Tour de San Luis Ends Without Fulcrum

A short recapitulation of the 2013 Tour de San Luis in Argentina: Although four stages resulted in an odd number of riders, and therefore a Point d’Appui, the Tour de San Luis finished on an even note and no fulcrum. The Cuspides for the general classification were Davide Vigano of Lampre-Merida in 77th place and Vojitech Hacecky of ASC Dukla Praha in 78th place.

Vigano finished 38 minutes and 49 seconds behind the tour’s winner and home country favorite, Daniel Diaz of San Luis Somos Todos, and more than 48 minutes ahead of the Lanterne Rouge, Kenny Dehaes of Lotto Belisol. Lucas Sebastian Haedo of Cannondale Pro Cycling finished with time closest to the media.

  • Stage 1 – Marc De Maar of United Healthcare
  • Stage 2 – No fulcrum
  • Stage 3 – Jeff Louder of United Healthcare
  • Stage 4 – No fulcrum
  • Stage 5 – Filippo Pozzato of Lampre-Merida
  • Stage 6 – Alexander Wetternail of Team NetApp-Endura
  • Stage 7 – No fulcrum

Late Crash Upends Fulcrum Rankings; Dumoulin on Cusp

The crash with only 26 kilometers left in the race upended the race for the Point d’Appui in Stage 6 of the Tour de France. Sadly, two riders who had contended for le Point d’Appui, finishing as Cuspides earlier in the race — Davide Vigano on Stage 5 and Tom Danielson on the Prologue — abandoned the race along with Mikel Astarloza of Euskeltel-Euskedi and Wouter Poels* of Vacansoleil-DCM.

The even number of abandons left the total number of finishers even, and so again no Point ‘Appui could be awarded. Les Cuspides for general classification after Stage 6 came to rest on the shoulders of Samuel Dumoulin of Cofidis, who finished 95th, and Juan Jose Haedo of Team Saxobank-Tinkoff Bank. Dumoulin finished 11:20 behind tour leader Fabian Cancellara and 41:10 ahead of the last rider.

Samuel Dumoulin

Samuel Dumoulin

Dumoulin was in the sprint on Stage 5, finishing fourth and had hoped to be in the sprint again on Stage 6, but like so many riders got caught behind the major crash of the day. Prior to Stage 6, LeTour.fr spoke with Samuel Dumoulin about Stage 5. Dumoulin said:

“Yesterday’s stage was fairly quiet, I could save myself for the finish. And, in the last 30 kilometers, I’m able to move up in the bunch. Then everything went pretty well. At the time of the crash, that happened to my right, but I didn’t really need to avoid it. I was a bit lucky, and after I managed to follow the right wheels, particularly that of Matt Goss… I was still just 150 meters from the line. But I wasn’t able to pass him.

“We can say that I had my chance because it was an uphill finish, and this is the type of terrain that suits me the best. I did not train to compete with them, but with experience, I can still go back to making the right wheels.

“On the flat, I have no chance against the best sprinters. The best way for me to succeed in a stage is still to put myself in a small breakaway group that goes to the end. But we must still make the right! In any case, since the start of the Tour I have good feelings.”

Jelle Vanendert of Lotto-Bellisol and Nick Nuyens of Saxobank-Tinkoff Bank finished as Les Cuspides for Stage 6.

Other notes from the stage:

  • The Lanterne Rouge is still Brice Feillu, who pulled in 2 and a half minutes during Stage 6 against some of the other riders in l’autobus, but he still has a ways to go to pull before he can hand off the lantern to someone else.
  • Aliaksandr Kuchynski fell back 40 places from his middle placement, coming home slowly, 13 minutes adrift at the head of l’autobus. Kuchynski fractured his wrist in Stage 5 and has been slowed along with the several other riders with wrung wrists.

* Early reports indicated that Poels abandoned after the crash, then other reports indicated he was still riding. His name, however, did not appear in the final classification of riders. We will update if Poels is found to be yet riding the long road to Metz.

Kuchynski Remains on Cusp in Stage 5

Russian Aliaksandr Kuchynski of Katusha appears to be consolidating his grasp upon the center of the peloton, holding onto one of Les Cuspides for the general classification a day after nabbing the first Point d’Appui in the Tour de France. He shares the middle with Davide Vigano of Lampre-ISD, both of them 7:02 behind the yellow jersey of Fabian Cancellara.

On a day when the whole field came home with the same time, it’s hardly worth mentioning the stage results, but the sake of order: Frederico Canuti of Liquigas-Cannondale and Ruben Plaza of Movistar finished as Les Cuspides of Stage 5.

About 40 kilometers into Stage 5, Marcel Kittel of Argos-Shimano abandoned the race with stomach problems he has endured since the beginning. His loss leaves 194 riders. Brice Feillu still holds onto the Lanterne Rouge.