Canny Dani's irresistible rise: 2020 Tour de France, stage 13

Canny Dani's irresistible rise: 2020 Tour de France, stage 13

“Wait. Don’t take it up too early, that would be the big mistake.” Commentator Sean Kelly was talking ahead of the last minute of racing as Dani Martínez and Lennard Kämna approached the end of their slow-motion slugfest on the Puy Mary, but he might as well have been issuing a pearl of wisdom about the whole day.

2020 Tour de France 5 minute read Bora-Hansgrohe Dani Martinez Max Schachmann Photos: ASO/PAULINE BALLET/CORVOS/THOMAS MAHEUX/ALEX WHITEHEAD/SWPIX.COM Words: Andy McGrath

It was a backstabber of a stage, hurting the bunch more than might have been expected. We’re used to obvious up-down profiles that resemble Baron Munchausen lie detector tests being most brutal, but these narrow, twisting roads and 4,400 metres of climbing proved some of the most revealing of the race so far.

Patience is a card game played by pensioners and, evidently, a sprightly young Colombian. In the day’s big break, Martínez hid for most of the day, helped by the work of team-mates Hugh Carthy and Neilson Powless, who went off on his own Hail Mary. Intelligent racing; Smart-inez, you could say.

As Max Schachmann threatened to ride off with the stage, Martínez made his move, bringing the German’s team-mate Kämna with him. Most days, being the filler in a Bora-Hansgrohe sandwich would have been his downfall, leading the man in pink to keep impotently flicking his bony elbow like a rhythmless teenager at a school disco for a turn that’d never come. 

But given the number of steep kilometres in the finale, Martínez opted to do all the chasing work, knowing he'd still have a decent chance with Kämna unable to get as much slipstreaming benefit. 

The brutal last two kilometres were a couple too far for suffering Schachmann before the 24-year-old clinched a finale so nail-biting that Massif Central manicurists will be besieged with bookings tomorrow.

Another day, another victory for a Tour debutant. Dani boy is quite the rough diamond, found and polished off by EF Education First: first a Paris-Nice stage in spring, then Dauphiné victory and now this for one of the riders of the summer. 

As one Colombian celebrated a memorable win, another suffered his heaviest time loss of the race to date. Egan Bernal’s screwed-up pain face across the line, finishing 38 seconds behind yellow jersey Roglic, could be used with the words: “Win the Tour again, they said. It’ll be fun, they said.” 

Again, it was the Rog and Pog show upfront among the contenders. Is the Tour now a two-horse race between these Slovenian thoroughbreds? It looks that way, but the time gaps are still close enough to be exposed by an off-day in the high Alps. Sean Kelly’s quote goes for the Tour de France itself. Plus, Tadej Pogacar’s mum could always shout for him to stop playing and come in for dinner too.

 



 

2020 Tour de France 5 minute read Bora-Hansgrohe Dani Martinez Max Schachmann Photos: ASO/PAULINE BALLET/CORVOS/THOMAS MAHEUX/ALEX WHITEHEAD/SWPIX.COM Words: Andy McGrath

READ MORE

Zurich Road World Championships 2024 individual time trial contenders

Zurich Road World Championships 2024 individual time trial contenders

Who will secure the gold medals in the elite individual time trials in Zurich?

Read more
All change at Astana: does new investment spell a revival?

All change at Astana: does new investment spell a revival?

The Kazakh team is currently recruiting riders who can guarantee enough WorldTour points to keep them in the top tier after 2025

Read more
Ready for the Worlds: Pogačar flies to victory in Canada (gallery)

Ready for the Worlds: Pogačar flies to victory in Canada (gallery)

Images from the WorldTour's weekend away to North America

Read more
‘I thought a KOM was a Strava segment!’ Clara Emond – the lawyer who became a Grand Tour stage winner

‘I thought a KOM was a Strava segment!’ Clara Emond – the lawyer who became a Grand Tour stage winner

From first bike to Grand Tour stage winner in three years: Law student Clara Emond’s remarkable and rapid rise

Read more
Opinion: Lotte Kopecky is your next Tour de France Femmes winner

Opinion: Lotte Kopecky is your next Tour de France Femmes winner

The Belgian rider’s recent performances prove that she is every bit the general classification contender

Read more
Pogačar is back: can the Tour de France champion make a winning return in Canada?

Pogačar is back: can the Tour de France champion make a winning return in Canada?

The Slovenian will return to racing at the GP de Québec and Montréal this weekend ahead of the World Championships

Read more

MEMBERSHIP

JOIN ROULEUR TODAY

Independent journalism, award winning content, exclusive perks.

Banner Image