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Sanchez clinches 14th stage

Last Updated : 15 July 2012, 19:18 IST
Last Updated : 15 July 2012, 19:18 IST

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Carpet tacks spread on the road brought the first Pyrenees stage of the Tour de France to a near standstill on Sunday and prompted the bunch to call a truce in the fight for places.

Defending champion Cadel Evans was one of some 30 riders in the 50-strong peloton to suffer punctures because of the tacks which race officials said had been scattered deliberately.

The 14th-stage win went to Spain's Luis Leon Sanchez, who broke from a group of escapees 11 kms from the line to cross it on his own and collect the fourth Tour stage laurels of his career.

Green jersey holder Peter Sagan finished second ahead of Frenchman Sandy Casar at the end of the 191-km ride from Limoux but the real action was taking place at the back where riders encountered the tacks as they began the descent of the first-category Mur de Peguere, 38.5 kms from the finish.

“"It was obviously done on purpose. We have the tacks but we don't know who spread them," said race director Jean-Francois Pescheux.

Evans suffered a puncture at the top of the pass. His BMC team car was already speeding down the descent and team mate Tejay Van Garderen passed without noticing him so the Australian was left unattended for several minutes and had to wait for another team mate to give him his back wheel.

On the descent, Evans finally managed to change bikes but it was a tricky process during which team manager Jim Ochowicz twice fell into a roadside ditch.

To make matters worse, Evans punctured again with 12 kms to go. “Yellow jersey holder Bradley Wiggins realised something was wrong and went to the front of the group to tell them to slow down.

“When 15 or 16 guys puncture, it becomes really apparent that something happened," said Wiggins.

“Evans and the rest managed to come back in the descent and everything went back to normal," Pescheux said.

Team Sky manager Dave Brailsford said it was only normal to wait for rivals when they were stopped by obvious acts of vandalism.

“There were definitely tacks on the road. It was the right decision. You never know what's going to happen to you. What goes around comes around," he said.

As a result of the lull, all the Tour contenders finished together and the overall standings did not change.

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Published 15 July 2012, 19:18 IST

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