Tour de France 2018 stage 7: Fougéres - Chartres 231 km

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Who is going to win the stage?

  • Fernando GAVIRIA

    Votes: 34 54.8%
  • Peter SAGAN

    Votes: 8 12.9%
  • Dylan GROENEWEGEN

    Votes: 8 12.9%
  • Marcel KITTEL

    Votes: 4 6.5%
  • Arnaud DEMARE

    Votes: 1 1.6%
  • André GREIPEL

    Votes: 2 3.2%
  • Alexander KRISTOFF

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Sonny COLBRELLI

    Votes: 1 1.6%
  • Mark CAVENDISH

    Votes: 3 4.8%
  • Other

    Votes: 1 1.6%

  • Total voters
    62
  • Poll closed .
Oct 14, 2017
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yetiyeti said:
The finish does not look flat at all.....looks like the sprint will be 4% or more to the line.

Is it a straight finish or are there technical corners with near the finish?
 
May 8, 2013
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Koronin said:
yetiyeti said:
The finish does not look flat at all.....looks like the sprint will be 4% or more to the line.

Is it a straight finish or are there technical corners with near the finish?
From what I can tell, piecing together the route on letour.fr and with strava, it looks like there's nothing stupid for turns near the end and the last 500 m or so is straight and wide..... but a significant gradient. Sometimes strava lies on the gradient though.
 
Oct 14, 2017
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Re: Re:

yetiyeti said:
Koronin said:
yetiyeti said:
The finish does not look flat at all.....looks like the sprint will be 4% or more to the line.

Is it a straight finish or are there technical corners with near the finish?
From what I can tell, piecing together the route on letour.fr and with strava, it looks like there's nothing stupid for turns near the end and the last 500 m or so is straight and wide..... but a significant gradient. Sometimes strava lies on the gradient though.

TY. Sounds like Gaviria, Sagan and Colbrelli should be the favorites for the sprint then. Wondering about if it was straight or technical to figure out if Valverde might get involved or not, but without any technical turns he should stay out of it.
 
Mar 29, 2016
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Re: Re:

yetiyeti said:
Koronin said:
yetiyeti said:
The finish does not look flat at all.....looks like the sprint will be 4% or more to the line.

Is it a straight finish or are there technical corners with near the finish?
From what I can tell, piecing together the route on letour.fr and with strava, it looks like there's nothing stupid for turns near the end and the last 500 m or so is straight and wide..... but a significant gradient. Sometimes strava lies on the gradient though.

A tight right-hand turn 1.9 kilometres before the line leads to a 700 metres drop, while the finale is rounded out by a 600 metres kick-up at 4% before the last 200 metres are on the flat

last 2 km
stage-7-finish-detail.jpg
 
Aug 3, 2015
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On a completely random note, Im very happy to see Rory Sutherland in the Tour. The job he did on Movistar was great, I especially remember his 2016-campaign where he was superb in the Giro and Vuelta and could pull for hours and hours, also in difficult terrain.
 
Apr 7, 2018
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fantomas said:
Brian Holm expecting crosswind. Let's hope he is right.
Lets hope for some action. It is fantastic when teams can shake up another boring (only need to see the last 5 k) stage :razz:

But everybody should be warned after yesterday and I think it will be dificult to catch a GC contender in the back - but never say never :rolleyes: . Hopefully Astana learned their lesson and finally will do what they can to protect Fuglsang - they looked like amateurs yesterday. If I was Fuglsang there would have been a lot of yelling after the stage and todays tacticmeeting should be used to build up the teams confidence.
 
Jul 5, 2011
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More Strides than Rides said:
231 km into a slight headwind the whole way. The breakaway has my sympathies...
Mine too. But also all the riders, viewers, commentators, team cars and race followers are going to be bored out of their wits.
Surely a short flat stage would be more interesting, maybe even offering some meaningful racing.
 
Mar 28, 2011
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I imagine the big teams will shut down the road as soon as the 3 - 5 man all-Francophone breakaway goes. Probably around 400 metres after the real start is given.
 
Jul 10, 2014
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Instead of having full coverage of these pre-determined stages we could instead be seeing live coverage of the women's Giro before switching to the Tour coverage. But I guess that would make too much sense and I'm sure they'll keep scratching their heads as to why women's cycling is not as popular.
 
Jul 18, 2015
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That sharp corner 1,9 km before the finish. My bet is that both Groenewegen and Kristoff will be in a crash in that particular corner.
 
May 4, 2014
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Lequack said:
Instead of having full coverage of these pre-determined stages we could instead be seeing live coverage of the women's Giro before switching to the Tour coverage. But I guess that would make too much sense and I'm sure they'll keep scratching their heads as to why women's cycling is not as popular.
Makes way too much sense
 
Jul 17, 2016
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Valv.Piti said:
On a completely random note, Im very happy to see Rory Sutherland in the Tour. The job he did on Movistar was great, I especially remember his 2016-campaign where he was superb in the Giro and Vuelta and could pull for hours and hours, also in difficult terrain.
Yeah very good rider. I also think him and kristoff saved D.Martin in the Team Time Trial and limited his losses.
 
Jul 10, 2014
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Lance Armstrong said:
Solo break. Luckily today is the longest stage of the Tour.

The peloton will have to go really slow today as to not catch him prematurely.
 
Aug 18, 2010
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DNP-Old said:
Vichot, Lampaert, Gallopin, Naesen, Postlberger, Gogl, De Gendt, Theuns, Gerrans, Vermote

Seriously? If that lot get are allowed to go, trying to bring them back won’t be easy