2001 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 10: Difference between revisions
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'''16 July 2001 — [[Pontarlier]] to [[Aix-les-Bains]], {{convert|185|km|1|abbr=on}}'''<ref name="MdC2001" /> |
'''16 July 2001 — [[Pontarlier]] to [[Aix-les-Bains]], {{convert|185|km|1|abbr=on}}'''<ref name="MdC2001" /> |
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The stage started very fast, with many attacks. |
The stage started very fast, with many attacks. Bradley McGee and Davide Etxebarria managed to make a gap of 1'20. Sergei Ivanov went after them and bridged the gap. The three leaders, chased by Momo Agnolutto, held a maximum lead of 7 minutes, but after that, the joined forces of ''Bonjour'' (of sprinter Damien Nazon) and ''Telekom'' (Zabel) quickly reduced the difference. Agnolutto was caught back, but the others managed to stay away, albeit only by a few seconds. Ivanov looked tired, but then revealed his bluff, escaping to the finish alone. |
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Revision as of 21:03, 29 December 2019
The 2001 Tour de France was the 88th edition of Tour de France, one of cycling's Grand Tours. The Tour began in Dunkirk with a prologue individual time trial on 7 July and Stage 10 occurred on 17 July with mountainous stage to Alpe d'Huez. The race finished on the Champs-Élysées in Paris on 29 July.
Prologue
7 July 2001 — Dunkerque, 8.2 km (5.1 mi) (ITT)[1]
One of the favorites to win the prologue, the previous year's winner David Millar, fell at the last curve, and thus was only 110th. The winner was Christophe Moreau, but his gains on most other favorites were small, with the exception of Casagrande, who was 120th and lost 45 seconds.
Rank | Rider | Team | Time |
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1 | Christophe Moreau (FRA) | You have called {{Contentious topics}} . You probably meant to call one of these templates instead:
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9' 20" |
2 | Igor González de Galdeano (ESP) | You have called {{Contentious topics}} . You probably meant to call one of these templates instead:
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+ 3" |
{{Contentious topics}} . You probably meant to call one of these templates instead:
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4 | Jan Ullrich (GER) | You have called {{Contentious topics}} . You probably meant to call one of these templates instead:
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+ 7" |
5 | Laurent Brochard (FRA) | You have called {{Contentious topics}} . You probably meant to call one of these templates instead:
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s.t. |
6 | Santiago Botero (COL) | You have called {{Contentious topics}} . You probably meant to call one of these templates instead:
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+ 10" |
7 | Joseba Beloki (ESP) | You have called {{Contentious topics}} . You probably meant to call one of these templates instead:
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+ 13" |
8 | Stuart O'Grady (AUS) | You have called {{Contentious topics}} . You probably meant to call one of these templates instead:
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s.t. |
9 | Carlos Sastre (ESP) | You have called {{Contentious topics}} . You probably meant to call one of these templates instead:
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+ 14" |
10 | Antonio Tauler (ESP) | You have called {{Contentious topics}} . You probably meant to call one of these templates instead:
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s.t. |
Stage 1
8 July 2001 — Saint-Omer to Boulogne-sur-Mer, 194.5 km (120.9 mi)[1]
Frenchman Jacky Durand attacked, and was chased and joined by his countryman Christophe Oriol. The two escapers were caught by the peloton, but Durand had managed to be first on two 4th category climbs, and thus was the first wearer of the mountain jersey this Tour de France. Laurent Brochard tried to get away in the last kilometres, but in the very last kilometre was caught back. The stage became a mass sprint, and was won by Erik Zabel.
Stage 1 result[1]
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General classification after stage 1[2]
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Points classification after Stage 1[2]
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Mountains classification after Stage 1[2]
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Stage 2
9 July 2001 — Calais to Antwerp, 220.5 km (137.0 mi)[1]
A group of 16 riders escaped from the peloton, and stayed away until the end, although with only a small difference. Because sprinter Stuart O'Grady was present, he was expected to take both the stage and the yellow jersey, but the Rabobank team had different plans. Their rider Erik Dekker, who had won 3 stages in 2000, was present, and was expected to try something, but instead he helped his teammate Marc Wauters to escape. Wauters took Arnaud Pretot with him, and they scored first and second. Wauters took the yellow jersey as a result.
Stage 2 result[1]
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General classification after stage 2[3]
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Points classification after Stage 2[3]
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Mountains classification after Stage 2[3]
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Stage 3
10 July 2001 — Antwerp to Seraing, 198.5 km (123.3 mi)[1]
The stage seemed likely to suit Erik Zabel, with some mountains in the Ardennes too tough for the pure sprinters, but not tough enough to really break the peloton, with a spurt going uphill. Marc Wauters cycled through the village where he lived wearing the yellow, but was later dropped by the peloton in the Ardennes. Another person who lost time was Francesco Casagrande, still suffering from a broken arm he had suffered in May. After Wauters dropped out, Stuart O'Grady took the yellow jersey.
Stage 3 result[1]
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General classification after stage 3[4]
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Points classification after Stage 3[4]
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Mountains classification after Stage 3[4]
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Stage 4
11 July 2001 — Huy to Verdun, 215 km (133.6 mi)[1]
Patrice Halgand attacked in the first part of the stage, which gained him the mountains jersey. In the end this led to a break-away group of nine, who got up to 10 minutes ahead before the teams of US Postal (Armstrong) and ONCE (Beloki and Gonzalez de Galdeano) started chasing. The heavy chase combined with a strong wind against caused the peloton to break. All favorites as well as yellow jersey O'Grady were in the first group, but some riders expected to place in the top-10 were left behind. After the nine were caught, the second group could rejoin, but the combined group of about 80 riders gained 18 minutes over a lot of other riders. Laurent Jalabert, Francisco Mancebo and Ludo Dierckxsens managed to escape. Mancebo was caught, but Jalabert and Dierckxsens were just a few seconds ahead of the first peloton, the first winning the sprint. Casagrande retired from the race.
Stage 4 result[1]
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General classification after stage 4[5]
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Points classification after Stage 4[5]
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Mountains classification after Stage 4[5]
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Stage 5
12 July 2001 — Verdun to Bar-le-Duc, 67 km (41.6 mi) (TTT)[1]
Stage 5 was a team time trial, in which the team time is set by the fifth member to arrive. While it was expected that O'Grady would lose some time here on the major contestants for the general classification, his You have called {{Contentious topics}}
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Miscellaneous
- {{Contentious topics/list}} and {{Contentious topics/table}} show which topics are currently designated as contentious topics. They are used by a number of templates and pages on Wikipedia. team won the stage. The ONCE team, considered the strong favorites, placed second. Jan Ullrich lost 30 seconds on Lance Armstrong (US Postal) and 1 minute on Joseba Beloki (ONCE). In the results the major GC contenders of each team are given in brackets. In the general classification, Crédit Agricole took places 1 to 3, while the rest of the top-10 were all ONCE riders except for Moreau.
Stage 5 result[1]
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General classification after stage 5[6]
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Points classification after Stage 5[6]
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Mountains classification after Stage 5[6]
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Stage 6
13 July 2001 — Commercy to Strasbourg, 211.5 km (131.4 mi)[1]
Little happened in this stage. A group of 5 riders (Axel Merckx, Michele Bartoli, Laurent Brochard, Rik Verbrugghe and Fred Bessy) got ahead with a maximum lead of 3 minutes, but was caught back by the Crédit Agricole riders and the sprint teams. The sprint was won by Estonian Jaan Kirsipuu. Belgian sprinter Tom Steels originally placed fourth, but because of 'irregular riding' during the sprint was declassified to the last place of the peloton.
Stage 6 result[1]
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General classification after stage 6[7]
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Points classification after Stage 6[7]
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Mountains classification after Stage 6[7]
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Stage 7
14 July 2001 — Strasbourg to Colmar, 162.5 km (101.0 mi)[1]
This was quite a mountainous ride through the Vosges. A breakaway group of five stayed ahead (Basso crashing), containing German Jens Voigt, who thus took over the yellow jersey from his teammate O'Grady. Laurent Jalabert took his second stage win.
Stage 7 result[1]
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General classification after stage 7[8]
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Points classification after Stage 7[8]
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Mountains classification after Stage 7[8]
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Stage 8
15 July 2001 — Colmar to Pontarlier, 222.5 km (138.3 mi)[1]
A group of 14 riders broke away, building a lead of almost 36 minutes, by far the largest one achieved in recent history. Even a lead of 22 minutes had not occurred in the last 25 years. Formally, this meant that the whole peloton finished outside the time limit, but the referees used a rule that they could give clemency to any group of more than 20% of the stage's starting riders, officially citing the weather conditions as their reason to do so. Still, the effects on the general classification were huge: Stuart O'Grady, who was in the group, retook the yellow jersey, and was now over 35 minutes ahead of Armstrong. Armstrong also had to make good over half an hour on Frenchman François Simon. Andrei Kivilev was 13 minutes ahead of Armstrong, but unlike the others from the escape group, was known to be good in the mountains. The situation was similar to 1990, when a group of four riders won 15 minutes in the first stage. One of them, Claudio Chiappucci, held on to the end, and ended second, only 2 minutes behind winner Greg Lemond.
Among the fourteen breakaways was Erik Dekker, who had won three stages in the 2000 Tour de France. In the end phase of the stage, he escaped from the group, getting joined by fellow Dutchman Servais Knaven. Spanish Aitor Gonzalez set out to bridge the gap, and succeeded; however, in doing so, he also brought Dekker's teammate Marc Wauters (who had won in Antwerp and had worn the yellow jersey for one day). With the help of Wauters, Dekker had no difficulty winning the sprint, and thus he could add a fourth Tour stage to his list of wins.
Stage 8 result[1]
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General classification after stage 8[9]
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Points classification after Stage 8[9]
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Mountains classification after Stage 8[9]
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Stage 9
16 July 2001 — Pontarlier to Aix-les-Bains, 185 km (115.0 mi)[1]
The stage started very fast, with many attacks. Bradley McGee and Davide Etxebarria managed to make a gap of 1'20. Sergei Ivanov went after them and bridged the gap. The three leaders, chased by Momo Agnolutto, held a maximum lead of 7 minutes, but after that, the joined forces of Bonjour (of sprinter Damien Nazon) and Telekom (Zabel) quickly reduced the difference. Agnolutto was caught back, but the others managed to stay away, albeit only by a few seconds. Ivanov looked tired, but then revealed his bluff, escaping to the finish alone.
Stage 9 result[1]
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General classification after stage 9[10]
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Points classification after Stage 9[10]
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Mountains classification after Stage 9[10]
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Stage 10
17 July 2001 — Aix-les-Bains to Alpe d'Huez, 209 km (129.9 mi)[1]
Finally the mountains were reached, and the work started for the riders who went for the general classification. Only one normal Alps stage this year, plus a climbing time trial (stage 11).
Laurent Roux, Eladio Jimenez and Toni Tauler were the early attackers this stage, and by the time the riders reached the first of three 'hors category' climbs, the Madeleine, they were 13'35 ahead of a peloton of about 45 riders. The Telekom team of Jan Ullrich led this peloton, hoping to make it a tough race. On the second climb, the Glandon, only one man was still up front, Roux, and he was 7 minutes before the peloton. In that peloton, Armstrong seemed to be in problems. Where usually he would climb in the front of the group, he was now in the back, and his facial expressions were also not that positive. Furthermore, only two riders from his team (Roberto Heras and Jose Luis Rubiera) were with him.
But when the final mountain, the famous Alpe d'Huez was reached, things were shown to be very different, it looked like Armstrong had been bluffing in order to tempt Ullrich and his team into wasting their energy by forcing the pace too early in the stage. Rubiera attacked on the start of the climb, Armstrong followed, but only a few other riders did - in the end it is just Armstrong and Ullrich. When Rubiera has to drop off, Armstrong looks back. The camera angle made it appear as if he looks straight into the eyes of Ullrich, but in a later interview Armstrong denied this, saying he was looking for who else was around. Armstrong then attacks again. Ullrich cannot respond to Armstrong who loses him and climbs the Alpe alone. He overtakes Roux, and climbs up the Alpe d'Huez in 38'01" - only 26 seconds short of Marco Pantani's record from 1995, scored after a much lighter stage. Kivilev (12th at 4.39) keeps up well, and seems likely to take the yellow jersey in the Pyrenees, whilst Ullrich battles hard to limit his losses and take 2nd place on the stage. For now, the yellow is on the shoulders of François Simon, who scored a creditable 29th place (10.20 behind Armstrong). Stuart O'Grady ends way in the back. After having worn it six days, he says goodbye to the yellow jersey. He is now concentrating on the green one. Armstrong is now the first of the favourites, at fourth place. He will still have to deal with Simon and Kivilev before getting the yellow.
Stage 10 result[1]
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General classification after stage 10[11]
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Points classification after Stage 10[11]
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Mountains classification after Stage 10[11]
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