Tour de France: Third stage win for Sagan as Thomas retains yellow

World champion holds off Alexander Kristoff in sprint finish

Slovakia’s Peter Sagan celebrates as he crosses the finish line to win the 13th stage  of the Tour de France  between Le Bourg-d’Oisans and Valence. Photograph: Jeff Pachoud/AFP/Getty Images
Slovakia’s Peter Sagan celebrates as he crosses the finish line to win the 13th stage of the Tour de France between Le Bourg-d’Oisans and Valence. Photograph: Jeff Pachoud/AFP/Getty Images

With most of the top sprinters out of the Tour de France after punishing mountain treks, world champion Peter Sagan claimed a third stage victory at the Tour de France on Friday, winning the relatively flat 169.5-km ride from Bourg d'Oisans by a whisker.

Sprinters Fernando Gaviria of Colombia and Dylan Groenewegen of the Netherlands, winners of two stages each, abandoned the race during Thursday’s stage ending atop the iconic Alpe d’Huez, exhausted after an opening block of racing in extreme heat.

Slovak Sagan, however, went through the first three mountain stages with relative ease and had enough gas in the tank for the final effort in Valence, where he outsprinted Norway's Alexander Kristoff and Frenchman Arnaud Demare into second and third place respectively.

“My team did an amazing job. I took Kristoff’s wheel for the sprint,” said Sagan.

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Briton Geraint Thomas retained the overall leader’s yellow jersey after he and Team Sky team-mate Chris Froome were booed by the crowd before the start.

The overall standings remained unchanged at the top with Thomas leading defending champion Froome by one minute 39 seconds and Dutchman Tom Dumoulin by 1:50.

Ireland's Dan Martin came home in the main bunch, moving up one spot overall to ninth position.

The peloton set off from Bourg d’Oisans without Vincenzo Nibali after the 2014 champion withdrew from the race following a crash apparently caused by a spectator in the climb up to l’Alpe d’Huez.

A four-man breakaway featuring New Zealand’s Tom Scully, Swiss Michael Schar as well as Belgians Thomas De Gendt and Dimitri Claeys were kept on a tight leash by the main bunch.

Schar went solo with 25km remaining, but Demare’s Groupama FDJ team accelerated in front of the peloton to set up a mass sprint, and it was a compact bunch five kms from the line.

In yet another incident affecting the race, a flare was thrown into the peloton with under 20kms left, but no riders were injured.

One kilometre from the finish, former world champion Philippe Gilbert jumped away from the speeding pack but came up short.

Demare launched a sprint 200 meters from the line, only for Sagan to come around and snatch his 11th career Tour victory and extend his lead in the points classification.

TOUR DE FRANCE STAGE AND OVERALL CLASSIFICATION

Stage 13 (Bourg d'Oisans to Valence, 169km): 1 Peter Sagan (Svk) Bora-Hansgrohe 3hrs 45mins 55secs, 2 Alexander Kristoff (Nor) UAE Team Emirates, 3 Arnaud Demare (Fra) FDJ, 4 John Degenkolb (Ger) Trek-Segafredo, 5 Greg Van Avermaet (Bel) BMC Racing Team, 6 Yves Lampaert (Bel) Quick-Step Floors, 7 Magnus Cort (Den) Astana Pro Team, 8 Andrea Pasqualon (Ita) Wanty-Groupe Gobert, 9 Sonny Colbrelli (Ita) Bahrain-Merida, 10 Taylor Phinney (USA) EF Education First-Drapac p/b Cannondale; 29 Dan Martin (Irl) UAE Team Emirates all at same time.

Leading general classification after stage 13: 1 Geraint Thomas (Gbr) Team Sky 53hrs 10mins 38secs, 2 Chris Froome (Gbr) Team Sky at 1m 39s, 3 Tom Dumoulin (Ned) Team Sunweb at 1m 50s, 4 Primoz Roglic (Slo) LottoNL-Jumbo at 2m 46s, 5 Romain Bardet (Fra) AG2R La Mondiale at 3m 07s, 6 Mikel Landa (Spa) Movistar Team at 3m 13s, 7 Steven Kruijswijk (Ned) LottoNL-Jumbo at 3m 43s, 8 Nairo Quintana (Col) Movistar Team at 4m 13s, 9 Daniel Martin (Irl) UAE Team Emirates at 5m 11s, 10 Jakob Fuglsang (Den) Astana Pro Team at 5m 45s.