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Tour de France 2014 stage 3: Cambridge to London – live!• Le Tour heads closer to France with 155km flat stage south
• Overall classifications and latest race results
• Tour de France selfies ‘the new pain in the arse’ for riders
John Ashdown theguardian.com, Monday 7 July 2014 15.54 BST
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3.54pm BSTSaxo-Tinkoff take their turn on the front as the Millennium Dome hoves into view. The gap comes down to 49 seconds.
3.52pm BSTIt's a winding route now, which is helping the two out front to some extent. The pace at the front of the chasing group – set by Lars Bak – has strung the peloton out.
3.51pm BSTJan Barta begins to drop Jean-Marc Bideau, but Bideau grits his teeth and battles back to his partner's wheel. Fourteen kilometres to go, 66 seconds the lead.
3.49pm BSTAstana are still doing the work on the front at the moment, but Greipel's Lotto-Belisol remain to the fore. They've done a huge amount of work today – now the Gorilla has to pay them back for their efforts.
3.47pm BSTWith 17km to go, Barta and Bideau are still 1min 17sec clear. Chapeau, boys. It's dry here in central London but the rain is pretty heavy out east by the looks of it.
3.46pm BSTThe peloton screams through the Olympic Park. From this point they head down to City Airport, then turn right along the river, skim along the top of the Isle of Dogs, join the river, then turn right again at Westminster before looping round St James's Park and onto the Mall.
3.41pm BSTGet. Back. You. Berk.
3.39pm BSTBye bye photo camera #TDF pic.twitter.com/GTqHkKwe9k
— José Been (@TourDeJose) July 7, 2014
A Lotto-Belisol rider calls for help from the other teams as they labour to bring down this gap. They'll do it, of that there can be no doubt, but this pair are making it as tough as possible – they lead by 1min 41sec still, with just over 20km to go.
3.37pm BSTThe peloton turns left and heads towards the Olympic Park down Orient Way. Orient Way, as it happens, does have a very good cycle lane. Quite sensibly, none of the riders are attempting to use it today, though.
3.36pm BSTA replay of the Schleck crash – or at least an incident near the crash – shows a spectator taking a photograph a yard or two out into the road. Argh! Team Sky's David Lopez clipped him fairly heavily but stayed on two wheels, but that could've led to a serious pile-up.
3.34pm BSTThe peloton head through Leyton and down Lea Bridge Road – the crowds are five, six deep.
3.32pm BSTAndy Schleck goes down. As does Ted King. Not sure what happened there – both were towards the back of the field. Having ridden along this very same road a few times, I'd suggest it may well have been a pothole. Or a bus.
3.29pm BSTThe gap is back up to 2min 10sec as Barta and Bideau make a last-ditch attempt to maintain their advantage. They're heading towards Walthamstow now.
3.28pm BSTIt's beginning to sound like the caravan's purveyors of tat plastique have simply been targeting pubs over the past couple of days:
Updated at 3.28pm BST 3.26pm BST.@JOHN_ASHDOWN The Castle inn, Skipton got loads. I couldn't cross the divide to revel in the garden of tat & beer. Left empty handed, sober
— MaliciousA (@MaliciousA) July 7, 2014
Inside 35km to go now and the gap is down to 1min 44sec for Barta and Bideau. I'm surprised our ballooning pioneers/Luxembourgeois Eurovision entrants have been able to stay away for so long. Expect them to be comfortably reeled in by the 15km mark.
3.25pm BSTGood sign work on the roads of Essex …
3.21pm BSTGallows humour on the Essex roadside #TdF14 @cyclingweekly pic.twitter.com/my34fW3xze
— Ben Miller (@Bob_Tag) July 7, 2014
The peloton is now inside the M25. As such it is now crawling along at 5mph and being stopped by a succession of traffic lights.
3.16pm BSTThe Tour Caravan – the plot thickens. "I saw someone (an adult) excitedly pick up a small box of Yorkshire Tea and another fellow get hit in the face by a flying pack of Haribo," writes Will W.
And:
.@John_Ashdown they must have given away all the tat plastique on Côte de Cray. It was raining stuff outside the pub where I was stood.
— Matthew Hardy (@drmatthewhardy) July 7, 2014
Was one solitary pub – the White Lion Inn in Cray perhaps – the one target for le Tour's tat plastique?
3.13pm BSTBryan Coquard of Europcar thunders past Peter Sagan and takes the points for third. The Frenchman, for now, extends his lead in second, though Sagan is pretty safe in green.
Updated at 3.14pm BST 3.11pm BSTBideau pops out from behind Barta and nabs the points and, perhaps more importantly as far as he's concerned, the €1,500 for first place in the intermediate sprint. Ninety seconds back down the road, Cannondale are all over the front of the peloton. Europcar are flying on the outside, though …
3.09pm BSTA few spits and spots of rain are appearing on the camera lens, which is a touch concerning with 1km to go until the sprint point. The peloton shuffles and organises …
3.06pm BST50km to go. The peloton heads into Epping. The crowds are three or four deep on the pavements … and they're keeping out well out of the way in the main which is good to see.
3.03pm BSTTour de France caravan – the backlash continues. "My niece was similarly non-plussed about the Tour de France caravan," writes Liam Blizard. "Despite dialling the I'm-a-cute-kid-so-please-give-me-some-useless-shite factor up to 11, the caravan whizzed passed and she was left with only a miniature bag of Haribo to show for it.
"She thought about it for a few minutes and announced with typical Yorkshire contrariness, oblivious to the scenes of jubilation around her, that 'It was the worst Tour De France she'd ever been to.' She's six, and this is her second. (To be fair in Picardy a couple of years ago, she could barely pick her rucksack up with the amount of swag she had accrued)."
Bideau & Barta. Photograph: Martin Keene/PA Updated at 3.07pm BST 3.01pm BST 2.54pm BSTFunny thing about big cities and the Tour. In Piccadilly or Regent St you'd never know the race is finishing 300m away today. Same in Paris.
— Richard Williams (@rwilliams1947) July 7, 2014
It's about an hour before the riders arrive at the finish in London. When the tat plastique-less caravan came through 20 minutes or so ago this was the scene:
Pendant ce temps là, les bus arrivent à Londres / Meanwhile, buses are arriving in London. @BMCProTeam #TDF pic.twitter.com/mRsluRWxDw
— Le Tour de France (@letour) July 7, 2014
On commentary Phil Liggett reckons the crowd in London could well exceed that for the road races in the 2012 Olympics.
2.53pm BST"On t'Moss we got slim pickings from this 'caravane'," notes John Sanderson in response to Robert Hammond's empty-handed email. "Pretty poor show. I got a foam pig keyring. Nothing says Le Tour more than a foam pig keyring, non? Non. Tres poor. Even the Yorkshire tea van had nowt." Looks like we've all been hoodwinked.
2.51pm BST"Due to a monumental error, I committed to cycling the 980 miles/1360 kilometres from that there London to Monte Carlo in eight days last month, including Mont Ventoux and a lot of other painful places," writes Paul Griffin. "It was for two charities which are based near today's stage route, Haven House, a children's hospice working in Woodford, and The Soup Kitchen, a charity which helps feed the homeless on the streets of London, based in Tottenham Court Road.
"Both charities are small enough that donations will make a big difference to people's lives – I would be massively grateful if you could give it a mention."
Consider it done, Paul. Fine effort. Anyone wishing to donate can visit Paul's fundraising page here.
2.48pm BSTThere's around 15km to go to the sprint point in Epping Forest, and with the gap still at 2min 15sec it looks like the lead two will hoover up the bigger points.
The peloton passes through Bannister Green. Photograph: Martin Keene/PA Updated at 3.03pm BST 2.43pm BST An email: "Sheffield yesterday was fantastic - the crowds on Cote de Jenkin Rd phenominally loud and friendly - the cycling exciting," begins Robert Hammond with the air of a man about to say 'but'. "But, still I feel let down. The much vaunted plastic trinket/food-athon that I have been led to believe is 'le caravan' was … well … it just didn't happen. I blame Ned Boulting for me erroneously thinking I'd be carrying armloads of plastic tat - at least some semi-edible - away from Le Tour only to recycle once I got home . But no, nothing, rien de tat plastique. No half-hearted scuffles between impatient kids. No humuilating grovelling by adults for a cracked Caisse d'épargne key ring. Had they run out? Given it all out on that Moss place? I demand to know!"
2.40pm BSTGiant Shimano's Ji Cheng sets the pace on the front, with a smattering of FDJ, Astana and Lotto-Belisol all in close attendance.
2.37pm BST70km to go. A man in a bowler hat rides a horse alongside the peloton. Obviously.
Man. Bowler hat. Horse. Peloton. Photograph: /Screengrab 2.34pm BST Bideau grabs a couple of bottles from his team car. The lead is down to 2min 27sec.
@John_Ashdown Barta & Bideau. Psychedelic children's TV show on 70s Swedish TV
— Neil Anthony Keenan (@neilokeeno) July 7, 2014
2.32pm BST@John_Ashdown Barta & Bideau. Recalling the tragic exploits of these ballooning pioneers bring a tear to the eye.
— Charlie Bird (@zebthecat) July 7, 2014
Anyone for some awkward sprinter banter?
2.28pm BSTThe lead pair head through a feed zone – Barta picks up an energy bar or two, Bideau opts not to partake.
2.24pm BSTEssex is putting out crowds similar to those in Yorkshire. Impressive
— William Fotheringham (@willfoth) July 7, 2014
The leaders have reached Chelmsford, at which point they make a sharp right-hand turn and head along the A1060 towards London.
2.20pm BST80km to go for Barta and Bideau. Jan Barta, a two-time Czech time-trial champion, leads the way.
2.16pm BST@John_Ashdown Barta & Bideau? Nul points for Luxembourg in the Eurovision Song Context 1979. Still sporting the lycra though.
— Gary Naylor (@garynaylor999) July 7, 2014
The lead for our ambient house pioneers Barta and Bideau is now down to under three minutes. Once we get to Epping Forest there's a sprint point – it's in around 37km time, so the sprinters' teams might well be looking to bring the group back together before then.
2.09pm BSTWe have a Guardian Witness Tour de France assignment currently running on the site. Head here to offer your contributions and take a look of what other readers have been posting.
2.06pm BSTThe red shirts of Andre Greipel's Lotto Bellisol ease their way to the front of the peloton and take their turn in dictating the pace.
1.55pm BSTUnder 100km to go now as the peloton tears through Rayne, the 2006 Essex Village of the Year (according to Wikipedia). They've stepped on the gas just a touch now, bringing mid-80s Montepellier strike pairing Barta and Bideau's lead down to just over three minutes.
1.51pm BSTOne thing that has been entertaining me today has been this tweet from Bertie Contador's Tinkoff Saxo team. They've been at pains to point out that they've got a brand new livery this year. What they don't mention is that these saddlebags make you look a little like a baboon who has swallowed a job lot of Stabilo Boss highlighters:
1.47pm BSTThe saddlebag redefined. @sciconbags new aeronaut minimizes wind resistance and comes in #Tinkoff4TDF yellow fluo. pic.twitter.com/0om0cPVpUF
— Tinkoff Saxo (@tinkoff_saxo) July 7, 2014
A fall at the rear of the field. Omega Pharma-Quick Step's Jan Bakelants hits the deck and he's brought Bretagne's Florian Vachon down with him. It was a touch of wheels, quite a gentle fall in the grand scheme of things (if any falls can be gentle when cycling at 40kph with your feet stuck in the cleats). They're both up and peddling their way back to the pack.
1.40pm BSTNibali's Astana team have been doing much of the work on the front of the peloton, as is the custom for the team-mates of the maillot jaune. But Marcel Kittel's Giant-Shimano team are taking a turn now.
1.38pm BSTOur leaders have 4min 20sec on the peloton with 108km to go until the finish line outside Buckingham Palace.
1.33pm BST Competition time!Thanks to Evans Cycles we're giving you the chance to win a new HOY Sa Calobra .001 2014 Road Bike, worth £750.
HOY bikes are developed by six-times Olympic gold medalist Sir Chris Hoy and the Sa Calobra is fittingly named after the infamous climb in Mallorca – where Sir Chris regularly trained with the GB Team.
You can enter right here.
HOY bikes are developed by six-times Olympic gold medalist Sir Chris Hoy. Photograph: Bryn Lennon/Getty Images 1.26pm BST So, What Is The Breakaway?
@John_Ashdown Barta & Bideau is actually a delicatessen in Chigwell. Watch out for them stopping to point out the cut-price brie
— CJ Maillard (@cjmaill) July 7, 2014
@John_Ashdown Barta & Bideau - French ambient house pioneers
— Matt Emerson (@Mattemerson) July 7, 2014
1.24pm BST@John_Ashdown I'm sure I saw Barta & Bideau doing their comedy juggling routine at this year's @HatFair ?
— Ken Parry (@kenparry) July 7, 2014
The Tour caravan – 180-odd vehicles dishing dishing out T-shirts, wine gums and other sponsor-related paraphernalia – has just passed close to Leyton Orient's Brisbane Road and is now heading down Lea Bridge Road in east London. Is it ironic that the cycle path along there isn't up to much?
1.17pm BSTA child at the side of the road yelps an audible "Woah!" as the breakaway pair career past.
Meanwhile, ITV have just featured a pleasing segment involving Chris Boardman and Lycra-loving Jacques-Brel-singing cassoulet-cooking Ned Boulting in a bed:
1.11pm BSToh dear, this won't last #tdf @itvcycling pic.twitter.com/tqwQf7kqfV
— WelshRacer (@Welshracer) July 7, 2014
"Barta & Bideau, Shearer & Sutton, Sturridge & Suarez," writes John Sanderson. "Devastating strike forces on their day." I like that. I can picture Barta & Bideau banging them in for Montpellier in the mid 80s. Meanwhile, the actual Barta and Bideau have a lead of 4min 31sec.
1.09pm BSTToday's Sport Picture of the Day features Chris Froome in the Channel Tunnel. There's a video too, which I was going to save until the end of the day and use it to shoehorn in a "Everyone else is getting the ferry over to France but someone is making his own way there …" but hey ho:
1.04pm BSTWhat Is The Breakaway? has its first entrant:
12.59pm BST@John_Ashdown Surely Barta & Bideau are just another brand of unaffordable surround sound systems?
— Paul Cutting (@PabloCutting23) July 7, 2014
The lead pair head into Saffron Waldren, which may well be the poshest sounding place in the UK (even if it's not). There are thousands – thousands – lining the streets here.
12.55pm BSTThe leaders have just over four minutes now as they head into Great Chesterford, home (according to Wikipedia) of Germaine Greer.
The racing was brilliant yesterday of course, but Vincenzo Nibali's embarrassed neck-scratch on the podium in Sheffield may have been the highlight …
12.48pm BST#TDF leader Vincenzo Nibali reenacts my 8th grade prom. http://t.co/Mx3Aji56ru
— Dan Wuori (@dwuori) July 6, 2014
A three-and-a-half minute lead on the peloton now for Barta and Bideau.
Anyone for a game of What Is The Breakaway? For me, this pair could be high-end bathroom designers: "We were thinking about just going with Ikea, but in the end we decided to splash out on a Barta & Bideau. I know, I know. But look, aren't these taps to die for …"
12.37pm BSTThe crowds do indeed look large once again, despite today being a school day. I've put myself on Unofficial Dangerous Selfie Watch, although it's worth remembering that the ill-timed photo opportunity isn't the only danger presented by spectators, as BMC rider Peter Stetina discovered yesterday …
12.33pm BSTHad some inquiries, so for the record: no crash, no sheared derailleur. Had confetti wrapped all thru my gears. Crazy fans strike again
— Peter Stetina (@peterstetina) July 6, 2014
Both Barta and Bideau are more than 10 minutes down on GC, so the peloton is perfectly happy to see them go. The sprinters' teams will be pleased to see an early structure – they'll give this pair a couple of minutes of leash.
12.30pm BSTAnd they're off! The flag goes down and a couple of riders from wildcard teams look to go up the road – Jan Barta of Team Netapp-Endura and Jean-Marc Bideau of Bretagne-Seche.
The pack passes King's College. Photograph: Laurent Cipriani/AP Updated at 1.05pm BST 12.20pm BST The riders roll through Cambridge for the neutralised start. The jersey wearers – Vincenzo Nibali in yellow, Peter Sagan in green and Cyril Lemoine polkadots – lead the way.
12.16pm BSTA couple of teams are publishing their on-bike stage footage on YouTube. They give you a great sense of the speed and claustrophobia of the peloton:
11.58am BSTIt's a good job the road is flat today, because stage two was tough:
Ohweiaaaa...what a day!!!i can barely find words to describe how hard this stage was...that's what I imagine how hard #liegebastogneliege is
— John Degenkolb (@johndegenkolb) July 6, 2014
It would appear stage 2 was a little hard. Even the honey badger needs a nap. pic.twitter.com/0ep4I47rcM
— Andrew Talansky (@andrewtalansky) July 6, 2014
(The Honey Badger is Garmin's Ramunas Navardauskas, who will be one of Talansky's key lieutenants for as long as the American is in the hunt for yellow and a decent shout for a breakaway win at some point if he's allowed to forego his protective duties at any point)
Updated at 11.58am BST 11.51am BSTThe crowds have been, in general, superb over the weekend but not everyone was quite as thoughtful as they perhaps should have been. To the age-old dangers of dogs, punctures and, well, gravity, we can now add the dreaded selfie.
"The worst thing is when people have got their backs to the peloton taking selfies,” said Team Sky's Geraint Thomas after Sunday's stage. “I had a few of those and they don’t see us coming and are stood in the road and it is very dodgy."
Several riders have also taken to Twitter to express their concern:
I think I've never been this scared in a race. We really like you to cheer for us, but please stay off the road!
— Tom Dumoulin (@tom_dumoulin) July 6, 2014
Standing I the middle of the road with you back turned while 200 cyclists come at you, just to take a selfie. #think #TDF2014
— Tejay van Garderen (@tejay_van) July 6, 2014
A dangerous mix of vanity and stupidity.........
— Tejay van Garderen (@tejay_van) July 6, 2014
One thing that I think is a bit dangerous is the TDF selfie. So I have decided to do the top three most dangerous selfies.
— Zak Dempster (@ZakDempster) July 6, 2014
1. Selfie with a human predator (shark, lion, crocodile etc).
— Zak Dempster (@ZakDempster) July 6, 2014
2. Selfie with oncoming train (on tracks).
3. Selfie with back to tdf peloton.
So if you're planning to watch the peloton zoom by today, please keep off the road.
Updated at 11.55am BST 11.32am BST PreambleBon matin, tout le monde. And welcome to live coverage of stage three of the 2014 Tour de France.
After the fireworks of Jenkin Road on Sunday, today's stage from Cambridge to London should be a far more sedate affair. The parcours is flatter than a cheap battery so the sprinters will be to the fore. There are no awkward little ramps in the final kilometre to worry the pure speedsters, so it's made for the in-form Marcel Kittel, winner of the opening stage, or the Gorilla, Andre Griepel, who should enjoy the wide expanses of the Mall. It's the same finish as the 2012 Olympic road race – Mark Cavendish was among the favourites then and would've been among the favourites now. Alexander Vinokourov, Rigoberto Uran and a flurry of attacks kept him out of the running two years ago. This time around a stretch of Harrogate Tarmac has done the damage.
Profile and map of today's stage
Profile and map of Tour de France 2014 stage 3. Graphic: Guardian At 155km today's stage is the shortest until Stage 17 in the Pyrenees and time-wise it's likely to be the quickest. The riders set off at 12.15pm BST and should be crossing the finish line at around 3.45pm BST. So about three-and-a-half hours from Cambridge to London, which is incidentally roughly the same time as it takes on a First Capital Connect train. And we're expecting large crowds again, with people scrambling for space and crammed in next to each other between Cambridge and London, much as they would be on a First Capital etc and so forth.
Share Tweet this6 Jul 2014: Tour de France 2014 stage 2: Vincenzo Nibali wins – as it happened
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This week's bestsellers by Jan Cleijne £11.99
2. Highlightsby Frank Keating £12.99
3. You are the Refby Paul Trevillion £9.99
4. Cricket: A Modern Anthologyby Jonathan Agnew £12.39
5. Break Pointby Kevin Mitchell £14.89
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