Tour de France 2017 stage 4: Mondorf-les-Bains-Vittel 207 km

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Who is going to win the stage?

  • Marcel Kittel

    Votes: 50 50.0%
  • André Greipel

    Votes: 5 5.0%
  • Mark Cavendish

    Votes: 6 6.0%
  • Sonny Colbrelli

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Arnaud Demare

    Votes: 15 15.0%
  • Peter Sagan

    Votes: 14 14.0%
  • Dylan Groenewegen

    Votes: 4 4.0%
  • Michael Matthews

    Votes: 2 2.0%
  • None of the above

    Votes: 4 4.0%
  • Vino-option

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    100
  • Poll closed .

KGB

Apr 16, 2015
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Re: Re:

Tonton said:
KGB said:
Well that was only one way to stop Sagan to take green jersey.Not point system and not profile.Very cheap way for french boys.
You can't be serious man :) .
So why he is out from tour then?
 
Re:

wwabbit said:
Watching the head on view and the overhead view side by side, synchronized and in slow motion at the same time, it's fairly obvious to me what really happened.

1. Cavendish was already on the right and half a bike length behind Sagan who was behind Demare
2. Demare veered to the right up against the barrier and Sagan followed him veering into the right were Cavendish was
3. This part was unseen in the overhead shot as it was obscured by trees: Sagan pushed Cavendish into the barriers causing Cavendish to fall
4. They both come out from under the trees where Sagan's elbow appears to be extended

Conclusion: This was 100% Sagan's fault, deviating from his line into Cavendish's line in an extremely dangerous manner and causing an accident. Was it deliberate? Maybe not, it's plausibly negligence from being unaware of Cavendish's position. The elbow appearing at the perfect timing from the overhead shot right when they reappear from under the trees does make it look worse than it is for Sagan. The fact that 'Cavendish was already going down when the elbow came out' is irrelevant, because the crash was still caused by Sagan.

I think the original punishment was correct, relegation and being put out of contention for the green jersey. I can't help but wonder if the DSQ decision was because he may have been 'warned' already for another incident earlier in the Tour.

This is pretty much the way I see it. A number of posters have posted photos and videos where Cav and Sagan are already close to the barriers. However, the whole manoeuvre begins completely on the other side of the road (the right hand side, looking from the finish line). Demare moves towards the other side (perfectly safe at that time). Cav was the first to try and catch his wheel and his front wheel comes alongside Sagan's back wheel. Sagan then begins to angle across the road (probably in reaction to Demare, but it seems likely that he knew that someone was coming alongside him). Cav either has to give up the sprint (not going to happen) or drift across the road (simultaneously following Demare and staying away from Sagan). This continues until Demare and Cav have to straighten out alongside the barriers. Saying that Cav was trying to go through a gap that wasn't there is ignoring what happened beforehand.

To disqualify a rider, there should be clear proof of intention. I see Sagan as more responsible for the crash than Cav, but I don't see proof of intention. Hence, disqualification seems exetremely harsh to me.

Edit: I've just seen the heli shots. Cav was further behind Demare than it looked from the shots from the finish line, so it is quite possible that Sagan didn't know that he was there until quite late. The DQ is incredibly harsh.

I'm not commenting on Demare's manoeuvre afterwards. I haven't really watched what happened after Cav's crash and I need to eat.
 
May 5, 2017
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Re: Tour de France 2017 stage 4: Mondorf-les-Bains-Vittel 20

Can't find a video that shows CLEARLY what went on. Like a slow motion. And i have seen in teh past sprinters that strayed WAY more from their lines not being sanctioned at all. Guess Dimension Data and FDJ have more power than Bora .

I remember Abdujaparov. The guy was all over the place. He broke line all the times.

From what i see from former riders like Robbie McEwen, they seem to think DQ from the Tour is way too harsh a punishment
 
Re: Re:

Knutsen said:
wwabbit said:
Watching the head on view and the overhead view side by side, synchronized and in slow motion at the same time, it's fairly obvious to me what really happened.

1. Cavendish was already on the right and half a bike length behind Sagan who was behind Demare
2. Demare veered to the right up against the barrier and Sagan followed him veering into the right were Cavendish was
3. This part was unseen in the overhead shot as it was obscured by trees: Sagan pushed Cavendish into the barriers causing Cavendish to fall
4. They both come out from under the trees where Sagan's elbow appears to be extended

Conclusion: This was 100% Sagan's fault, deviating from his line into Cavendish's line in an extremely dangerous manner and causing an accident. Was it deliberate? Maybe not, it's plausibly negligence from being unaware of Cavendish's position. The elbow appearing at the perfect timing from the overhead shot right when they reappear from under the trees does make it look worse than it is for Sagan. The fact that 'Cavendish was already going down when the elbow came out' is irrelevant, because the crash was still caused by Sagan.

I think the original punishment was correct, relegation and being put out of contention for the green jersey. I can't help but wonder if the DSQ decision was because he may have been 'warned' already for another incident earlier in the Tour.

This. We have a winner!

Yeah the elbow was side affect that never touches Cav. However it looks pretty obvious the touch (caused by Sagan with bike) happened earlier which made Cav fall down.

Sagan must've seen/realized Cav is there on the right as he was almost fully next to him, still he actually kept on closing the line.

Pretty similar (though of course in much higher speed) as Froome closing Porte in the Dauphine with the difference that at the end those riders respected each others and no crash luckily happened.
 
Re: Re:

klintE said:
ToreBear said:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ow0MgSNtiCI
Sagan is clearly endangering Cav when he changes his line, and it has consequences for Cav. But Demare looks to me to be changing his line in a much more dangerous way.

I watched first crash video The primer was one of FDJ rider falling onto Sagan. Coincidence or eliminate pattern? ;)

If so, I nominate Marc Madiot to be the next Bond villain. :lol:
 
May 5, 2017
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Re: Tour de France 2017 stage 4: Mondorf-les-Bains-Vittel 20

Just a question here ? Is Sagan really that dangerous a rider when he sprints ? Greipel seems to think so.

As for those saying Cavendish would have won if not for the crash ? Get a hold. There is no way to know.
 
Re: Re:

KGB said:
Tonton said:
KGB said:
Well that was only one way to stop Sagan to take green jersey.Not point system and not profile.Very cheap way for french boys.
You can't be serious man :) .
So why he is out from tour then?

The UCI made the decision, not the ASO, and Sagan is the perfect posterboy for the UCI. He brings a ton of attention to cycling.
In fact, I believe the decision was an attempt to prove that the UCI is bipartisan.
 
Re: Re:

wolvie15 said:
Kwibus said:
loge1884 said:
@Kopuliak
Thanks for the slo.mo ... exactly what I saw in the original video

guess, if there is something you should not be doing in a sprint (or at any point of tension in a race), it's trying to pushing Peter Sagan out of your way .... that's about like a driver in a Mini Cooper trying to prod someone in a Hummer ....

not sure why PS is getting punished, but as the decision seems to be final, guess Peter would say, there is more to life than TdF 2017 ....

The head from Cav against Sagan is his last reflex trying to avoid crashing into the barriers.


What more do you want. He is out of the Tour !!!

I didnt want him to be dq'd. I think that decision is too harsh. If the elbow caused the crash a dq would be right, but elbow came out after Cav leaned against Sagan because Sagan pushed him into the barriers, without intent imo.

What I want is people to stay calm and rational. There are some who say Sagan elbowed Cav down which is ofcourse nonsense and there are some that suggest Sagan didn't do anything wrong or even that Sagan didnt cause Cav to crash which is also nonsense.
 
May 5, 2017
58
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Re: Re:

ToreBear said:
klintE said:
ToreBear said:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ow0MgSNtiCI
Sagan is clearly endangering Cav when he changes his line, and it has consequences for Cav. But Demare looks to me to be changing his line in a much more dangerous way.

I watched first crash video The primer was one of FDJ rider falling onto Sagan. Coincidence or eliminate pattern? ;)

If so, I nominate Marc Madiot to be the next Bond villain. :lol:


Not Madiot's decision. Relegating Sagan was the right call. The DQ from the Tour is a UCI decision. I don't think Madiot is happy with that. It will likely impact the ratings of the sprint stages as Sagan is such a star. I know that i will not watch only the mountain stages from now on. None of the other sprinters interest me.
 
Re: Re:

Kwibus said:
wolvie15 said:
Kwibus said:
loge1884 said:
@Kopuliak
Thanks for the slo.mo ... exactly what I saw in the original video

guess, if there is something you should not be doing in a sprint (or at any point of tension in a race), it's trying to pushing Peter Sagan out of your way .... that's about like a driver in a Mini Cooper trying to prod someone in a Hummer ....

not sure why PS is getting punished, but as the decision seems to be final, guess Peter would say, there is more to life than TdF 2017 ....

The head from Cav against Sagan is his last reflex trying to avoid crashing into the barriers.


What more do you want. He is out of the Tour !!!

I didnt want him to be dq'd. I think that decision is too harsh. If the elbow caused the crash a dq would be right, but elbow came out after Cav leaned against Sagan because Sagan pushed him into the barriers, without intent imo.

What I want is people to stay calm and rational. There are some who say Sagan elbowed Cav down which is ofcourse nonsense and there are some that suggest Sagan didn't do anything wrong or even that Sagan didnt cause Cav to crash which is also nonsense.

I agree Sagan caused the crash but the UCI rulebook states that either deviation from line nor irregular sprint can warrant DSQ until 3rd offense. How have they justified this? Violent conduct is the only possibe way I can see, which would be laughable.
 
I can buy that it's Sagan's fault because he closed Cav in, but I cannot buy the DQ. WAAAAAAAY too harsh. If Cav had been able to slam the breaks on and avoid the wreak, what would have happened to Sagan? Not a DQ, that is for 100% certain. 1 second later Demare does exactly the same thing (actually worse) and it's a miracle there wasn't a second crash. Yet there is nothing to answer for?
 
Re: Re:

Aimar16 said:
KGB said:
Well that was only one way to stop Sagan to take green jersey.Not point system and not profile.Very cheap way for french boys.

UCI BRITISH president sent Sagan home not the french dudes fault


I think DQ is too harsh in my opinion.

However, knock off all the tiresome conspiracy stuff, if anything it's better for the UCI to have Sagan at the Tour.
 
Re: Re:

alspacka said:
Kwibus said:
wolvie15 said:
Kwibus said:
loge1884 said:
@Kopuliak
Thanks for the slo.mo ... exactly what I saw in the original video

guess, if there is something you should not be doing in a sprint (or at any point of tension in a race), it's trying to pushing Peter Sagan out of your way .... that's about like a driver in a Mini Cooper trying to prod someone in a Hummer ....

not sure why PS is getting punished, but as the decision seems to be final, guess Peter would say, there is more to life than TdF 2017 ....

The head from Cav against Sagan is his last reflex trying to avoid crashing into the barriers.


What more do you want. He is out of the Tour !!!

I didnt want him to be dq'd. I think that decision is too harsh. If the elbow caused the crash a dq would be right, but elbow came out after Cav leaned against Sagan because Sagan pushed him into the barriers, without intent imo.

What I want is people to stay calm and rational. There are some who say Sagan elbowed Cav down which is ofcourse nonsense and there are some that suggest Sagan didn't do anything wrong or even that Sagan didnt cause Cav to crash which is also nonsense.

I agree Sagan caused the crash but the UCI rulebook states that either deviation from line nor irregular sprint can warrant DSQ until 3rd offense. How have they justified this? Violent conduct is the only possibe way I can see, which would be laughable.

The CN news says:

"We applied article 12.104, irregular sprints, in which case commissaires are allowed to enforce a judgement to disqualify a rider and amend a fine."
 
May 5, 2017
58
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0
Re: Re:

Ruby United said:
KGB said:
Tonton said:
KGB said:
Well that was only one way to stop Sagan to take green jersey.Not point system and not profile.Very cheap way for french boys.
You can't be serious man :) .
So why he is out from tour then?

The UCI made the decision, not the ASO, and Sagan is the perfect posterboy for the UCI. He brings a ton of attention to cycling.
In fact, I believe the decision was an attempt to prove that the UCI is bipartisan.


Not so sure the UCI loves Sagan. Too undisciplined. Too showy. Too much. I am pretty sure they hate him. And Sky too . He is stealing some thunder from all mighty Mister Sky Froome. Now, with him now, we can get to the business at end : celebrating the cult of Sky and their prophet Froome. The vulgar false God is out.
 
May 26, 2010
28,143
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Re: Re:

Poursuivant said:
Aimar16 said:
KGB said:
Well that was only one way to stop Sagan to take green jersey.Not point system and not profile.Very cheap way for french boys.

UCI BRITISH president sent Sagan home not the french dudes fault


I think DQ is too harsh in my opinion.

However, knock off all the tiresome conspiracy stuff, if anything it's better for the UCI to have Sagan at the Tour.

Since when did the UCI ever care about the sport?
 
Nov 29, 2010
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Re: Re:

deValtos said:
BigMac said:
Laura Meseguer
@Laura_Meseguer

Sergeant, Lotto: "Greipel is pissed by the attitude of Sagan...He has just told me: 'Sagan is not my friend anymore'

What the hell is this? ''Not my friend anymore''.

I can't bear the cringe.

To be fair to Greipel he said that 10s after the finish line. I think everyone needs a few hours to cool down and then ok let's see what their opinions are.


Greipel just now: "Sometimes I should watch images before I say something. Apologies to @petosagan as I think that decision of the judge is too hard."
 
Re:

Kopuliak said:
IbaLZ1z.gif

this is what happens when Cav tries to pull a Cav :mad:

There was NO fvcking room between Sagan and the barriers for Cav to ever squeeze in-let alone out sprint Sagan.
I don't quite know who's the most stupid - Cav or the U.C.I.
 
Re: Re:

[quote="bambino"

snip

I agree Sagan caused the crash but the UCI rulebook states that either deviation from line nor irregular sprint can warrant DSQ until 3rd offense. How have they justified this? Violent conduct is the only possibe way I can see, which would be laughable.[/quote]

The CN news says:

"We applied article 12.104, irregular sprints, in which case commissaires are allowed to enforce a judgement to disqualify a rider and amend a fine."[/quote]

Then I think they are using an outdated rulebook. I'm looking at one dated 01/07/17.

http://www.uci.ch/mm/Document/News/Rulesandregulation/16/26/68/12-DIS-20170701-E_English.pdf