Tour De France Odds Stage 14

Tour De France Odds Stage 14 Rating: 3,8/5 6308 votes
  1. Tour De France Odds Stage 14 2018
  2. Tour De France Odds Stage 14 Results
  3. Tour De France 2020 Stage 14 Odds
  4. Tour De France Odds Stage 14 Live

Søren Kragh Andersen capped another collective effort from Sunweb to win stage 14 of the Tour de France into Lyon. The Dane attacked with just over 3km remaining to win his team’s second stage of the race, with Luka Mezgec (Mitchelton-Scott) taking second and Simone Consoni (Cofidis) finishing third.

Tour de France betting odds boom. When Bradley Wiggins won the 2012 Tour de France it was a unique piece of history and the pinnacle for British cycling. It created a new wave of enthusiasm for the sport within the UK and saw cycling betting turnovers sore. Analysis from stage 14 of the 2019 Tour de France. News from the #1 sports destination and #HomeofCycling in Europe. Watch LIVE anytime, anywhere via eurospo.

Peter Sagan (Bora-hansroghe) finished fourth to reignite his challenge for the green jersey as Primož Roglič (Jumbo Visma) retained his lead in the yellow jersey.

Sunweb started their assault on the penultimate climb with Tiesj Benoot attacking first and creating a small but effective gap on an already reduced peloton. The Belgian was brought back on the descent with

Lennard Kamna (Bora-Hansgrohe) going clear on the final climb of the Côte de la Croix-Rousse. Thomas de Gendt (Lotto Soudal) and Julian Alaphilippe (Quickstep) also went clear with just over 5km to but when they were caught Sunweb fired off previous stage winner Marc Hirschi with 3.8km to go. With so many team leaders isolated the likes of Greg Van Avermaet and Sagan were forced to cover moves and when the three-time world champion neutralized one attack and the pace briefly slowed Kragh Andersen executed a perfectly timed attack with just over 3km to go.

© Provided by Cycling News Stage winner Team Sunweb rider Denmarks Soren Kragh Andersen celebrates as he crosses the finish line at the end of the 14th stage of the 107th edition of the Tour de France cycling race 197 km between ClermontFerrand and Lyon on September 12 2020 Photo by STEPHANE MAHE POOL AFP Photo by STEPHANE MAHEPOOLAFP via Getty Images

The Dane quickly built up a winning margin in the technical run-in and not for the first time in this year’s race Sunweb demonstrated their ability to translate numbers into win.

How it unfolded

On a day that should have seen a break decide the finish of stage 14 of the Tour de France, the undercurrent within this race to decide the green jersey took centre stage as Peter Sagan’s team once more put up a resolute fight in what many believe had become an unwinnable battle.

Tour de france odds stage 14 live

There was a break of sorts, with Stefan Küng (Groupama-FDJ) and Edward Theuns (Trek-Segafredo) eventually pushing clear and building up a near six-minute lead but with Bora defiantly sticking with their talismanic leader in his quest for another green jersey there was little chance in the bunch enjoying a relative rest day.

The terrain was perfect for Sagan, to be fair, who put yesterday’s breakaway hero Max Schachmann on the front over the fourth cat climb of the Côte du château d'Aulteribe, and while Sam Bennett gamely hung on in green for as long as possible he was forced to relent before the summit and let the Bora duo go. Sagan duly took 15 points at the intermediate sprint that came just after the descent but with Bennett taking 10 points a few minutes later, it was clear that Sagan’s possible comeback in the competition would be arduous. For all that effort, he only drew back five points on Bennett’s substantial lead.

Yet the three-time world champion wouldn’t give up. On the second category Col du Béal he once more called on Bora – a team that came into this race with a fierce GC contingent – to move to the front and lift the pace. It felt like a GC race as the Bora train lined out the bunch with Jumbo Visma and Ineos Grenadiers in their coattails. Up head, Kung and Theuns saw their advantage with the FDJ ride eventually pushing clear before the summit with his lead shredded to around three minutes and Theuns soon caught.

Bora’s pace-setting cut Bennett adrift just before the summit but with the Côte de Courreau just around the corner 30 seconds quickly expanded to almost two minutes as his Belgian team failed to stem the tide.

On the long descent, Bora were joined by CCC and their help eventually lead to Bennett sitting up, while Kung was caught with 80km remaining.

Race reset

With Bennett dispatched and not coming back the race began to settle into a more regular rhythm. CCC and Bora remained at the front of the peloton as the race entered the final 40km. Jumbo Visma, Trek Segafredo and Ineos moved up just ahead of the two final fourth category climbs before Roglic’s squad took complete control through Tony Martin, Wout Van Aert and Robert Gesink in the lead into the Côte de la Duchère as the road narrowed. Ineos made a play just as the road kicked up with Luke Rowe bringing Bernal close to the front but the GC contenders were always going to fight for space with the stage hunters.

Tiesj Benoot (Sunweb) created a gap on the lower slopes and created a gap with 11km to go. Valentin Madouas (Groupama-FDJ) made a move but the peloton was back together with 7..4km to go.

Richie Porte survived a late scare and was forced to take Kenny Ellisonde’s bike after a mechanical just before the final attacks on the Côte de la Croix-Rousse.

PlaceRider (Country) TeamResult
1Søren Kragh Andersen (Den) Team Sunweb04:28:10
2Luka Mezgec (Slo) Mitchelton-Scott00:00:15
3Simone Consonni (Ita) Cofidis00:00:15
4Peter Sagan (Svk) Bora-Hansgrohe00:00:15
5Casper Phillip Pedersen (Den) Team Sunweb00:00:15
6Jasper Stuyven (Bel) Trek-Segafredo00:00:15
7Matteo Trentin (Ita) CCC Team00:00:15
8Oliver Naesen (Bel) AG2R la Mondiale00:00:15
9Sonny Colbrelli (Ita) Bahrain McLaren00:00:15
10Marc Hirschi (Swi) Team Sunweb00:00:15
Brief Stage
PlaceRider (Country) TeamResult
1Primoz Roglic (Slo) Team Jumbo-Visma61:03:00
2Tadej Pogacar (Slo) UAE Team Emirates00:00:44
3Egan Arley Bernal Gomez (Col) Ineos Grenadiers00:00:59
4Rigoberto Uran (Col) EF Pro Cycling00:01:10
5Nairo Quintana (Col) Team Arkea-Samsic00:01:12
6Miguel Angel Lopez Moreno (Col) Astana Pro Team00:01:31
7Adam Yates (GBr) Mitchelton-Scott00:01:42
8Mikel Landa Meana (Spa) Bahrain McLaren00:01:55
9Richie Porte (Aus) Trek-Segafredo00:02:06
10Enric Mas Nicolau (Spa) Movistar Team00:02:54
General Classification after stage 14

A day after the TT has shaken up the GC once again, the riders who lost lots of time on Friday get a chance to try to make some of it back with a tough stage that finishes on top of the Tourmalet, a legendary Tour de France ‘Haute Category’ climb, being used for the 87th time.

The stage starts out easy enough for the first 45kms or so, with just a few bumps in the first 18kms to get over, they will just help with establishing the break of the day, rather than stressing the GC men. Soon after they pass 45kms though the road starts to rise as they approach the Category 1 Col du Soulor.

The Soulor is 12kms long at 7.8% average, with some steep 10-11% sections around half-way up for 3kms. This is where we should see some teams like Ineos or Movistar push the pace to thin out the pack. That’s followed by a 21km long descent, but once at the bottom the road starts climbing immediately and continues to do so for the next 36kms, gently at first for 17kms or so until Luz-Saint-Sauveur.

That village marks the start of the Tourmalet climb, it’s 19kms long at an average of 7.4%. It’s a pretty steady climb for 16kms, but gets steeper in the last 3kms, hitting gradients of 10-11%. It stays steep all the way to the line.

Contenders

It could be a close-run thing between whether the break makes it on a day like this or whether the GC men’s teams go so hard on the Soulor and the Tourmalet that they reel them in before the top. I’m leaning more towards it being a GC day, it’s a short stage at just 117kms, so if Movistar, Ineos, Astana, and Mitchelton Scott want to they will be able to keep the break on a pretty short leash and mop them up late on.

From the GC there are probably 10 guys who can win this stage, and not surprisingly they are all near the top of the betting. Betway opened their book on this stage on Wednesday, and admirable feat three days before the stage, and if gave us an early indication that they too see it as a GC day.

Thibaut Pinot, Mikel Landa and Geraint Thomas had been made the +600 co-, with Egan Bernal just behind them at +650, but since Geraint Thomas stormed to 2nd place today he has been cut to just 3/1. Thibaut Pinot was a very angry man after losing time in the crosswinds on stage 10, he was shaping up to be one of the biggest challengers to Thomas and Bernal following his finish on La Planche on stage 6 and his attack with Alaphilippe on stage 8 which bagged him 26.

He was in great climbing form earlier this season too, winning the stage to Grand Colombier in the Tour de l’Ain and finishing 4th on that Queen stage in the Dauphine. This stage could come down to a bunch of 6 or 8 guys slugging it out in the last few kilometers and could come down to a sprint finish, and Pinot is one of the best finishers here on a finish like this. He did a great TT today, the legs are good and he will have fire in his belly to try to take some time back.

Geraint Thomas only needs to watch and mark and follow now that he has such a commanding lead over his main GC rivals, but Thomas is hungry and likes to win and will know the significance of winning the first summit finish of the race can have on his rivals. Not just the possible time gap and bonus seconds, but the psychological damage it can do.

He probably thought that he’d be riding into the yellow jersey pretty soon, and might have been a bit defensive tomorrow, but that plan might have to change now that Alaphilippe is starting to become a real threat and holds a healthy lead over him.

Ineos are sure to go very hard in the last 5kms, with Poels, Castroviejo, Rowe, and Kwiatkowski ripping the legs off their rivals, before a possible late attack from Thomas in the last kilometer. It will have to be a very strong attack though I think to get away from Yates, Quintana, Landa, Kruijswijk, Porte and the like, and it might be once he’s pulled back, he reigns it back a little and lets the likes of Pinot fight out the finish.

But this stage is also a good looking one for Egan Bernal, it’s the first opportunity for the young Colombian to shine in the high mountains. Winner of that really hard stage in the Tour de Suisse to St Gotthard, a climb that averaged 7.4% for 12kms, he kicked away from the rest with 2.7kms to go after a great job by the team and kept pulling it out all the way to the line.

But will he be let go? Will team orders dictate that he works for Thomas and chase down rival attacks? It is likely, so it makes it hard to back him at that price, although he won’t be far off, he could well be in the top 3.

Mikel Landa is a different proposition for how this stage could be won though, he won’t win if it comes to a sprint finish among the favorites, so will have to attack early. But where will he attack? He is over five minutes back on GC so might be given a little bit of rope, he might even attack on the Soulor, bridge to Erviti or Soler who might have gotten in the break and kick on on the Tourmalet. I wouldn’t put it past him.

But it might all depend I guess on how Nairo Quintana is feeling – he was looking really good up until earlier this week but he’s got caught out in a few splits and crashes which have cost him unnecessary stress and aggravation, and his TT today was really poor – he now sits almost 4 minutes down on Alap. He is another though who should love this climb and could well attack from a long way out too. But we rarely see a Quintana attack work to good effect in the last few years, he just doesn’t have the punch and acceleration (or ambition it seems) he used to have.

Tour De France Odds Stage 14

All too often in the past Movistar left their moves too late in a race, but they struck early and hard in the Giro with Carapaz on stage 13 coming after Landa and gapping his rivals, maybe they are learning to be a bit more aggressive… Will Nairo be able to oblige? I’d love to see him dancing away from them all and putting Ineos under pressure, we might even see Bernal being forced to go after him, but it’s hard to see it based on his performances in the last few years when it mattered most.

Adam Yates has been pushed out from 14/1 to 22/1 now after his disastrous TT today, he has gone from a genuine podium hope to being almost 4 minutes down in one day. He needs to get aggressive now though and he too won’t be far off on this climb, if he can hang in there with the front group to the last kilometer I think he has the ability to kick away from them to win.

He has got a great sprint on a 10% finish like this, an example being when he outsprinted Bernal and Dan Martin to the top of Vallter 2000 in the Tour of Catalunya in March. The mood in the team would have been buzzing after Simon’s (and Impey’s) win and the brothers often bounce back in the face of adversity, so we could see Adam fight back tomorrow, and 22/1 is too big to ignore.

Dan Martin is another who could attack late on this stage, maybe taking advantage of a bit of a standoff between Ineos and the other favorites, if he gets a small gap with 2kms to go they might not catch him.

Tour De France Odds Stage 14 2018

Could it also be the day we see Jakob Fuglsang start to fight back? He was very good earlier in the season, and was superb in the Dauphine, finishing a very good 2nd on Pipay. He was also very strong in the Tirreno stage to Recanati, which, although a lot shorter, the finish was a similar gradient. He finds himself outside the top 10 now, four and a half minutes down, he needs to start making up time fast. He looked very tired at the finish to me today though.

Enric Mas will be watching and marking Bernal wherever he goes, but can he do anything himself? He finished a superb 9th in the TT today, he’s clearly got good legs, but will he now be asked to try to help keep Alap in yellow, or will they try to protect his white jersey? Or will they play two hands? Will Mas go up the road while Thomas and Ineos keep an eye on Alaphilippe? Or vice-versa, will Alaphilippe attack and force Ineos and the rest to waste energy chasing him down?

There are others who will try to win it from far out, be it in the break or by attacking on the Soulor maybe and hoping to get a bit of a headstart. Ilnur Zakarin is one who springs to mind, he should like this climb and maybe after a tough opening week he’s starting to find his legs – he finished just 6″ slower than Bardet today, so he put a bit of an effort in it seems to maybe test the legs. I got him at 50/1 two days ago, he’s still 40/1 with Bet365 though and that’s worth a small interest.

But I think it will most likely be a GC day, and I think it’s a day we see the French carry on their strong run with another stage win – only this time it’s Thibaut Pinot I fancy to finish off the stage after a strong ride at the front of the race. Adam Yates might not be far off either though. Let’s just hope for some fireworks though, would be great to see all those guys who have lost time take the fight to Ineos and Alaphilippe. Will be interesting to see though if Alap can hold on in there on a climb over 2,000m and hold on to his yellow jersey though.

Recommendations:

Tour De France Odds Stage 14 Results

1pt win on Thibaut Pinot at 6/1 with Ladbrokes

0.5pts e/w on Adam Yates at 22/1 with various

Tour De France 2020 Stage 14 Odds

0.25pts e/w on Ilnur Zakarin at 40/1 with various

Matchbets

Tour De France Odds Stage 14 Live

Dan Martin to beat Bardet and Guillaume Martin to beat Kreuziger – 2pts at 5/4