Stage 3: Cambridge › London – 155 km
A pancake-flat Stage 3 will be a welcome change for the peloton after a day of challenging climbs that dropped the big name sprinters early and allowed Vincenzo Nibali to attack a tired lead group in the final kilometer for the stage win. On the third day of the Tour de France, the peloton travels from Cambridge to London without a single categorized climb on the menu, and at 155 kilometers, it’s won’t be a particularly long ride either. While the motivation to get out in front of the pack for some TV time will be very high on the Tour’s final day in England, anything but a sprint finish on this profile would be a big surprise. Still, after the race enters London, things get a bit technical on the way to the finishing straight on The Mall; there is a pair of right-hand turns within the final kilometer where things could get hectic. The fight to get positioned for the closing moments of Stage 3 will be fierce, and anyone with hopes of winning this stage will have to brave a dangerous stretch at the head of the pack at the end of the day.
With Mark Cavendish out of the race following his opening stage crash, Marcel Kittel‘s hold on the title of sprinter favorite becomes that much stronger. His leadout train took their time to get set up on Stage 1, but when it mattered they put Kittel at the front and in position win the day. With that leadout, and his elite ability and form, he is the man to beat on Stage 3. Unfortunately, the carnage on Day 1 robbed us of the opportunity to see Kittel matched up at full speed against the rider who is his only likely rival in this type of stage, Lotto Belisol’s Andre Greipel. Though the aforementioned crash in Harrogate did not bring Greipel down, it did slow him enough to take him out of contention. He has another chance here. He has certainly looked strong in the past few weeks, taking the German National Championship against Kittel’s teammate Degenkolb, but beating Kittel himself will be a tall order. If anyone can do it, however, it’s Andre Greipel; behind the two German stars there is a clear dropoff in sprinting ability to the next few contenders.
Nevertheless, anything can happen with this technical finish, and there are several other fast men who will be gunning for this one just as hard as the two favorites. Cannondale’s Peter Sagan is obviously one of those contenders. He was a strong 2nd to Kittel on the opening stage, and after allowing a great opportunity for a victory to get away from him in the final moments of Stage 2, he will be hungry for another shot at a win, and certainly for more Green Jersey points, here on Stage 3. Europcar’s Bryan Coquard has looked impressive at both the finish line and in the intermediate sprints so far, and he will look for more success here. FDJ’s Arnaud Demare and Katusha’s Alexander Kristoff should place highly. Trek’s Danny van Poppel, Movistar’s JJ Rojas, IAM Cycling’s Heinrich Haussler, Lampre’s Maximiliano Richeze (Sacha Modolo has unfortunately abandoned the race with a fever), and AG2R’s Samuel Dumoulin will hope to get into the mix. As usual, Giant-Shimano’s John Degenkolb will become a strong contender if anything should happen to team leader Marcel Kittel. Omega Pharma-Quick Step is in an interesting situation: they still have an excellent leadout even though they are missing their top sprinter. Whomever they decide to put forward for the sprint, Alessandro Petacchi or Mark Renshaw, or even Matteo Trentin or Michal Kwiatkowski, he will have a strong support squad in the Stage 3 finale.
VeloHuman Stage Favorites
1. Marcel Kittel | 2. Andre Greipel | 3. Peter Sagan
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-Dane Cash











