Saturday, 4 May 2019

Philippa York: Analysing Mark Cavendish's Tour de Yorkshire sprints

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A second day and a second chance at the Tour de Yorkshire for Dimension Data to guide Mark Cavendish into a position where he could unleash the sprint that many fans would love to see. They'd love it even more to witness his arms aloft in victory but victory is never as simple as it looks from the outside.

In terms of commitment to the cause the South African team has fulfilled the expectations placed upon them by having the Manxman in their ranks, and there's been no shirking or waiting on others to do the work to keep the early break under control in both stages. The morning orders on the team are fairly obvious; Nicholas Dlamini and Rasmus Tillier do the long hard miles at the head of the peloton and then it's up to the final lead-out pairing of Bernie Eisel and Mark Renshaw to do the rest.

Coming into Bedale on stage 2 things were looking good for Dimension Data as they surfed the wheels and waited for the right moment to place their sprinter in the right place at the right time, that is until Eisel hit the front just that little bit too early coming under the flamme route but Cavendish spotted that and used his experience. He slipped back two spots to be in a better position for the slightly uphill and headwind finish. You have to remember it's as much instinct as anything else when a sprinter choses where to be and who to follow inside those last 1,000 metres.

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All was looking good as Renshaw pulled over and the final decision was going to be played out from 300 metres to go. And that's when it all started to get messy because this isn't a WorldTour race and it's not the full flat experience.

Placed nicely on the right and by the barriers one could see that Cavendish was waiting for the guy in front of him to open his sprint. Cavendish was hoping to come from the slipstream.

However, that impromptu lead-out never came, and in fact a wave of guys came from the left over to the right and boxed him in just at the crucial moment. Add to that they were all bouncing off each other in desperation to get on Rick Zabel's wheel and it all became rather dodgy. Gaps closed, Cavendish had to stop pedalling for a split second and that was the end of his chances of, at best, a podium place.

You can read more at Cyclingnews.com



via Cyclingnews Latest Interviews and Features http://www.cyclingnews.com/features/philippa-york-analysing-mark-cavendishs-tour-de-yorkshire-sprints

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