Dennis at Fulcrum Point on Fulcrum Stage of Tour

Rohan Dennis of BMC

Rohan Dennis of BMC, the new leader in the Point d’Appui competition.

The fulcrum stage of the 2015 Tour de France, Stage 11, saw a new leader in the contention for the Point d’Appui after the previous holder crashed and had to abandon. Rohan Dennis of BMC moved several spots up in the general classification to land on fulcrum point of the fulcrum stage of a difficult mountain stage.

The hot, steep climbs over the Col d’Aspin and Col du Tourmalet put the placement of riders below the top 20 into the jackstraws.

Rafal Majka of Tinkoff-Saxo won the stage atop the hill of Cauterets, riding solo much of the afternoon and dedicating his win in part to his teammate Daniele Bennati, who had led in the Point d’Appui competition after the Stage 10. Bennati crashed hard relatively early in the stage and had to abandon.

Along with the loss of Bennati, the Tour saw five more abandons on the day: Dominik Nerz of Bora-Argon 18, Rui Costa of Lampre-Merida, Daniele Bennati of Tinkoff-Saxo, Johan Van Summeren of AG2R La Mondiale, Ben Gastauer of AG2R La Mondiale and Rein Taaramae of Astana Pro Team.

Chris Froome of Sky still leads the general classification and Michael Matthews of Orica GreenEdge still holds the Lanterne Rouge, but he has gained time on other riders in le autobus. He is less than a minute behind Alex Dowsett of Movistar Team.

Bennati on Fulcrum after First Mountain Stage

At the end of the first mountain stage, Daniele Bennati of Tinkoff-Saxo landed at the Point d’Appui of the Tour de France.

Daniele Bennati

Daniele Bennati

Bennati has held the fulcrum after stages in previous Tours and the 2014 Vuelta as well as sharing the cusp of the fulcrum after Stage 2 of this year’s tour. He has remained close to the middle and landed at the fulcrum today after helping lead out Alberto Contador to the base of the climb to La Pierre-St.-Martin.

Like so many riders, Contador couldn’t hang with the stiff pace set by Chris Froome, who won the stage, gained more than a minute on his closest rival and retains the yellow jersey. Neither Nairo Quintana nor T.J. Van Garderen could maintain Froome’s pace but both managed to succeed in retaining podium spots. There are, however, more days in the Pyrenees and then the Alps to continue testing them.

Michael Matthews, the holder of the Lanterne Rouge, dropped further behind the penultimate rider in the tour.

Ivan Basso and Lars Boom did not start Stage 10. Basso, who was on the cusp of the Point d’Appui after Stage 3, left the race after receiving a diagnosis of testicular cancer. Boom, who was on the cusp after Stage 2, departed with the flu.

Zubeldia at Fulcrum After Stage 8 of Tour de France

Haimar Zubeldia

Haimar Zubeldia

Haimar Zubeldia of Trek Factory Racing finished in the top 30 on the stage with a good enough time to pull him up into the fulcum spot of the 2015 Tour de France after Stage 8. His time is 26 minutes and 35 sconds behind the leader Christopher Froome and 45 minutes ahead of the Lanterne Rouge, Michael Matthews.

Luca Paolini of Team Katusha did not start Stage 8, putting the number of riders still in the race at 185.

The winner of the stage Alexis Vuillermoz of AG2R La Mondiale, who broke away from the lead group on the uphill finish. Daniel Martin of Cannondale-Garmin Pro Cycling Team reacted too slowly to catch Vuillermoz, and the leaders’ group had not reason to chase. Vincenzo Nibali, the 2014 Tour champion, was dropped on the final climb. Whether that showed a bad day or was indicative of general condition will get answered on the time trial and then the upcoming Pyrenees.

Gene, Trentin on Les Cuspides after Stage 7

Yohann Gene of Team Europcar and Matteo Trentin of Etixx-Quick-Step found their way to the cusps of the fulcrum at the end of Stage 7 of the 2015 Tour de France. Trentin has shared the Les Cuspides before, finishing on cusp at the end of Stage 9 of the 2014 Tour. One hundred and eighty-six riders remain in this year’s race.

Christopher Froome of Team Sky regained the yellow jersey at the end of the after the withdrawal of Tony Martin after Stage 6 following a crash near the end of the day. Michael Matthews of Orica GreenEdge soldiers on as the Lanterne Rouge.

On the stage, of course, Mark Cavendish got his first stage win in the Tour de France since 2013.

High and Lows in Stage 6: Martin Abandons; Teklehaimanot Grabs Polka Dot

The Tour de France returned to Les Cuspides on Stage 6. Julien Simon of Cofidis and Damien Gaudin of AG2R La Mondiale shared placement on the cusp of the fulcrum.

The crash of tour leader Tony Martin and the subsequent announcement that he would abandon due to a broken collarbone made the stage win by teammate Zdenek Stybar a pyrrhic victory.

On the other hand, the work done by Daniel Teklehaimanot of MTN-Qhubeka to pick up the 3 mountain-climber points available on the course of Stage 6 meant that he is the first Eritrean and, in fact, the first African to stand on the Tour de France podium. He won the mountain jersey in this year’s Critérium du Dauphiné.

Also, Armindo Fonseca, who held the Point d’Appui after Stage 5, finished strongly on Stage 6, attaining 14th place in the sprint finish.

The yellow jersey was still held by Martin at the end of the stage, although it , and Michael Matthews remains the Lanterne Rouge.

Fonseca Slips into Point d’Appui after Stage 5

Stage 5 of the 2015 Tour de France wasn’t quite as crazy as Stage 4, but that’s not saying much. Two more abandons as the result of crashes left the peloton with 189 riders to come home. Armindo Fonseca of Bretagne-Séché Environnement wound up as the Point d’Appui in the general classification at the end of the day.

Nacer Bouhanni of Cofidis and Jack Bauer of Cannondale-Garmin had to leave the race after crashes. Bouhani hit the deck just 10 kilometers into the stage; Bauer went down with several teammates not long afterward.

Tony Martin remained in the yellow jersey at the end of the day, and Michael Matthews retained the Lanterne Rouge.

Malori Is First Competitor to Grab Point d’Appui in 2015 Tour

Adriano Malori in the Tour de Romandie 2010, Stage 3. Photo by Fanny Schertzer and licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons.

Adriano Malori in the Tour de Romandie 2010, Stage 3. Photo by Fanny Schertzer and licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons.

After three riders were unable to start Stage 4 of the Tour de France, 191 riders were left to come home on a long but fast day, quiet sizzle after the furious pop of Stage 3. Adriano Malori of Movistar sat at the fulcrum of the peloton at the end of the stage and is the first rider of the 2015 Tour to hold the Point d’Appui.

Malori, the Lanterne Rouge of the 2010 Tour de France, has won three of the last five National Time Trial Championships of Italy, including this year’s contest. He also won the final time trial, Stage 21, in the 2014 Vuelta a España.

With his strong finish, Tony Martin of Etixx-Quick-Step was able to just finish enough ahead of Chris Froome to gain the maillot jaune. Michael Matthews of Orica GreenEdge remained the Lanterne Rouge, although if he mends enough he will assuredly climb out of last place.

Tour Remains on Les Cuspides After Three Stages

A crash on Stage 3 of the Tour de France caused havoc in the general classifications, provided to a new yellow jersey and forced four abandons. Since an even number survived, we still have no Point d’Appui in the 2015 tour.

After Stage 2, the two riders on Les Cuspides were Daniele Bennati of Tinkoff-Saxo and Lars Boom of Astana Pro Team. Bennati held the Point d’Appui at the end of Stage 13 in the 2013 Tour de France and has found his way to the cusp during races in 2012 and 2014 as well.

After today’s Stage 3, the two riders on the cusp of the fulcrum are Bram Tankink of Team LottoNL-Jumbo and Ivan Basso of Tinkoff-Saxo. Basso won the Point d’Appui in the 2014 USA Pro Challenge.

The four riders who abandoned the race due to crashes were Simon Gerrans of Orica GreenEdge, Dmitrii Kozonchuk of Team Katusha, Tom Dumoulin of Team Giant-Alpecin and William Bonnet of FDJ.fr.

Christopher Froome of Sky is quite surprisingly the holder of the yellow jersey, and Michael Matthews of Orica GreenEdge, who came home battered and bloodied, now tenuously holds the Lanterne Rouge.

Time Trial Finishes Without Fulcrum; Bak, Devolder on Cusps

Lars Bak, one of two riders who finished on Les Cuspides at the end of the 2014 Tour de France, is back in the middle at the end of Stage 1 of the 2015 Tour de France. All 198 racers easily came home on the 13.8 kilometer time trial, leaving the race without a Point d’Appui yet. Bak, who rides for Lotto Soudal, was joined by Stijn Devolder of Trek Factory Racing at the cusp.

The Point d’Appui in the 2013 Tour de France, Manuel Quinziato, is back to defend his title, as is Markel Irizar of Trek Factory Racing, who was the Point d’Appui in the 2011 Tour de France. Daniel Oss, who was the Point d’Appui of this year’s Paris-Roubaix, is also in the tour racing for BMC. Vasil Kiriyenka, winner of the 2013 Tour de France Point d’Appui, raced in the Giro d’Italia and is not in the line-up for Le Tour.