Cavendish regains winning form at TDF

Etixx Quick Step team rider Mark Cavendish of Britain celebrates as he crosses the finish line to win the 7th stage of the 102nd edition of the Tour de France 2015 cycling race over 190.5km between Livarot and Fougeres, France. EPA/SEBASTIEN NOGIER

Etixx Quick Step team rider Mark Cavendish of Britain celebrates as he crosses the finish line to win the 7th stage of the 102nd edition of the Tour de France 2015 cycling race over 190.5km between Livarot and Fougeres, France. EPA/SEBASTIEN NOGIER

Published Jul 10, 2015

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Fougeres, France - Briton Mark Cavendish sprinted to victory in the seventh stage of the Tour de France on Friday for his 26th career win in cycling's greatest race.

The Etixx-Quick Step rider, who crashed out in the first stage of last year, had appeared far from his brilliant best in the first sprints of the Tour but he finally delivered in Brittany.

Cavendish perfectly timed his effort to leapfrog German Andre Greipel (Lotto-Soudal), who finished second after winning two stages this year.

Slovakian Peter Sagan finished third.

“I'm super happy,” said Cavendish, who is eight shy of Belgian Eddy Merckx's record of 34 stage wins on the Tour.

“It was a long time (I had not won) on the Tour de France, I was kind of impatient.”

Cavendish had not raised his arms as a winner on the Tour since the 13th stage in St Amand Montrond in 2013.

Briton Chris Froome of Team Sky is the overall leader after German Tony Martin abandoned the race with a collarbone fracture on Thursday.

Froome, who did not wear the distinctive yellow jersey out of respect for Martin, leads Sagan by 11 seconds and American Tejay van Garderen (BMC Racing) by 13.

Spain's Alberto Contador (Tinkoff-Saxo), who fell off his bike in the neutral zone, is seventh and 36 seconds off the pace.

Defending champion Vincenzo Nibali of Italy, who was caught up in a crash on Thursday, is 12th and 1:38 behind Froome while Colombian Nairo Quintana, the last member of the Big Four, lies 16th, 1:56 off the pace.

Saturday's eighth stage will take the peloton over 181.5 km from Rennes to Mur de Bretagne, up a short but punchy climb.

Reuters

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