FEDRIGO

 STAGE 16 - Bagnères-de-Luchon  Pau 199.5 km  

 
 Tuesday 20 July

FEDRIGO BEATS AN ATTACKING FORMER WINNER…

With four massive cols it was billed as major day for the 2010 Tour de France and the start of stage 16 lived up to the hype. Four two solid hours there was no let up in the attacking action and almost every climber in the peloton tried their luck… with the exception of the two at the top of the general classification. Alberto and Andy marked each other, knowing that it was a long ride from the final ascent to the finish in Pau. But two former champions were willing to try their luck; both Lance Armstrong and Carlos Sastre were part of the action over the col de Peyresourde and col d’Aspin. Given that they were well down the rankings, however, they were allowed plenty of leeway from the peloton and it effectively became a race for the opportunists. 
Pierrick Fedrigo is proving that he’s reliable, consistent and capable of winning. He easily accounted for his escape companions in the final 300 meters and claimed his third stage victory in the Tour de France. It’s the first time since 1992 that French riders have won six stages. 
Lance Armstrong did animate the stage but not even The Boss could stamp his authority on the group of nine opportunists who shared the sprint for stage honors; 15 years after he and his Motorola mates led the peloton across the line in Pau a day after Fabio Casartelli’s death, the Texan was sixth in the stage.

 

The Progress Report
The highly anticipated 199.5km 16th stage of the 2010 Tour de France, from Bagnere-de-Luchon to Pau began at 11.43am. There were 172 riders at the sign on with Mayoz (FOT) and Tankink (RAB) the non-starters. The stage had two intermediate sprints – in Bielle (164.5km) and Gan (185.5km) – and the big features were four huge passes: the cat-1 col de Peyresourde (11km), the cat-1 col d’Apsin (42.5km), the ‘Hors Category’ col du Tourmalet (72km), followed by another ‘HC’ climb, the col d’Aubisque (138km).

Armstrong Into An Escape Group
Right from the start, the attacks began and by 5km, 18 established an escape including: Armstrong and Horner (RSH), Wiggins (SKY), Kreuziger and Szymd (LIQ), Hesjedal (GRM), Roche (ALM), Lloyd (OLO), Barredo (QST), Martinez (EUS), Verdugo (EUS) and Capecchi (FOT). This thinned out to 11 at the top with Roche one of the team leaders unable to follow. Van den Broeck attacked Contador’s peloton (which was down to 30 riders) in the final kilometer of the Peyresourde and crested the climb 30” behind the stage leaders. 
The Liquigas pair in the escape led to the top, Armstrong was eighth and the peloton was led by three Astana riders and was at 55”. Voigt crashed early on the descent.

Col d’Aspin
The lead group was reduced to 11 on the second climb with Lloyd waiting for the peloton and then helping led Van den Broeck to the top. Contador and Astana followed the Omega Pharma riders in the peloton, never lagging behind the escape by more than 30”. With 5km to climb, Sanchez (EUS), Sanchez (GCE) and Gesink (RAB) were dropped by the yellow jersey’s group but they caught up early on the descent. Charteau led the escape over the Aspin, 30” ahead of the yellow jersey and 50” ahead of Sanchez’s group. Cunego attacked the peloton in the final kilometer and caught the escape group at the 45km mark. Casar attacked the descent and arrived at the base of the Tourmalet with a lead of 20” on Vinokourov, Armstrong, Wiggins, Kreuziger, Hesjedal, Sastre, Charteau, Costa, Cunego and Capecchi.

Col du Tourmalet
Sastre, Kreuziger, Wiggins, Vinokourov, Hesjedal, Capecchi and Costa retreated to the peloton between the 2nd and 3rd climbs. Armstrong caught Casar at 51km and the other escapees retreated to the peloton that was 50” behind. Fedrigo, Cunego, Moreau and van de Walle formed a counter-attack at the base of the third climb. They were 15” at 53km and the peloton was at 1’10”.
Armstrong was caught by Cunego and Fedrigo at 62km, the peloton was 2’50” behind and led by Omega Pharma. With 9km to climb, Casar, Moreau and Van de Walle joined the lead group, then came Horner, Plaza and Barredo caught the lead group at 65km. Hushovd attacked the peloton with 6km to climb. Konovalovas caught the leaders 4km from the top. Moreau sprinted ahead to take the Souvenir Jacques Goddet ahead of Fedrigo and Cunego… then came the rest of the 10-man escape. 
Charteau was 12th at the top (at 2’40”) and the peloton was led by Astana (at 3’40”).

Col d’Aubisque
The peloton arrived at the base of the col d’Aubisque 6’25” behind the 10 escapees: Armstrong, Horner, Casar, Konovalovas, Barredo, Van de Walle, Fedrigo, Moreau, Plaza and Cunego. They worked up a lead of 7’30”. With 13km to climb, Armstrong attacked and only Barredo, Cunego, Fedrigo and Plaza could follow. Armstrong attacked the peloton but four others were able to match his accelerations. Barredo was aggressive on the final climb but he couldn’t shake his rivals and the eight arrived at the top of the Aubisque together. Between the Soulor (128.5km) and the Aubisque, Horner, Moreau and Van de Walle returned to the lead group. Moreau attacked in the final 300m and took first at the top. Casar was at 1’35” and Konovalovas 10th at 3’40”. The peloton was led by Astana’s Tiralongo virtually all the way up the Aubisque and Contador’s group reached the top 9’50” behind. Casar caught the eight leaders with 47km to go.

Fedrigo Claims The Win After Gallant Effort From Barredo…
With 45km to go, Barredo attacked the escapees and no one responded, 5km later he had a lead of 40”. He would hover about 25” ahead of the peloton and only get caught with 1,100m to go. Then the race for stage honors began. The Caisse d’Epargne pair in the escape led the eight riders to the line and all of them were in the hunt for the win – although Armstrong appeared happy to start the sprint from second-last place… once Fedrigo hit the turbo button, it was clear everyone else was racing for second. He took the win a bike length ahead of Casar. It’s his third victory in the Tour de France. 
Hushovd led the peloton home, 6’45” behind Fedrigo, taking six points and regaining the lead in the points classification. 
Schleck and Contador finished 21st and 22nd in the stage, 6’45” behind Fedrigo and the defending Tour champion will wear the yellow jersey again after the rest day.