Paul Lambert calls on Aston Villa to battle themselves out of relegation trouble ahead of Reading Premier League clash

Lambert calls on Villa to battle themselves out of relegation trouble ahead of Reading clash

By
Neil Moxley

PUBLISHED:

19:06 GMT, 8 March 2013

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UPDATED:

19:06 GMT, 8 March 2013

Paul Lambert says Aston Villa will need to play with 'courage' at the Madjeski Stadium tomorrow as he attempts to drag others into the relegation dogfight.

Villa's boss says he does not sense that his team is playing under pressure and believes that a good result against Reading this weekend, followed by similar against bottom-placed QPR next Saturday will ease the club's lingering relegation issues.

War cry: Lambert believes a couple of wins for his Aston Villa side will pull others into a relegation dogfight

War cry: Lambert believes a couple of wins for his Aston Villa side will pull others into a relegation dogfight

Scrap: Villa are four points ahead of basement club QPR

Scrap: Villa are four points ahead of basement club QPR

Lambert believes two positive results will leave others looking 'edgy' as the Premier League campaign enters its final two months.

'There are loads of teams who will be edgy,' he said. 'It will take courage tomorrow. We will need it all over the pitch. To go and play football and not get caught up with the occasion.

'We certainly don't look like a team that is playing under pressure. We were well in the game against Manchester City – we never allowed them to play their normal fluid game.

In the game: Lambert said his team frustrated Manchester City on Monday, with Gabby Agbonlahor (above) and Christian Benteke (below)

In the game: Lambert said his team frustrated Manchester City on Monday, with Gabby Agbonlahor (above) and Christian Benteke (below)

Christian Benteke

'I would like to think that everyone has fight in them to win a game – it's okay to be aggressive.

'But we need to play the game and not the occasion.'

Lambert has a few injury issues with which to contend. There was some positive news regarding Ron Vlaar who has come through a calf problem and is set to start.

But Fabian Delph's suspension and an ankle injury to Karim El Ahmadi might mean a first start for Yacouba Sylla, signed during the January transfer window from Clermont for 2m.

Aston Villa: (4-4-2) Guzan, Lowton, Clark, Vlaar, Baker; N'Zogbia, Sylla, Westwood, Agbonlahor; Benteke, Weimann.

Suspended: Delph

Injured: El Ahmadi, (ankle) Bent, (foot) Dunne (groin and hip) Albrighton. (toe)

Paul Lambert says young players will keep Aston Villa away from relegation battle

My kids won't drop us in it, says Lambert who is confident of avoiding relegation scrap

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UPDATED:

23:04 GMT, 31 August 2012

Paul Lambert insists his kids are all right and dismissed suggestions Aston Villa are doomed to a relegation struggle this season.

Lambert has leaned heavily towards youth in his early-season selections, handing Barclays Premier League starts to Nathan Baker, Fabian Delph and Nathan Delfouneso.

In addition, he has bought youngsters Matthew Lowton from Sheffield United, Joe Bennett from Middlesbrough and Chesterfield’s Jordan Bowery.

We'll be fine: Paul Lambert is confident his young squad can do well in the Premier League

We'll be fine: Paul Lambert is confident his young squad can do well in the Premier League

Further moves in the past week for Charlton Athletic’s Dale Stephens and Genk striker Christian Benteke — for whom Villa made another late attempt on Friday night — have reinforced the notion that Lambert is deliberately targeting youth.

Of that crop, only Lowton has celebrated his 23rd birthday. Despite this, Lambert is confident there will be no repeat of the club’s woes under Alex McLeish last season, when Villa finished just two points above the drop zone.

Asked whether they would be in a survival scrap again, Lambert said: ‘No, no,’ before adding that his crop of youngsters would come good.

Young hope: Matthew Lowton is highly thought of at Villa

Young hope: Matthew Lowton is highly thought of at Villa

Getting his chance: Fabian Delph is one of the young stars at Villa Park

Getting his chance: Fabian Delph is one of the young stars at Villa Park

‘I had exactly the same question last year and the Norwich lads surpassed everything,’ he said. ‘It’s my decision. I am comfortable with what I’m trying to do. I don’t have any fears about them. I’m trying to give them the confidence to do as well as they can. That’s what I’m looking for.

‘I know that when you get really hungry players they can take you a long way, that’s what we will try to do.

‘If you don’t have that hunger as a footballer, there’s no point playing the game. You need that enthusiasm, so we will see how it goes.’

Lambert added that he had been put under no pressure to pursue this policy by Villa’s American owner Randy Lerner, who is slashing the club’s wage bill.

The Scot said: ‘These have all been my decisions. The football decisions are mine. I’ll take full responsibility for that.

‘But I think the importance of transfer fees can get blown out of proportion. How do you put a price on someone

‘It’s whatever we think can help us and we will look at them.

‘How do you know they are not good enough You won’t know until you give them that opportunity. I like to do that.

‘It gives me great satisfaction knowing people can do well for themselves and the team.’

London 2012 Olympics: Fabian Cancellara crash is boost for Bradley Wiggins

Cancellara crash may wreck his time-trial tussle with Wiggins

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UPDATED:

21:17 GMT, 28 July 2012

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MEDALS TABLE

An extraordinary crash by Fabian Cancellara robbed the great Swiss champion of a likely Olympic title and boosted Bradley Wiggins' chances of striking gold on Wednesday.

Cancellara, the 2008 Olympic time trial champion and road race silver medallist, looked good on improving in Saturday's road race when he appeared to be the strongest contender in a breakaway group of 32 riders that caught out Wiggins, race favourite Mark Cavendish and the rest of the five-man British team.

But just 10 miles before the finish on the Mall, Cancellara's wheels locked at the Star and Garter corner in Richmond Park and he crashed into the roadside railings.

Injury: Fabian Cancellara's Olympic hopes are in doubt

Injury: Fabian Cancellara's Olympic hopes are in doubt

Although he picked himself up and continued to race, the lead group were gone and he was left easing his way into central London clutching his right shoulder.

Ironically, he had tweeted a photo of the same corner on Friday during a reconnaissance of the course.

On Saturday night Cancellara, known for his bike-handling skills, was undergoing a scan at a London hospital for a suspected fractured collarbone and the chances of him being fit enough to attempt a defence of his time trial Olympic title on Wednesday around Hampton Court and through the roads of Surrey appear remote.

This immeasurably improves Wiggins's chances of winning a fourth Olympic gold – and a seventh medal in total – to add to his Tour de France victory last week.

Surprise boost: Bradley Wiggins has a great chance of gold

Surprise boost: Bradley Wiggins has a great chance of gold

The 32-year-old was seen as joint favourite for the time trial alongside Cancellara. The Swiss won the first trial at the Tour earlier this month, Wiggins taking the other two in the event.

Now the road appears to be clear for the Londoner as long as he recovers from his gruelling efforts. If Wiggins ends up on the podium on Wednesday he will have captured more Olympic medals than anyone else in British sport.

He stands level with rower Sir Steve Redgrave on six, with three golds, a silver and two bronzes to Redgrave's five golds and a bronze. Another potential crash was narrowly avoided inside the first hour when a dog ran across the road in St Margaret's, Twickenham, in between a lead group of riders and the peloton.

London 2012 Olympics: Bradley Wiggins going for gold

I'll be fresh for London, roars Wiggins as Tour hero eyes Olympic gold

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UPDATED:

21:30 GMT, 23 July 2012

Olympics 2012

There was precious little time to dwell on the enormity of his achievement for Bradley Wiggins on Monday. Not with a fourth Olympic gold medal to chase eight days from now in the Olympic road time trial.

What is termed in cycling as the race of truth was the foundation stone of Wiggins’ Tour de France triumph. It is so called because there can be no hiding in the peloton, sheltered against the wind by teammates or towed up mountain passes by pacemakers. It is simply man against the clock, each riding alone, with whoever comes home in the fastest time declared as the winner.

Wiggins has excelled in the discipline since he began cycling although his three previous Olympic golds were won in a velodrome over just 2.5 miles which took under four minutes to complete for the team time trial, just over for the individual event in which he was victorious in Athens and Beijing.

No rest for the wicked: Wiggins was back on his bike on Monday in the UK

No rest for the wicked: Wiggins was back on his bike on Monday in the UK

Until this year, road time trials have been another matter. Next Wednesday afternoon, starting and finishing at Hampton Court Palace, the Olympic course is over 27.5 miles, a distance at which Wiggins has been competitive in recent years but not dominant as he was on the track.

Simply put, Fabian Cancellara and Tony Martin – between them world champions in five of the past six years in the discipline – have been faster.

That all changed last winter with another example of meticulous planning by Team Sky Performance Analyst Tim Kerrison and of Wiggins’ determination to become Britain’s first-ever Tour de France winner.

Through the mysterious workings of cadence, torque and rolling resistance, Wiggins found another gear – literally.

Wiggins said: ‘A year ago when I was
beaten by Tony (Martin) at the world championships by quite a way, I
thought I was probably just going to get a medal at the Olympics, but 12
months on I’ve closed the gap now if not surpassed it. It’s going to be
another tough race, but a very realistic chance of gold.

Happy to chat: Wiggins poses for a picture with a fellow cyclist

Happy to chat: Wiggins poses for a picture with a fellow cyclist

‘Tim said: “I think we can close the gap.” We started training and we were doing a lot of different, non-traditional stuff. It was much more like the track stuff and we started physically working the machine to get to the point in July when we could ride like this in the Tour. That’s made the difference, ultimately, between now and the Brad Wiggins of 2010 who tried to do it himself.’

Before the challenge of the time trial, Wiggins has pledged to ride all out for Mark Cavendish in Saturday’s Olympic road race around Surrey. Just as the yellow jersey wearer led out Cavendish for Sunday’s final Tour stage victory on the Champs-Elysees, he is committed to ensuring another sprint finish to capitalise on Cavendish’s standing as the fastest man in the world of road cycling rather than conserve energy for the time trial four days later.

Wiggins added: ‘I’ve just done a world
class time trial on Saturday, averaging a ridiculous amount of power
after three weeks of bike racing and two really tough Pyrenees stages
and physically not a lot’s going to change in the next week. If
anything, I’m going to be fresher.

Brit special: Wiggins celebrates his win in the Tour de France on Sunday

Brit special: Wiggins celebrates his win in the Tour de France on Sunday

'And once you start thinking in those terms, that you’re so fit and you’ve trained for the demands of three weeks and you’ve actually got three days off in between the road race and the time trial, it shouldn’t be a problem.’

One tiny cloud drifted on to Wiggins’ horizon from France with the news that next year’s Tour de France route will be aimed more at his weaknesses than his strengths. The Tour organisers are already devising a route for the 100th running of the race which is more mountainous than the one Wiggins conquered over the past three weeks.

Tour director Christian Prudhomme said: ‘The one thing I can tell you is that the 2013 Tour will favour the climbers a lot more than this year’s route did. Whatever we decide, there will be more stages with summit finishes.’

With only one individual time trial, as opposed to this year’s two, likely to be planned, Wiggins’ may struggle to hold on to any advantage gained when the race reaches the Alps and the Pyrenees. Team Sky could therefore elect to favour Chris Froome, a more natural climber, as its team leader with Wiggins supporting him.

Tour de France 2012: Bradley Wiggins builds lead with stage nine win

Wiggins digs deep to build Le Tour lead over rival Evans with stunning win on stage nine

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UPDATED:

16:07 GMT, 9 July 2012

Tour de France leader Bradley Wiggins enhanced his advantage in the yellow jersey with a stunning victory on stage nine's individual time-trial.

Wiggins (Team Sky) clocked 51 minutes 24 seconds to triumph on the 41.5-kilometre race against the clock from Arc-et-Senans to Besancon.

The triple Olympic champion, who on Saturday succeeded prologue winner Fabian Cancellara in the maillot jaune, began the day with a 10-second lead over defending champion Cadel Evans (BMC Racing) and enters Tuesday's rest day with an advantage of 1min 53secs.

Yellow jersey: Team Sky rider Bradley Wiggins crosses the finish line during the individual time trial

Yellow jersey: Team Sky rider Bradley Wiggins crosses the finish line during the individual time trial

Evans placed sixth on the day in 53:07, as Team Sky celebrated a one-two on the stage, with Chris Froome second in 51:59. Olympic time-trial champion Cancellara (RadioShack-Nissan) was third in 52:21.

Froome, who won stage seven, climbed into third place overall, 2:07 behind his team-mate and 14 seconds behind Evans.

Gritted teeth: Great Britain's Christopher Froome at the end of the ninth stage

Gritted teeth: Great Britain's Christopher Froome at the end of the ninth stage

The time-trial, coming ahead of the rest day, could be significant in the race for the maillot jaune, with this year's Tour featuring more than 100km of racing against the clock before the finish in Paris on July 22.

Wiggins is now firmly in pole position to be the first British Tour winner – and Froome could join him on the podium.

The day's events were also a useful marker for the 44km August 1 Olympic time-trial at Hampton Court, when Wiggins hopes to add to his haul of three Olympic gold medals. Wiggins and Froome are Britain's Olympic time-trial selections.

Race against the clock: Fabian Cancellara of Radioshack-Nissan on the way to Besancon

Race against the clock: Fabian Cancellara of Radioshack-Nissan on the way to Besancon

As race leader, Wiggins started last, three minutes behind nearest rival Evans, who he was seeking to beat to Besancon, the watch-making centre of France.

At the first time check, after 16.5km, Wiggins led the field in 21:05 and was beating Evans by 1:02. Froome was five seconds behind his team-mate.

Wiggins again led through the second time check, at 31.5km, in 39:02, 16 seconds faster than Froome and 1:19 ahead of Evans.

Trailing: Wiggins now leads Cadel Evans of the BMC Racing team by just under two minutes

Trailing: Wiggins now leads Cadel Evans of the BMC Racing team by just under two minutes

The 32-year-old maintained his scintillating pace in the final quarter of the race to triumph by 35 seconds from Froome, with Cancellara a further 22 seconds behind.

David Millar (Garmin-Sharp) was 36th in 55:38 and Steve Cummings (BMC Racing) 39th, nine seconds further adrift.

Mark Cavendish (Team Sky), the world road race champion, was 6:27 behind in 1:00.07.
Vincenzo Nibali (Liquigas-Cannondale), who began the day in third overall, 16 seconds behind, finished in 53:31 to place eight on the stage and fall to fourth place, 16 seconds behind Froome.

Lion heart: British ace Wiggins celebrates his stage win on the podium in Besancon

Lion heart: British ace Wiggins celebrates his stage win on the podium in Besancon

Germany's Tony Martin (Omega Pharma-QuickStep), the world time-trial champion, clocked 53:40 to place 12th despite wearing a cast on his fractured wrist and later revealed he suffered a puncture.

Froome was nine seconds behind Wiggins after the opening prologue, but punctured on the opening road stage to Seraing, losing 1:25 on the stage.

Had the 27-year-old not suffered that misfortune he would be ahead of Evans in the standings.

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.

Tour de France: Bradley Wiggins has yellow jersey in his sights

Wiggins has yellow jersey in his sights after rivals are caught in the carnage

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UPDATED:

17:59 GMT, 6 July 2012

Bradley Wiggins successfully negotiated a crash-strewn first week of the Tour de France as some of his rivals for the Paris podium saw their hopes come to an end on stage six to Metz.

As Peter Sagan (Liquigas-Cannondale) re-emphasised his stunning talent by claiming his third stage win of his maiden Tour, Team Sky leader Wiggins rolled in with the front group to remain seven seconds adrift in second place overall behind race leader Fabian Cancellara (RadioShack-Nissan).

East rider: Bradley Wiggins stays at the front and out of trouble

East rider: Bradley Wiggins stays at the front and out of trouble

The 32-year-old Londoner could take the yellow jersey as soon as Saturday.

Defending champion Cadel Evans (BMC Racing) remained 17 seconds adrift of the Swiss in sixth place, but Giro d'Italia champion Ryder Hesjedal lost 13 minutes 24 seconds on the day as a result of a crash 26km from the end to effectively end his hopes of a Grand Tour double.

World champion Mark Cavendish also endured a troublesome day.

Isolated by a puncture after narrowly avoiding the crash and with Team Sky riding for Wiggins, the Manxman was denied an opportunity to contest the finish.

Agony: Injured Ryder Hesjedal

Agony: Injured Ryder Hesjedal

His wait for a 22nd Tour stage success goes on, while Sagan holds a 80-point lead over Cavendish in the points classification standings.

Garmin-Sharp's David Millar described the moment his team-mate Hesjedal's Tour bid ended as the Canadian tumbled from ninth in the standings, 18 seconds adrift, to 108th place.

'It was the scariest crash I've ever been in,' said the 35-year-old Scot, riding in his 11th Tour and nursing bleeding cuts.

'We were doing 70 (kph) when it happened. God knows how it happened – some idiot.

Delight: Peter Sagan celebrates his third stage victory

Delight: Peter Sagan celebrates his third stage victory

'It shouldn't happen like that. Once it started happening we didn't even have a chance to really brake.

'We were banging into each other at 60, 70kph. I was lucky, I think, in that I was in the third wave.

'I started landing on guys, but bikes were hitting me, chain rings going up and over me and getting tangled up.'

Frank Schleck (RadioShack-Nissan), third in 2011, also lost time, as did Michele Scarponi (Lampre-ISD).

Wiggins could so easily have done so too, but Team Sky employed the same front-riding tactics as on stage five to ensure the triple Olympic champion reached the Tour's second weekend, having crashed out with a broken collarbone last year.

The yellow jersey contenders are sure to be whittled down again on the 199km seventh stage to La Planches des Belles Filles tomorrow, which concludes atop a category one climb, and in Monday's time-trial.

Flying the flag: Fans get behind Wiggins

Flying the flag: Fans get behind Wiggins

Team Sky principal Dave Brailsford said: 'In a split second everything changed and all hell was let loose.

'Five minutes before that crash happened Brad came right up to the front with Christian and it was one of the best moves he's made so far.

'The first phase of this race is now over and he's still upright on his bike, which was the main objective, and he hasn't lost any time.'

Richie Porte, one of Wiggins' key climbing domestiques, crashed three times today, but will continue nursing bumps and bruises as the race heads towards the Alps.

A young SKY Procycling fan

Cavendish will also ride on, with his quest to draw level with Lance Armstrong and Andre Darrigade in fourth place in the all-time rankings of stage winners continuing.

Brailsford admitted stage two winner Cavendish's morale might be low after another day when he missed the dash for the line, but praised sporting director Sean Yates for prioritising Wiggins.

'It's hard for Mark in those situations,' Brailsford added.

'Maybe in previous teams the whole team would've stopped immediately and taken him up.

'They were some tough calls for the sports directors, but ultimately Brad was in that front group and lost no time.

'When you saw Frank Schleck, Scarponi, (Robert) Gesink and Hesjedal all caught up in that crash, you've got to say it was a good day.'

Cavendish was not the only rider to miss out on a record.

Andre Greipel (Lotto-Belisol) avoided the day's major incident after two earlier, more minor falls, and was in contention as the front group swept up the remnants of the day's four-man breakaway, with David Zabriskie (Garmin-Sharp) caught with around 1.3km remaining.

Greipel, though, was unable to become the 12th rider to win three straight Tour stages as Sagan overpowered him in the finale, with the German second and Matt Goss (Orica-GreenEdge) third.
Sagan has 209 points to remain in the green jersey, with Goss (178) second, Greipel (167) third and Cavendish (129) fourth.

The 22-year-old Slovakian's talents were evident to all and he will be a major rival for Cavendish at the Olympic road race on July 28 and in the coming years.

Twenty seven riders were listed in the day's medical bulletin.

Four of them abandoned, reducing the field to 190, with Mikel Astarloza (Euskaltel-Euskadi), Davide Vigano (Lampre-ISD), Tom Danielson (Garmin-Sharp) and Wouter Poels (Vaconsoleil-DCM) withdrawing.

Danielson and his Garmin-Sharp team-mate Johan van Summeren were taken to Metz military hospital for further assessment.

Tour de France 2012: Mark Cavendish crashes out

Manx Missile grounded as Cav crashes to dent Tour hopes in stage four

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UPDATED:

16:14 GMT, 4 July 2012

World champion Mark Cavendish's bid for a 22nd Tour de France stage win was ended by a crash as Andre Greipel won stage four to Rouen.

In the close-packed bunch, Robbie Hunter (Garmin-Sharp) spectacularly tumbled over his handlebars fracturing the peloton with around 2.7 kilometres to go of the 214.5km route from Abbeville.

The incident delayed more than two thirds of the peloton, but Greipel had support from his Lotto-Belisol team as he claimed a sprint victory. Alessandro Petacchi (Lampre-ISD) was second, with Tom Veelers (Argos-Shimano) third.

Down and out: Mark Cavendish was left bruised and battered by a crash on stage four of the Tour

Down and out: Mark Cavendish was left bruised and battered by a crash on stage four of the Tour

Cavendish (Team Sky) was seeking to draw level with Lance Armstrong and Andre Darrigade by adding to his 21 Tour stage wins, but was seen gingerly picking himself up off the tarmac, his world champion's jersey in tatters and ripped across the back.

Cavendish crossed more than four minutes behind Greipel, but apparently with no more than superficial injuries.

As the collision occurred inside the final 3km of the stage, Fabian Cancellara (RadioShack-Nissan) retained the race leader's maillot jaune.

Yukiya Arashiro (Europcar), David Moncoutie (Cofidis) and Anthony Delaplace (Saur-Sojasun) comprised the day's three-man breakaway, which began in the opening kilometre.

Wheely good views: Stage four of the Tour goes from Abbeville to Rouen in north-western France

Wheely good views: Stage four of the Tour goes from Abbeville to Rouen in north-western France

Wheely good views: Stage four of the Tour goes from Abbeville to Rouen in north-western France

Japan's Arashiro led the trio over the intermediate line in Fecamp with 74.5km of the stage remaining.

The peloton followed six minutes later, with Cavendish leading the sprint over the line.

Matt Goss (Orica-GreenEdge), Mark Renshaw (Rabobank) and maillot vert Peter Sagan (Liquigas-Cannondale) followed.

The result saw Cavendish move into second place in the points classification standings behind Sagan, the winner of stages one and three, who took nine points.

Man in mirror: Fabian Cancellara, wearing the overall leader's yellow jersey, was in the mix

Man in mirror: Fabian Cancellara, wearing the overall leader's yellow jersey, was in the mix

The Manxman moved to 86 points, with Slovakian Sagan going to 125.

The peloton then increased the tempo in pursuit of the escapees, with Team Sky, BMC Racing, Orica-GreenEdge and Lotto-Belisol to the fore.

A handful of riders broke out of the peloton in an attempt to bridge the gap with 10km to go, and Samuel Dumoulin (Cofidis), Sylvain Chavanel (Omega Pharma-QuickStep) and Wouter Poels (Vacansoleil-DCM) stayed clear on the final descent into Rouen.

Leading the way: Andre Greipel eventually surged to glory

Leading the way: Andre Greipel eventually surged to glory

It was a forlorn break, though, as the sprinters' teams set to work and the peloton soaked up the trio with 3km remaining.

Just as the teams sought to get their teams in position for the finale, an innocuous stage turned sour with a large crash.

With Cavendish down, Greipel was able to avoid the crash and surge to victory, while Sagan, winner of stage one and three, added to his points haul by finishing fifth.

Cancellara rolled in well down alongside Bradley Wiggins (Team Sky), who remained second overall, seven seconds behind.

Tour de France 2012: Mark Cavendish wins second stage

Super Cav off the mark … British ace wins second stage after brilliant sprint finish

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UPDATED:

16:55 GMT, 2 July 2012

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.

Mark Cavendish

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

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

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

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

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

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.'

Tour de France 2012: Peter Sagan wins first stage

Sagan wins first stage of Tour de France with Wiggins second in yellow jersey hunt

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UPDATED:

16:59 GMT, 1 July 2012

Rising cycling star Peter Sagan of Slovakia won the first stage of the Tour de France on Sunday ahead of Fabian Cancellara of Switzerland, who retained the overall lead.

Title contenders Bradley Wiggins of Britain and defending champion Cadel Evans trailed close behind in the pack after the 198-kilometer loop from Liege to suburban Seraing featuring five low-grade climbs.

They're off: The pack peddles along during the first stage of the Tour de France between Liege and Seraing

They're off: The pack peddles along during the first stage of the Tour de France between Liege and Seraing

Sagan, at age 21 one of cycling's
most promising riders, placed his hands on his shoulders as he collected
his first Tour stage win in a three-man sprint ahead of Cancellara in
second and Edvald Boasson Hagen of Norway in third.

Cancellara, who won the Tour's opening-day prologue on Saturday, leads Wiggins overall by 7 seconds.

France's Sylvain Chavanel is third
with the same time. Defending champion Cadel Evans trails 17 seconds
behind the Swiss leader.

Surrounded: Yellow jersey owner Fabian Cancellara was boxed in on all sides

Surrounded: Yellow jersey owner Fabian Cancellara was boxed in on all sides

The 198-rider pack split up during a final climb in the last three kilometers, when the stage turned into a three-man race.

Sagan hugged the wheel of Cancellara,
doing the hard work of leading into the wind – then whipped around him
with less than 150 meters (yards) before the finish to win in 4 hours,
58 minutes, 19 seconds.

'I am really, really happy,' Sagan
said. 'I was the only one who could follow (Cancellara), I was tight
behind him. I was just happy to stay on his wheel.'

Big two: Fabian Cancellara (left) with the yellow jersey and sprint ace Bradley Wiggins (right) with the green jersey

Sprint ace: Bradley Wiggins wears the green jersey

Big two: Fabian Cancellara (left) with the yellow jersey and sprint ace Bradley Wiggins (right) wears green

It was the Liquigas-Cannondale
rider's 13th stage victory this season, after winning in races as
diverse as the Tirreno-Adriatico, the Tour of Switzerland and the Tour
of California – where he won five of the race's eight stages.

At least two crashes marred Sunday's
stage amid escalating tensions within the pack near the finish, where
roadside crowds drew in to get a glimpse of the whirring cyclists.

High-profile riders including Spain's
Luis Leon Sanchez and Michael Rogers of Australia went down in one late
spill, but got back up.

The bad luck continued to stick with Germany's Tony Martin, who went down in a crash early Sunday before recovering.

All guns blazing: Peter Sagan crosses the finish line to win the first stage

All guns blazing: Peter Sagan crosses the finish line to win the first stage

The world time-trial champion popped a flat and lost in the prologue the day before.

At one point, with his BMC team
leader Evans riding in his wake, Marcus Burghardt of Germany caused his
bike to jump to avoid a plastic bottle in a downhill patch about 17
kilometers before the finish.

Six breakaway riders jumped out of
the pack after the first kilometer, and held onto a lead until less than
10 kilometers to go – when the speeding pack overtook all the escapees.

Wiggins wore the best-sprinter's
green jersey after placing second in Saturday's prologue – an honor
granted to him because Cancellara cannot wear both the green and the
yellow jersey.