Super Cav off the mark ... British ace wins second stage after brilliant sprint finish
Mark Cavendish won a first Tour de France stage as world champion and a 21st of his stellar career on Tuesday.
The 27-year-old from the Isle of Man operated primarily on his own in the finale and showed his supreme bike handling ability on the 207.5-kilometre second stage from Vise to Tournai to win ahead of Andre Greipel (Lotto-Belisol) and Matt Goss (Orica-GreenEdge).
With Team Sky's priority Bradley Wiggins' bid for overall victory and the Olympic Games on July 28 Cavendish's main focus, it is anticipated the points classification's green jersey will be on the shoulders of another rider come Paris on July 22.
Making his Mark: The British star sealed the 21st Tour stage win of his brilliant career on Tuesday
But Cavendish, now sixth behind Eddy Merckx on the list of all-time Tour stage winners and one stage behind Lance Armstrong, appears unwilling to give up the prize without a fight.
Fabian Cancellara (RadioShack-Nissan) retained the race leader's yellow jersey, with Wiggins second overall, still 10 seconds clear of defending champion Cadel Evans (BMC Racing). All three finished in the main bunch.
Main man: Cavendish celebrates his win on the second stage of the Tour de France
Christophe Kern (Europcar), Michael Morkov (Saxo Bank-Tinkoff Bank) and Anthony Roux (FDJ-Bigmat) formed the day's three-man break which had little chance of survival on a route made for the fast men of the peloton.
The intermediate sprint came 54.5km from the finish, with Kern, Roux and Morkov riding across without contesting the race for the line, leaving the first rider of the peloton chasing 13 points.
Driving for the line: Cavendish out-sprints Germany's Andre Greipel at the end of the second stage
Cavendish was alone for Team Sky and crossed behind former HTC-Highroad team-mates Goss and Mark Renshaw (Rabobank) to claim nine points.
The gap to the escapees was kept to under three minutes and Roux launched a solo attack as his two fellow escapees were swept up with around 25km to go on a straight run-in into Tournai.
Photo finish: Cavendish does enough to see of the challenge from Greipel
With a full-speed peloton in pursuit, Roux was caught with just under 15km remaining. The sprinters' teams lined up, while Evans' BMC Racing squad were also prominent at the front, with Wiggins staying out of trouble alongside. Cavendish's sprint rival Marcel Kittel (Argos-Shimano), though, was at the back of the peloton due to illness.
The tempo was high as the peloton negotiated a technical and tight conclusion, including two roundabouts and a narrowing section of road.
Water view: The Tour always throws up spectacular routes for riders and fans alike
Lotto-Belisol moved to the front with 1.5km to go, but all the main protagonists were present as Cavendish tucked in behind Greipel.
With his team-mates primarily assigned to support Wiggins, Cavendish, who had early support from Bernhard Eisel and Edvald Boasson Hagen, had to freestyle from wheel-to-wheel in the finale before timing his move to perfection, rounding Greipel with 200metres to go and winning the dash for the line to add to his formidable total of stage wins.
It was the first time Cavendish has won a stage of the Tour outside France.
Still in the hunt: Bradley Wiggins
Cavendish talked down his prospects of retaining the green jersey in a year where both his and the team's priorities lie elsewhere but vowed to make the most of what chances he has.
'I had to leave it a little bit late but I should have gone earlier...I really had to lunge for the line,' he told British Eurosport.
'I'm not really chasing (the green jersey) this year. I'll keep it in the back of my mind and go for every opportunity but I'm not going to put myself in the ground for it.
'It's not possible to chase the green jersey alone so I'm just trying to get the stages and then see.
'I'll go for the intermediates but I'm not going to chase down breaks to go for it. It's about minimising points lost really.'
Assessing the stage itself, a typically tough early day in the Tour, he added: "It was so hectic. If it had just been sprinters it would have been okay but every type of climber and GC (general classification) rider was at the finish.
'I knew it would be difficult, dangerous and hectic here but I came in without any pressure. it was just about being plucky about it.
'I knew the finish and knew there was a headwind, so I knew you could come from behind.'
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