Cavendish holds fire at Tour Down Under

Mark Cavendish and Robbie McEwen, Tour Down Under 2011, stage one

Mark Cavendish held his fire in stage one of the Tour Down Under today in Angaston, Australia. His HTC-Highroad team-mate Matt Goss won the first stage and took the overall lead.

"It is more important to win as many stages as possible," said Cavendish, "it is irrelevant who it is with."

Cavendish placed 62nd. Australian Goss won ahead of André Greipel (Omega Pharma-Lotto) and Robbie McEwen (RadioShack).

Goss followed Mark Renshaw, the man who led Cavendish to many of his Tour de France sprint wins last year. Cavendish sat behind Goss.

"Hayden Roulston went from about 1.5 kilometres to go, he got Bernard Eisel to 600 metres, I started at 600 metres," said Renshaw. "It was a long sprint for Gossy, he had to go about from 300 metres, at the time when a couple of the other guys jumped."

Goss also won the opening criterium Sunday night in Adelaide. Cavendish, explained Renshaw, will have his turn later in the week.

"He has never really raced this early, in January, so it is a shock for him," added Renshaw. "I'm sure Cavendish will have a go sometime this week, he won't be able to hold it himself back for that long."

Cavendish is not sure.

"It's not too early, it is just that if you want to be on best form for the Tour de France then... If you've got the same goals as me - San Remo, Tour de France, Worlds - and you are flying now then chapeau if you hold it for those three races as well," said Cavendish

"I just want to be able to help, I can't really contribute anything at the moment. If we weren't winning then I would be disappointed."

Cavendish's rival and former team-mate, Greipel finished second and congratulated Goss. He won the race last year for HTC and believes he is stronger than Cavendish.

"I saw that Cav was not good, he was dropped on the first climb, so it was for sure that they [HTC] were going for Goss," said Greipel.

"I didn't notice [other sprinters], I was riding well at the front. Our whole team was there."

In fact, only Italian sprinter Francesco Chicchi (Quick Step) was behind on the first climb. Regardless, Greipel is more worried about stage one winner, Goss.

"I said before that Cav is not the guy to beat," said Greipel, "that it will be Matthew Goss."

"If Cav was there, he was there," added Renshaw. "It was totally up to him. It's January, when we get to the Tour de France, and he has won 16 stages, I am sure everyone will forget about the Tour Down Under."

Tour Down Under 2011: Related links

Tour Down Under 2011: Cycling Weekly's coverage index

Cavendish-Greipel duel: Let the fun begin

Sky's Thomas keeping covered Down Under

Armstrong faces questions on doping investigation and 2009 payments

Armstrong in Adelaide: One more time

Tour Down Under 2011: Who will win?

Tour Down Under 2011: Start list

Farrar heads Garmin-Cervelo's Down Under assault

Cavendish to face Greipel Down Under with in-form Goss

Cavendish to start 2011 Tour Down Under

Farrar to ride Tour Down Under

Tour Down Under 2011: Stage reports

Cancer Council Classic: Goss wins Down Under opener after Sky crash

Tour Down Under 2011: Photo galleries

Tour Down Under stage one gallery

Cancer Council Classic gallery

 

Thank you for reading 20 articles this month* Join now for unlimited access

Enjoy your first month for just £1 / $1 / €1

*Read 5 free articles per month without a subscription

Join now for unlimited access

Try first month for just £1 / $1 / €1

Founded in 1891, Cycling Weekly and its team of expert journalists brings cyclists in-depth reviews, extensive coverage of both professional and domestic racing, as well as fitness advice and 'brew a cuppa and put your feet up' features. Cycling Weekly serves its audience across a range of platforms, from good old-fashioned print to online journalism, and video.