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As it happenedended1563032932

Tour de France 2019: Julian Alaphilippe regains yellow jersey as Geraint Thomas survives late crash

The Tour returns to the hills for a tough, undulating stage

Lawrence Ostlere
Saturday 13 July 2019 13:46 BST
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Tour de France 2019: stage 7 highlights

Thomas De Gendt soloed to victory on stage eight of the Tour de France in Saint Etienne as Julian Alaphilippe regained the yellow jersey and Geraint Thomas survived a dramatic crash which snapped a team-mate's bike in half.

Lotto-Soudal's Thomas De Gendt was the last survivor of a four-man breakaway on the 230km stage from Macon, and had the power to hold off a late attack from Deceuninck-Quick Step's Alaphilippe and Thibaut Pinot of Groupama-FDJ.

Late in the stage the Team Ineos train was derailed in frightening fashion on a downhill bend, though Thomas was quickly back on his way and caught the peloton on the last of the day's seven categorised climbs. Re-live the live action:

Click on stage 8 to refresh the live tracker

Then again, it is the kind of stage which could offer someone like Julian Alaphilippe or Greg van Avermaet the platform to surge away from the main group in the final 10km, just as Alaphilippe did on stage 3 so impressively. He will be motivated to try and regain the yellow jersey from Giulpo Ciccone, if the opportunity arises.

There are bonus seconds available – eight, five and two – for the first three riders to reach the final summit of the day, and that could also tempt some of the lead riders towards the front late in the day. But realistically for GC contenders like Geraint Thomas, this is the kind of tough day to simply get through with as little fuss as possible.

Contenders

Peter Sagan – If he is in contention in the final few kilometres, he almost certainly wins this kind of stage. ****

Julian Alaphilippe – It is hard to know how much stage six took out of him as he fought and to keep the yellow jersey, but he will be extra motivated to regain it today if the chance comes his way. ***

Greg van Avermaet – Always dangerous on a stage like this one which requires strategy, strength and speed in the finish. **

Wout van Aert – He has impressed so far during this Tour but would love to grab a stage to really leave his mark on the race. *

Thomas De Gendt – He has looked lively in the breakaway over the past few days. *

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105km to go: Great stuff, this, as Thomas De Gendt dishes out an admonishing to fellow attacker Ben King for not working hard enough. This is classic De Gendt, a master of directing a breakaway like this one as if he really wants them all to have a great day out together before mugging them in broad daylight at some point later in the stage. 

Lawrence Ostlere13 July 2019 13:49
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100km to go: The break are being caught here, and De Gendt is getting worried. He's flapping around trying to cajole his fellow breakers into working harder to preserve their advantage of about three minutes from the main bunch. To my mind no sporting event is quite as photogenic as the Tour de France, and here's a few of this breakaway in action:

Lawrence Ostlere13 July 2019 14:04
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Tejay van Garderen became the third rider of this Tour de France to abandon the race after a nasty crash yesterday which left abrasions on his face and down the left side of his body. He completed stage 7 with a broken thumb and was declared by the doctors unfit to continue racing. The American's team revealed the news this morning in a tweet...

Lawrence Ostlere13 July 2019 14:21
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Here's Geraint Thomas, speaking before the stage: "The plan is to try and be in the front. Especially today there's small twisty roods, so it's the best place to be. It's gonna be hot and hard, so keep eating and drink, the small things. Basically it's about conserving as much as possible until the time-trial, and not making a mistake which can you cost you."

On his potential rivals: "Julian Alaphilippe has been incredible, Thibaut Pinot has been really good too. They're the two who stand out."

Lawrence Ostlere13 July 2019 14:40
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70km to go: It's all action at the front, all of a sudden! Thomas De Gendt gets his kick on and only Alessandro De Marchi can keep pace. Niki Terpstra and Ben King have slipped away.

Lawrence Ostlere13 July 2019 14:51
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Meanwhile back in the peloton, which is around 3min 50sec from De Gendt and De Marchi at the front of the race, plenty of riders are falling off the pace on the second category climb the Cote de la Croix. Team Ineos have positioned themselves comfortably near the front. 

Lawrence Ostlere13 July 2019 14:54
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Here's Thibaut Pinot, speaking before the stage: "I think if there's an attack, I'm expecting Julian Alaphilippe to get the yellow jersey back. This could potentially be harder than La Planche [stage six]. My goal is to come to every day and be in a good position. Sometimes the best form of defence is attack. I'm not thinking about the yellow jersey, just about my own race. I know the type of profile that suits me, I'm waiting for the Pyrenees. I don't know many GC leaders able to follow him so we'll have to be very careful when he attacks."

Lawrence Ostlere13 July 2019 15:18
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35km to go: So we are getting towards the business end of this long and brutal stage. Di Marchi briefly got stuck on the descent as he went straight instead of turning, stopping just before hitting a wall, but he's back now with De Gendt and those two lead the race, around two minutes ahead of the yellow-jersey group, who have swallowed up the rest of the breakaway. 

Lawrence Ostlere13 July 2019 15:39
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15km to go: A crash! It's a couple of Team Ineos riders who wipe each other out and Geraint Thomas is briefly held up. They seem to back and OK, but they are disengaged from the yellow jersey group for now. The attacking duo's lead has been reduced severely, down to only one minute – and De Gendt attacks off the front!

Lawrence Ostlere13 July 2019 16:05
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12km to go: So the state of play right now is this: Thomas De Gendt, the madman, has gone powering on a solo mission off the front as he aims to win the stage. Behind him, Julian Alaphilippe attacks from the GC pack! He crests the final climb and sweeps up six bonus seconds, and only Thibaut Pinot can follow him. Geraint Thomas is not there, left behind a little by that Ineos incident a few minutes ago. Jakob Fuglsang is trying to keep up but is struggling, and a whole group of major contenders are trying to follow...

Lawrence Ostlere13 July 2019 16:12

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