Tour de France: Bradley Wiggins second to Cancellara in prologue
Fabian Cancellara's stunning time trial denied Bradley Wiggins the first yellow jersey of the 2012 Tour de France.
The Swiss rider raced home in seven minutes 13 seconds to beat Britain's Wiggins by seven seconds in the opening 6.4km prologue in Liege, Belgium.
France's Sylvain Chavanel was third but pre-race favourite Wiggins leads 2011 winner Cadel Evans by 10 seconds.
"It's the perfect start," said Wiggins. "I said to the team there was one man who could beat me and that was Fabian."
He added: "I was really calm, really relaxed. I keep taking myself back to reality by putting my headphones on, taking myself out of this madness because this isn't reality at this moment.
"It's just a bike race. It would be very easy to be drawn into all this. There's a long way to Paris."
Cancellara produced a tremendous display of time-trial riding to win his fourth successive prologue and in doing so equal Bernard Hinault's record of starting the first stage in yellow for a fifth time.
He broke his collarbone in a fall during the Tour of Flanders in April and had been a doubt to make the start of the Tour but showed he was feeling no ill effects on the streets of Liege.
Wiggins's perfect start - Brailsford
"Every victory is important but [Saturday] was special after a hard comeback," Cancellara said. "I've done what I had to do. I was motivated and it's a victory I won't forget for a long time."
Chavanel surprised many by setting a target of 7'20" midway through the prologue and his time proved unbeatable until Wiggins crossed the line.
The 32-year-old was six seconds down at the intermediate split but powered through the second half of the race to eclipse Chavenel's time by less than half a second.
This year's Giro d'Italia winner Ryder Hesjedal and another rival for the overall victory, Italy's Vincenzo Nibali failed to threaten Wiggins's time, while Evans, as defending champion the last man to complete the course, also lost ground.
However, the Australian was not overly concerned with his start. "It was not good, but not bad," said Evans, who has also twice finished as runner-up.
Analysis
"That went pretty much as we thought it would. Cancellara was very much the favourite and proved he is in good condition, while Wiggins will be satisfied. Deep down he will not have expected to beat Cancellara but he has put 10 seconds on Evans. It's not a significant gap and Evans will not be worried. Likewise, Wiggins will not be thinking that the job has been done."
"There's only one GC (general classification) rider ahead of me, but I was half expecting that with Wiggins, with his background in very short, flat efforts.
"It's 6.4km out of 3,500, so in that regard it's a small comparison."
World time trial champion Tony Martin's hopes of a win were ended by a puncture, although the German recovered to finish just 23 seconds adrift, while sprinter Peter Sagan, a Slovakian chasing the green points jersey which Cavendish won last year, lost crucial seconds when he almost crashed on a bend.
Brits Chris Froome, Stephen Cummings, David Millar and Mark Cavendish all produced strong time trial performances to finish 11th, 14th, 15th and 42nd respectively.
Sunday's stage one is a 198km ride from Liege to Seraing which features a 2.5km ascent to the finish.
Prologue result:
1. Fabian Cancellara (Swi) Radioshack Nissan Trek - 7'13.470 (53.2km/h)
2. Bradley Wiggins (GB) Team Sky @ 7"
3. Sylvain Chavanel (Fra) Omega Pharma Quickstep @ same time
4. Teejay van Garderen (US) BMC Racing @ 10"
5. Edvald Boasson Hagen (Nor) Team Sky @ 11"
Selected others:
9. Philippe Gilbert (Bel) BMC Racing @ 13"
11. Chris Froome (GB) Team Sky @ 16"
13. Cadel Evans (Aus) BMC Racing @ 17"
14. Vincenzo Nibali (Ita) Liquigas @ 18"
15. Ryder Hesjedal (Can) Garmin @ same time
16. David Millar (GB) Garmin @ same time
17. Steven Cummings (GB) BMC Racing @ same time
42. Mark Cavendish (GB) Team Sky @ 23"
138. Frank Schleck (Lux) Radioshack Nissan Trek @ 38"
See the full tour classifications (external)
Comments
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Comment number 55.
Lanterne rouge1st July 2012 - 12:53
35.
The_Goatee_of_Steven_Gerrard
I don't think you can declare a sport clean unless it has the kind of testing regime the UCI have for cycling. No other sport has, so taking the logic of your earlier post, no sport is clean and therefore no sport should be reported on.
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Comment number 54.
mattconn19121st July 2012 - 12:53
To describe Wiggins as being 'thwarted' of victory indicates he's had a disastrous ride. On the contrary, he's struck an early blow by gaining 10 seconds on Evans.
A quick mention too for the legend that is Phil Liggett - this is his 40th year covering Le Tour and for me he's the best sports commentator on British TV.
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Comment number 53.
JJ1st July 2012 - 11:38
Well done ITV! You have again highlighted why the bbc is so bad at supporting cycling on their main sports page, with live commentary thoughout the tour instead of sending a reporter to moan about the drugs in the sport, if I had to cycle up an Alp I would have to take drugs! Never mind I will click on the cricket link on the main page, “wait I need to take some more drugs” it’s so boring.
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Comment number 52.
harbourmaster1st July 2012 - 11:22
Wiggins was leading the time trial until Fabien came along and bettered the time. In that sense he can said to have been 'thwarted'. Though I do take the point regarding a 'divine right' to win and how damaging this can be (e.g. England football team).
Can we please desist in the 'Beeb bashing' on these threads. It can be just as harmful to the image of cycling than any perceived ropey coverage
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Comment number 51.
Kurt Replei1st July 2012 - 11:00
18.
The_Goatee_of_Steven_Gerrard
I can't believe that this is still reported as a sport.
After all of the doping scandals the whole thing is a mockery.
------------------------------------------------------------
The reason sports like cycling/athletics catch cheats is because of the extremely strict testing regimes.
Football is lax at testing, and cheating is coached and encouraged on the pitch
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Comments 5 of 55