2016 Tour de France: Chris Froome runs to the top of Mont Ventoux on Stage 12

By Scott Pryde / Expert

Stage Results:

Thomas De Gendt (Lotto-Soudal) might have been the winner on Stage 12 of the Tour de France to Mont Ventoux, but there were chaotic scenes behind.

De Gendt rode away from breakaway companions Daniel Navarro (Cofidis) and Serege Pauwels (Cofidis).

Behind in the peloton, it was Richie Porte (BMC), Chris Froome (Sky) and Bauke Mollema (Trek) who had broken clear of the rest, leaving Alejandro Valverde and Nairo Quintana (Movistar) to do the chasing.

Just inside the final kilometre though, and Porte ran straight into the back of a motorbike that was forced to stop abruptly with fans crowding it. Both he and Froome suffered mechanical incidents while Mollema picked himself back up and continued on.

Porte managed to return his bike to service, but Froome, with no teammates near by and the team car a mile back picked his bike up and started to run for the finish in one of the strangest things ever seen in a bike race.

Eventually, he ditched the bike and continued on his merry way before the neutral service car caught up with him. He would take a bike a number of sizes too small, before swapping it with one of his own and powering the last 400 metres to the finish.

Adam Yates was placed in the provisional yellow jersey for over an hour before the race officials made a decision to give Porte, Froome and Mollema their advantage at the time of the crash.

This meant Froome would retain yellow, opening up a 47 second game ahead of tomorrow’s crucial Individual Time Trial.

The fallout from this though, will likely carry on for the forseeable future.

Stage Preview:

Wind will play havoc on Stage 12 of the 2016 Tour de France as the peloton takes on Mont Ventoux, but not in the way it’s normally done. Join The Roar for live coverage from 10pm (AEST).

The stage, which was originally marked down for 184 kilometres from Montpellier to the top of the famous Ventoux, has been shortened by six kilometres to Chalet Reynard.

This is just before the peloton would hit the exposed part of the climb, where the barren landscape has been called everything from the lunar surface to a desert.

With winds reaching over 100 km/h at the top of Ventoux, it poses a safety risk for the riders, and also an impossible task – quite literally it was just about impossible to walk up there yesterday, let alone ride.

With wind forecasts the same for today, the race authorities have shortened the stage.

That doesn’t mean things will be any easier. It is still incredibly windy in the protected part up to Chalet Reynard, and of course Ventoux is one of the Tour’s hardest climbs on a normal day of racing.

Starting out in Montpellier, the riders will be subjected to more crosswinds and dangerous situations, similar to yesterday when Chris Froome made a four-man split and put more time into his rivals. The biggest question to come from that, and his exploits on the downhill run into Bagneres-du-Luchon, is how much energy does he have left?

If there are indeed more splits today, then it is going to be a stage raced at a hectic pace, with all the general classification riders trying to stay near the front of the peloton, and certainly the valley just before Ventoux will be hotly contested.

This valley of about 20 kilometres comes after back-to-back Category 3 and Category 4 climbs of the Cote de Gordes and the Cote des Trois Termes, before a short descent.

Interestingly, finishing at Chalet Reynard may be tougher than finishing at the top. Normally, following what will be tonight’s finish line there are about two kilometres where the gradient drops away, and riders have a chance to recover.

Not today though, with the gradient locked in between 7.5 and 10 per cent all the way to the new finish line, which comes after about ten kilometres of climbing.

Prediction
Today is the day for Nairo Quintana. With a time trial – and a difficult one at that – tomorrow, he needs to put time into Chris Froome, and the shortening of the climb means he could put in a much more brutal attack, knowing he can leave all his cards on the table early.

Watch out as well for Adam Yates and Daniel Martin, who have been riding brilliantly, and any of the French riders, who will want to impress on Bastille Day.

Be sure to join The Roar for live race updates of Stage 12 from 10pm (AEST), and don’t forget to add your own comments in the section below.

Follow Scott on Twitter @sk_pryde

The Crowd Says:

2016-07-14T16:14:03+00:00

Sean Lee

Expert


I think they have given Foome and Porte the same finishing time as Mollema.

2016-07-14T16:02:59+00:00

Jono

Guest


Looks like they took the time at the crash. Froome extended his lead over Yates by 20 secs. Mollema up to third with Martin taking a tumble down to 9th losing about a minute and a half. Porte just outside the top ten. Edit: Or what Scott said.

AUTHOR

2016-07-14T16:02:51+00:00

Scott Pryde

Expert


Decided one more check of Twitter would be beneficial - turns out we have a decision. Not sure how they came to it, but this is a new provisional top 10 GC. Full update to come this morning sometime. PROVISIONAL General Classification 1. Chris Froome (Sky) @ 57:11:33 2. Adam Yates (Orica-Bikeexchange) + 0:47 3. Bauke Mollema (Trek-Factory) + 0:56 4. Nairo Quintana (Movistar) + 1:01 5. Romain Bardet (Ag2r) + 1:15 6. Alejandro Valverde (Movistar) + 1:39 7. Tejay Van Garderen (BMC) + 1:44 8. Fabio Aru (Astana) + 1:54 9. Daniel Martin (Etixx-Quickstep) + 1:56 10. Jaoquin Rodriguez (Katusha) + 2:11

AUTHOR

2016-07-14T15:53:48+00:00

Scott Pryde

Expert


Right, that's going to wrap it up here. Not sure how much news we are going to get in the next couple of minutes, but as I said Chris Froome has announced to the world he is still in yellow so that's good enough for me to say there has been some sort of neutralisation. There will be a full report and update on site sometime this morning, so be sure to check out that on what has been an absolutely farcial stage. Thanks for joining me this morning and hopefully you enjoyed the coverage - full credit to the stage winner Thomas de Gendt as well. I'll back this evening from an earlier, yet to be determined time for live coverage of the Individual Time Trial and Stage 13. Be sure to join me then. Bye for now.

2016-07-14T15:51:09+00:00

Hoges

Guest


AUTHOR

2016-07-14T15:50:20+00:00

Scott Pryde

Expert


So, it appears they have made some sort of neutralisation of the times. SBS are closing their coverage, and I reckon I am about 5 minutes from doing the same here.

AUTHOR

2016-07-14T15:49:48+00:00

Scott Pryde

Expert


AUTHOR

2016-07-14T15:49:28+00:00

Scott Pryde

Expert


Fresh news from the top of the mountain and Chris Froome has tweeted that he is still in the yellow jersey.

2016-07-14T15:49:00+00:00

Mitch

Guest


Absolutely gutted for Porte. What a joke!

AUTHOR

2016-07-14T15:47:58+00:00

Scott Pryde

Expert


Chris Froome has told the race organisers he is leaving the mountain, and to tell him what happens when it happens.

AUTHOR

2016-07-14T15:47:21+00:00

Scott Pryde

Expert


The team cars are now making their way down the mountain, the lotto-soudal bus is ready to leave as well. This is just crazy stuff. We still haven't had a podium presentation.

2016-07-14T15:44:53+00:00

Tony Michael

Guest


Checking eBay for Pinarello Dogma's for sale in France ...

AUTHOR

2016-07-14T15:40:38+00:00

Scott Pryde

Expert


No problems Tony! Cheers. Could be here for a while yet! Absolutely crazy.

AUTHOR

2016-07-14T15:40:10+00:00

Scott Pryde

Expert


2016-07-14T15:39:36+00:00

Tony Michael

Guest


Thanks Scott, great coverage!!

AUTHOR

2016-07-14T15:39:33+00:00

Scott Pryde

Expert


Interesting way to put it.
AUTHOR

2016-07-14T15:37:02+00:00

Scott Pryde

Expert


Thomas de Gendt with some interesting comments at the line - he didn't actually know where the finish line was or how far away it was.

AUTHOR

2016-07-14T15:35:08+00:00

Scott Pryde

Expert


It has been over half an hour since Froome and Porte rolled across the finish line and we still have no idea what is going on. Coverage is going to have to come to an end here shortly, given the time. I'll hang around for a little longer though to see if we get anything out of this.

AUTHOR

2016-07-14T15:33:22+00:00

Scott Pryde

Expert


Fair enough - thanks for that.

AUTHOR

2016-07-14T15:33:06+00:00

Scott Pryde

Expert


They have brought out Peter Sagan for the green jersey ceremony ahead of the yellow jersey ceremony. In other words, the officials still have no idea.

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