London 2012 Olympics: Jessica Ennis and and Greg Rutherford need improvement

Jessica and Greg need to find a leap in form

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UPDATED:

21:01 GMT, 8 July 2012

It was not a great weekend for Britons who will be long jumping at the Olympic Games.

Jessica Ennis, who needs to leap at least 6.40 metres to be competitive in the heptathlon, had another poor outing at Loughborough, managing only 6.21m.

Leap of faith: Jessica Ennis needs to improve her long jump

Leap of faith: Jessica Ennis needs to improve her long jump

Admittedly it was into a headwind but the rest of her series was far worse.

Meanwhile in Madrid, Greg Rutherford, joint leader this year in the event, abandoned the competition after three attempts because of cramp.

His best at that point was only 7.81m with a lot of help from the wind, more than half a metre below his season's best.

'Not a great night,' he tweeted, admitting that his first jump was not even close to taking off from the board.

Sanchez agony

Olympic road race champion Samuel Sanchez's hopes of defending his title at London 2012 appear over after he broke his right hand and injured his left shoulder in a crash during the Tour de France on Sunday.

Ruled out: Samuel Sanchez injured his shoulder

Ruled out: Samuel Sanchez injured his shoulder

The Spaniard, 34, hurt during the eighth stage from Belfort to Porrentruy in Switzerland, immediately quit the Tour.

Gay hails Blake

Tyson Gay knows the 100m is more than just about beating 'the monster, the big dog' Usain Bolt.

'(Yohan) Blake is the favourite on time,' said the American after winning his first post-US Olympic trials race in Paris.

Backing: Tyson Gay (left) says Yohan Blake (right) should be favou8rite

Backing: Tyson Gay (left) says Yohan Blake (right) should be favou8rite

Backing: Tyson Gay (left) says Yohan Blake (right) should be favou8rite

Gay runs 100m against another Jamaican Asafa Powell in the Aviva Diamond League meeting in London on Friday.

Tour de France 2012: Bradley Wiggins relieved to keep yellow jersey

Wiggins relieved to keep yellow jersey after challenge from defending champion Evans

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UPDATED:

16:25 GMT, 8 July 2012

Leader: Wiggins retains the yellow jersey

Leader: Wiggins retains the yellow jersey

Bradley Wiggins admitted he was made to work hard to retain his Tour de France yellow jersey and overall 10-second lead over Cadel Evans.

Wiggins had to be alert after Evans tried gain vital seconds in the closing moments of the 157.5-kilometre stage eight from Belfort to Porrentruy in Switzerland, but the Briton had enough strength to finish level with the defending champion.

Frenchman Thibaut Pinot triumphed, 26 seconds from Evans (BMC Racing), with Tony Gallopin (RadioShack-Nissan) third and Wiggins fourth.

'I think it was a lot harder than I expected it to be,' Wiggins told Eurosport.

'I was surprised at the size of the group over the last climb but we were there and we were present so it was good day for the team.

'The boys were incredible, they really marshalled the race fantastically and set us up to be able to go with them on the last climb.

'It was a tough day for a lot of people.'

Wiggins became the fifth Briton to don the maillot jaune on stage seven and will be hoping to extend his lead at Monday's 41.5km time-trial to Besancon.

But the three-time Olympic champion thinks he is already in a tremendous position heading into the next couple of days.

Keeping in touch: Wiggins stays with Cadel Evans (centre)

Keeping in touch: Wiggins stays with Cadel Evans (centre)

Keeping in touch: Wiggins stays with Cadel Evans (centre)

'It's a fantastic position to be in after the first week and two tough days down,' he added.

'The time-trial tomorrow and then a rest day so it's certainly some of the toughest ones ticked off, that's for sure.'

Chris Froome was delighted after helping team-mate Wiggins resist the challenge of Australian Evans.

Froome finished seventh on Sunday to move up to sixth in the overall standings.

'Cadel tried and a lot of people were trying today to put us under pressure but Bradley's in super form and we've all worked really, really hard for this so we're not just going to let this get away from us so easily,' Froome told Eurosport.

Winner: Pinot celebrates on the podium

Winner: Pinot celebrates on the podium

Froome does not expect the relentless pressure of the Tour to let up and revealed he is not particularly relishing tomorrow's time-trial.

'Time-trials are one of the hardest disciplines in cycling, you've just got to brace yourself,' he said.

'Turn yourself inside out to get the best time possible. It's something Bradley excels in so hopefully it should be a good day for us.

'I'll give it my best shot and see where I end up at the end of the day.'

The only downside for Froome is that he lost the King of the Mountains polka dot jersey to Astana's Fredrik Kessiakoff.

'The jersey wasn't another objective for me coming to the Tour de France so it was a bonus,' he added.

Tour de France 2012: Bradley Wiggins rant at doping question

Tour leader Wiggins in ferocious expletive-laden rant after doping question

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UPDATED:

16:49 GMT, 8 July 2012

Bradley Wiggins responded with an expletive-laden rant to a question over doping in cycling after successfully defending the yellow jersey on stage eight of the Tour de France.

The 32-year-old Team Sky rider is seeking to become the first British winner in the 99th edition of the Tour and entered the race as one of the favourites after wins in the Paris-Nice, Tour de Romandie and Criterium du Dauphine stage races this season.

Not so mellow yellow: Bradley Wiggins reacted angrily to questions after he retained the leader's jersey on stage eight of the Tour de France

Not so mellow yellow: Bradley Wiggins reacted angrily to questions after he retained the leader's jersey on stage eight of the Tour de France

Not so mellow yellow: Bradley Wiggins reacted angrily to questions after he retained the leader's jersey on stage eight of the Tour de France

After the 157.5-kilometre route from Belfort to Porrentruy, won by Thibaut Pinot (FDJ-Bigmat), Wiggins holds a 10-second advantage over defending champion Cadel Evans (BMC Racing) ahead of Monday's 41.5km time-trial to Besancon.

After stage eight, Wiggins was asked about Team Sky's recent performance on stage seven.

Attacks: Lance Armstrong continues to fight off allegations of doping during his pomp

Attacks: Lance Armstrong continues to fight off allegations of doping during his pomp

The British backed team were dominant throughout, provoking some commentators to compare the squad with that of seven-time winner Lance Armstrong's United States Postal Service squad in their heyday – and the cynics who suggest riders have to take drugs to win the Tour.

Wiggins said: 'I say they're just f*****g w*****s. I cannot be doing with people like that.

'It justifies their own bone-idleness because they can't ever imagine applying themselves to do anything in their lives.

'It's easy for them to sit under a pseudonym on Twitter and write that sort of s**t, rather than get off their arses in their own lives and apply themselves and work hard at something and achieve something.

'And that's ultimately it. C***s.'

Bradley Wiggins bags Tour de France yellow jersey as Brits dominate stage seven

There's Froome for all of us! Wiggins bags yellow jersey as Brits dominate stage seven

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UPDATED:

16:31 GMT, 7 July 2012

Bradley Wiggins took possession of
the Tour de France race leader's yellow jersey after a dominant
performance from Team Sky today, capped by a stage seven success for
fellow Briton Chris Froome.

Wiggins was third on the
199-kilometre route from Tomblaine to La Planche des Belles Filles as
Froome triumphed by two seconds from defending champion Cadel Evans (BMC
Racing).

The result saw Wiggins become the fifth Briton to don the maillot jaune and the first since David Millar in 2000.

Mellow yellow: Bradley Wiggins celebrates

Mellow yellow: Bradley Wiggins celebrates

BRITS IN YELLOW

Britons to have worn the yellow jersey.

Tom Simpson (1962, one day)

The first Briton to wear the maillot jaune.

Chris Boardman (1994, three days; 1997, one day; 1998, two days)

Won the Tour prologue on three occasions to enjoy spells in yellow.

Sean Yates (1994, one day)

A short-lived spell in yellow came towards the end of his career.

David Millar (2000, three days)

Like Boardman, Millar took the yellow jersey on his Tour debut after a prologue success.

Wiggins entered the 99th Tour as one of the favourites and will aim to finish with the prize in Paris on July 22.

Swiss rider Fabian Cancellara (RadioShack-Nissan) won the opening prologue in Liege last Saturday and entered the seventh stage with an advantage of seven seconds over Wiggins, with Evans 10 seconds further adrift, but crumbled, finishing almost two minutes behind.

Tomorrow's 157.5km eighth stage from Belfort to Porrentruy, Switzerland, features seven categorised climbs, but Wiggins, Evans and Froome may wait until Monday's 41.5km time-trial to Besancon to shake up the general classification further.

The overall standings showed Wiggins in possession of a 10-second lead over Evans, with Vincenzo Nibali 16 seconds adrift in third and Froome up to ninth, one minute 32 seconds adrift.

Froome with a view: Britain's Christopher Froome wins stage seven of the Tour de France

Froome with a view: Britain's Christopher Froome wins stage seven of the Tour de France

It was a tactical masterclass from Team Sky, who for the first time have a rider leading the most prestigious race in cycling.

The day's seven-man escape was caught on the lower slopes of the 5.9km finishing ascent to La Planches des Belles Filles, with Team Sky squad leading the peloton.

Team Sky were to the fore throughout the day – with world champion Mark Cavendish performing a team role by retrieving bottles from the team car – and the tempo they set up the final climb whittled down the overall contenders.

Christian Knees and Edvald Boasson Hagen led the British squad to the lower slopes of the final climb and Michael Rogers took over, before Richie Porte forged on. When Porte had done his turn, Froome maintained the pace, with Wiggins on his wheel and Evans shadowing him throughout.

Leading from the front: Bradley Wiggins (centre) will become the fifth Briton to wear the yellow Jersey

Leading from the front: Bradley Wiggins (centre) will become the fifth Briton to wear the yellow Jersey

The relentless pace reduced the group to five, Froome followed by Wiggins, Evans, Nibali (Liquigas-Cannondale) and Rein Taaramae (Cofidis).

Australian Evans accelerated away with one kilometre to go and Froome, Wiggins and Nibali went with him. Froome then summoned the energy to overtake Evans and dart for the line for a stunning first Tour stage win.

There was an even greater prize for Wiggins, who justified his pre-Tour favourite billing after wins in the Paris-Nice, Tour de Romandie and Criterium du Dauphine stage races.

The day's stage began with the peloton counting the cost of the crash 26km from the end of stage six to Metz, with Giro d'Italia champion Ryder Hesjedal (Garmin-Sharp) among those who abandoned. Anthony Delaplace (Saur-Sojasun) joined him, taking the total number of withdrawals to 17.

Tough competitor: Cadel Evans (right) came in second

Tough competitor: Cadel Evans (right) came in second

It was the most after seven days' racing since 1998, when the 17 withdrawals included the Festina team who were expelled following a doping scandal.

The best-placed of the day's seven-man escape group was Christophe Riblon (Ag2r La Mondiale), who began the day in 55th place, five minutes four seconds behind Cancellara.

The numbers in the breakaway persuaded Cavendish not to contest the day's intermediate sprint.

The world champion was later seen on domestique duty, returning to the Team Sky support car to retrieve water bottles for his team-mates and carrying them in his rainbow jersey.

Holding back: Mark Cavendish decided not to join the breakaway

Holding back: Mark Cavendish decided not to join the breakaway

Peter Sagan (Liquigas-Cannondale) won the peloton's dash for the line ahead of Matt Goss after the Orica-GreenEdge made a mess of their leadout, as the Slovakian consolidated his lead in the green jersey.

After two category three climbs, the escape had an advantage of three and a half minutes with 30km remaining.

The final climb had an average gradient of 8.5%, but Chris Boardman, one of four previous Britons to wear the maillot jaune, described the final 500 metres as among the steepest he had seen in a road race.

Proud moment: Bradley Wiggins takes the plaudits

Proud moment: Bradley Wiggins takes the plaudits

Team Sky and BMC Racing were prominent at the front of the peloton and, despite losing Hesjedal, Garmin-Sharp worked hard to reduce the deficit to the escape, apparently in a bid to help set up Dan Martin.

The breakaway's lead fell to under two minutes with 20km remaining and less than a minute with 12km to go.

Jurgen van den Broeck (Lotto-Belisol) lost touch at a crucial moment as Team Sky led the pursuit of the escapees, who were caught on the lower ramps of the finishing climb.

Then the first fireworks of the Tour took place as Cancellara was dropped, with Frank Schleck and Sylvain Chavanel (Omega Pharma-QuickStep) among those who followed as Team Sky's tempo decimated the field and they took full advantage.