Cycling: Boiling-hot Kittel claims fifth Tour stage win
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[July 13, 2017]
By Julien Pretot
PAU, France (Reuters) - German Marcel
Kittel was once again a cut above the rest as he claimed his fifth
victory in this year's Tour de France, winning a crash-ridden 11th
stage in emphatic style on Wednesday.
The Quick-Step Floors rider, who now has 14 stages to his name, left
it late to launch his sprint but easily beat Dutchman Dylan
Groenewegen (LottoNL-Jumbo) and Norway's Edvald Boasson Hagen
(Dimension Data).
Boasson Hagen raised his arms as if he had won but was
comprehensively beaten by Kittel and Groenewegen after 203.5km from
Eymet.
Britain's Chris Froome retained the overall leader's yellow jersey
on a relaxed day for Team Sky's defending champion, but some of his
rivals did not have a quiet day.
Three of the main contenders crashed as last year's runner-up Romain
Bardet, third overall, Jakob Fuglsang (fifth) and twice winner
Alberto Contador (12th) hit the deck in separate incidents.

Fuglsang was involved in a crash at the feed zone and sustained
small fractures in his wrist and elbow but he will start on
Thursday, his Astana team said. Astana's Dario Cataldo was forced to
abandon the race because of a wrist injury after the Italian also
fell.
Frenchman Bardet, meanwhile, avoided serious injury.
"I escaped unhurt but now I'm happy that the flat stages are over,"
said Bardet, who is expected to attack in Thursday's 12th stage, a
214.5-km trek featuring three major climbs and a summit finish in
Peyragudes.
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Quick-Step Floors rider Marcel Kittel of Germany in action.
REUTERS/Benoit Tessier

Contador, who slipped down the general classification
after a bad day in the Jura mountains on Sunday, fell off his bike
25km from the finish but managed to make it back to the peloton with
the help of his Trek-Segafredo team mate Jarlinson Pantano.
He suffered bruises to his hip and elbow. Contador's fall was the
latest in a series of crashes on the Tour for the Spaniard, who was
forced to abandon the race in 2014 and 2016.
"I never believed in bad luck, but this Tour is putting me to the
limit, especially psychologically," he said.
"But those who think I will give up don't know me."
At that point, the main pack was traveling at full speed as the
sprinters' teams rode hard at the front to catch the last fugitive
of the day, Maciej Bodnar of Poland.
The exhausted Bora-Hansgrohe rider was reined in 250 meters from the
line before Kittel stole the show yet again.
(Reporting by Julien Pretot, editing by Ed Osmond) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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