Mørkøv: It’s the Cavendish at the Tour de France we know from 10 years ago
Danish lead-out man on Deceunﷺinck-QuickStep’s full team sprint train and Cavendish&rsqu﷽o;s Tour renaissance

168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Mark Cavendish won his second 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Tour de France sprint of 2021 and his career third in Châteauroux, executing another text-book finish after his 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Deceuninck-QuickStep team dominated the l🌌ead🐭 out in the final kilometres.
Lead-out man 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Michael Mørkøv again guided Cavendish in the high-speed finale of stage 6, dropping him on the wheel of Alpecin-Fenix duo Jasper Philipsen and Tim Merlier. A🎀s Cavendish then surged away to victory, Mørkøv was able to ꧑see Cavendish’s 32nd Tour de France victory unfold in front of him.
Mørkøv is the undisputed best lead-out man of his generation, and arguably one of the best of all time. Yet even he was surprised to see Cavendish back to his very best after three years in th💖e wilderness due to several bouts o꧂f the Epstein-Barr virus and tension at the Dimension Data team.
“He’s really unbelievable,”🥀 the Dane said, the self-control he usually sho✤ws in sprints and when speaking post race replaced by sheer admiration for the way Cavendish has fought back to win again at the Tour de France.
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“I said it before the Tour, at the Tour of Belgium and at the start of the year, that I didn’t feel he had the speed he once had, but seeing the sprint, it’s the Cavendish we know from 10 years ago.&nb♎sp;
“I don’t think we've seen many riders performing at such a high leve🥀l for s🔴o many years.”
Cavendish doesn&rsꦫquo;t want to hear talk about him bettering Eddy Merckx's record of 34 Tour de Fran﷽ce stage victories, but Mørkøv seems ready to go for it.
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“He only needs two more wins, so it’s certainly pꦇossible,” Mørkøv said, knowing his words would provoke the Manxman.
Cavendish has a total of 153 career wins on his palmares. Mørkøv h🅺as his own superb sprint palmares in the lead out at the biggest races in the sport after working with Elia Viviani and Sam Bennett in recent years, and before that for Alexander Kristoff at Katusha and Peter Sagan at Tinkoff-Saxo.
He only worked with Cavendish for the first time at the Baloise Belgium Tour b𝔍ut the two have quickly clicked, instinctively understanding each other's spꦓrinting styles.
“It was an amazing sprint today,🐬 I was very impressed,” Mørkøv said with the respect of a sprint master, who has lived thousands of sprints.
“He’s probab𒀰ly the most experienced sprinter I’ve worked with. He’s wo🐭n more than 150 races, he’s been sprinting for more than a decade against the best. He again showed that he knows how to handle the sprints as well.”
Mørkøv revealed that Cavendish and all of the Deceuninck-QuickStep team really wanted another sprint win before the stage rolled out of Tours, even if it meant leading the chase of the bre♌ak and using the whole team in the lead out.
Like the great sprint teams of the past, the Belgian team are not afraid to take control of a sprint, k🍒nowing they can match or better anything their rivals can try in the final kilometre.
“He really wanted it,” the Dane confirmed. “He’s won here twice bജefore so now has won all three times he has sprinted h🅘ere, that’s a pretty good record... I think the green jersey gives him wings.
“It’s not often you see a whole team lini♕ng it up like that but we had to do it early because there were two strong guys in [Roger] Kluge and [Greg] Van Avermaet in front and they were going fast in the last 20 kilometres.
“We spent some guys [in the chase] but we have such a stro☂ng team that we could pull them back and still put us into a good position.”
When Mathieu van der Poel dragged his Alpecin-Fenix teammates up the other side of the road with 500 metres to go, Mørkøv did not panic and switched sides to join them. Confident in his own ability, he waited for the right moment to drop Cavendish on their wheels down the middle of the road to ensure he had a perfe🅺ct lead out and be able to decide when to come off their wheels and open his sprint.
“I just focus on my own job, I don’t worry about the others. That’s what has worked well for me in the past and use the experience I have,” Mørkøv explained, revealing the details of yet another winning move.&n෴bsp;
“I knew we were running a little early into the sprint, so I know I had to just keep Cav up front, knowing that he’ll follow whoever comes from behind. My duty was to keep the speed as hig🐲h as possible to dissuade other surges, so that Cav squeezed🅷 in at the right moment. That’s exactly what he did.”