Tour de France 2021
Mark Cavendish celebrates his first Tour de France stage win since 2016 as he
sprinted to an emotional victory in Fougeres.
Mark Cavendish celebrates his first Tour de France stage win since 2016 as he sprinted to an emotional victory in Fougeres.

Cavendish claims first stage victory since 2016 after sprint finish

BRITAIN’S Mark Cavendish won his first stage at the Tour de France after five years in a thrilling sprint finish on stage four in Fougeres. Cavendish, 36, rolled back the years as he finished ahead of Nacer Bouhanni and Jasper Philipsen. Dutch rider Mathieu van der Poel kept the overall leader’s yellow jersey. Cavendish’s victory came at the end of a race which featured a riders’ protest after Monday’s crash-affected stage three. Geraint Thomas and 2020 runner-up Primoz Roglic were among those involved in crashes, and yesterday the peloton came to a halt for a minute shortly after the rollout from Redon, before beginning a go-slow ride for the first 10km. But on a Tour that has already featured some incredible stories, Cavendish’s resurgence at a finish, where he also won in 2015, will take some eclipsing. A long battle with Epstein-Barr virus and a succession of injuries was followed by a diagnosis of clinical depression in 2018, and he did not register a single win in 2019 or 2020 leaving him without a team heading into this season.

However, he has repaid the faith placed in him by Deceuninck-Quick-Step boss Patrick Lefevere. Five wins during the season made him the ideal last-minute stand-in when Irishman Sam Bennett was ruled out through injury. And the way in which the Manx rider collapsed in tears and was embraced by team-mates and rivals alike underlined the scale of his achievement, after a three-year absence from the race. ‘I didn’t think I’d ever get to come back’ Belgium’s Brent van Moer, part of a two-man breakaway, went solo with 14km remaining to establish a lead of around a minute before Deceuninck-Quick-Step, led by world champion Julian Alaphilippe, took up the chase.
As van Moer faded in the final 200m, Cavendish powered through and rounded Belgium’s Philipsen before finishing ahead of Frenchman Bouhanni by a bike length.
It was a fairy-tale moment for the Briton, who moves within three stage wins of Eddy Merckx’s all-time record of 34 on the Tour and took possession of the green jersey, which he won in 2011. “I don’t know what to say, man – just being here is special enough,” said an emotional Cavendish.
“I didn’t think I’d ever get to come back to this race. Fire man, just fire from the whole team! We didn’t know if we were going to get them. (BBC Sport)

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