Maiden Tour stage a huge remedy for Dessel
November 22, 2024
Login
Home
News
Ride Maps
Blogs
Forums
Gear
Resource
VeloTV
Photos
Current Articles
|
Archives
|
RSS Feeds
|
Search
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Maiden Tour stage a huge remedy for Dessel
by Agence France-Presse at 1:52 PM EST
comments
Categories:
Pro Cycling
,
Tour de France
Frenchman Cyril Dessel of AG2R finally drew a line under his nightmare 2007 season with a prestigious maiden win on the Tour de France 16th stage on Tuesday.
Dessel came to the wider cycling world's attention when he wore the race's yellow jersey for a day in 2006 - when he finally had to hand it over to disgraced American Floyd Landis.
A year later Dessel disappeared almost entirely from the peloton after succumbing to toxoplasmosis.
Months of hard work followed during the winter, and he re-emerged with important stage wins at the Four Days of Dunkirk, the Tour of Catalonia and the Dauphine Libere earlier this year.
After a quiet Tour de France thus far, Dessel seized his chance with both hands after escaping from a small breakaway group at the end of a long descent, outsprinting compatriot Sandy Casar prior to the finish line. "I've come a long way since 2007, which was a really difficult year for me," said Dessel after claiming his team's first stage win of this year's race. "I was really at rock bottom because of my health problems, but thankfully I was given a lot of support from friends and family. I worked hard to get back into shape and today all that effort has paid off."
Dessel's bid to shine on the race's earlier stages was kept in check by yet another health problem, although one that was a little more delicate. "I was in real pain at the start of the Tour because of hemmorhoids. But today I knew I couldn't let the opportunity go begging because it's not every year there's a stage that suits you. "I came close in 2006, and I got the yellow jersey as consolation. "After my wins earlier this year I knew I wanted to add a stage win from the Tour. It's great, a bit of a relief really - and it's good for French cycling."
Dessel had been part of an earlier breakaway group that caught Germany's Stefan Schumacher shortly before the summit of the Cime de la Bonette-Restefond.
After a long descent with three other riders, the 33-year-old Frenchman made his decisive move inside the last kilometre to finish ahead of Casar, with Spaniard David Arroyo finishing third ahead of Ukrainian Yaroslav Popovych. "I knew from looking at the race book there was a bend in the final 150 metres so I knew I had to attack with 400 metres to go because after the bend it would have been impossible to overtake," he added. "It was a really tense finish and I told myself I had to stay as calm as possible, but in the end it worked out perfectly."
comments
Follow @Pro_Cycling
Tweet
Subscribe via RSS or daily email
Contact the editor about this article
WHAT'S HAPPENING RIGHT NOW
RECENT
READ
Darach McQuaid acknowledges June deadline for plans to restart Tour of Ireland in 2015
Third climbing stage to feature on Presidential Tour of Turkey route, GC battle will be more intense
Philip Lavery interview: Walking away from the sport, then getting a second chance
Stetina wants rethink on dossards: ‘Cycling is still an amateur sport in so many ways’
Walker undergoes heart operation, retires; Philip Lavery to take his place on Synergy Baku team
McQuaid ends his part in legal action against Kimmage, Verbruggen persists
Planned new finale to Milan Sanremo in doubt after La Pompeiana climb and descent deemed too dangerous
Degenkolb beats Hushovd in bunch sprint to make it three from three in the Tour of the Mediterranean
Froome set to begin season in Tour of Oman, gunning for strong overall result
Past winner Gesink feeling on course for strong result in Tour of Oman
Wiggins admits pressure got to him in 2013, speaks about difficulty of being defending Tour champion
Démare swoops to victory on concluding stage of Tour of Qatar, Terpstra takes overall
Degenkolb notches up first win of his 2014 season on stage one of Tour of the Mediterranean
NetApp Endura still perfecting sprint train for Bennett
Greipel fastest in battle for Tour of Qatar’s fifth stage
No articles match criteria.
Terms and Conditions
|
Privacy Policy
Copyright 2008-2013 by VeloNation LLC
About
Advertising
Mission
Contact
Jobs
Content
Pro Cycling News
General Cycling Articles
Training and Health
Gear Reviews
Community
Directory
Blogs
Photos
Forums
Groups
VeloTV