Top Banana: Tour de France stage 5 – Stefan Küng

Top Banana: Tour de France stage 5 – Stefan Küng

While Porte was ponderous on La Planche des Belles Filles, here’s to the BMC youngster who kept the breakaway of Voeckler, Gilbert and company in check

Racing Top Banana Tour de France

For the Tour de France peloton, stage five was a 160-kilometre ride between Vittel and La Planche des Belles Filles. A few lumps, then a steep climb for the finish. 

BMC domestique Stefan Küng’s finish line was far sooner. His day was a self-imposed interminable time-trial on the front of the bunch with just an empty Vosges road in his eyeline. 

Every time the TV camera showed the bunch, the rangy Swiss seemed to be at its head in praying mantis mode, occasionally swapping with his even taller compatriot, Michael Schär.

We’re more accustomed to this kind of work-rate from Schär, a veteran lieutenant who helped Cadel Evans to Tour triumph in 2011 – not from a 23-year-old in his first Tour de France with a couple of Tour de Romandie stage wins to his name.

Mind you, the prologue around Düsseldorf showed his calibre; finishing second, he donned the white jersey. Tall, Swiss, terrific against the clock and capable of manful domestique duties? Perhaps Fabian Cancellara has a successor.

Doing the lion’s share, Küng kept at arm’s reach an eight-strong breakaway that included Tour of Flanders champ Philippe Gilbert, Thomas Voeckler and Edvald Boasson Hagen.

The gap never exceeded three minutes, Küng as dazzling and reliable as a Swiss watch. All his legwork ensured the stage win would be fought out by the Tour’s pre-race contenders, not the star-studded attack. 

But the result of all this? Rien. His leader Richie Porte didn’t win the stage, attack or take any of the available bonus seconds, which made BMC’s tactics look wasteful. 

However, the Aussie claimed post-race that it was no sweat, they had only burned two matches. Well, if that isn’t merely saving face, that’s because Kung and Schär did the work of six men.

The kid’s earned a Toblerone, but because that’s not as healthy as fruit, here’s our Top Banana for a top Swiss talent.

The Rouleur Top Banana goes to an unsung hero of each stage of the Tour de France – not the winner, not the yellow jersey – but a rider whose efforts deserve recognition. 

 

The post Top Banana: Tour de France stage 5 – Stefan Küng appeared first on The world's finest cycling magazine.

Racing Top Banana Tour de France

READ MORE

Giro d'Italia peloton in 2024

Giro d'Italia 2025 stage one preview: A sprint for pink?

The opening stage of the Giro d'Italia will be a tightly fought contest between the sprinters and the attackers for the first maglia rosa of...

Read more
Can comeback queen Anna van der Breggen win the Vuelta a España Feminina?

Can comeback queen Anna van der Breggen win the Vuelta a España Feminina?

Team SD Worx-Protime rider takes her 63rd career victory at stage four of La Vuelta a España Femenina, four years after her last win

Read more
Front row seat: A wild Strade Bianche VIP chase with Sportive Breaks

Front row seat: A wild Strade Bianche VIP chase with Sportive Breaks

Rouleur joins Sportive Breaks for a hair-raising, behind-the-scenes dash around the gravel roads of Tuscany following, seeing and experiencing the chaos of Strade Bianche

Read more
Richard Carapaz

Richard Carapaz returns to the Giro d'Italia as a former winner — and an underdog

Richard Carapaz will head into the 2025 Giro d’Italia as one of the pre-eminent GC riders of his day, a former winner of the race...

Read more
Giro d'Italia 2024 peloton

Giro d’Italia route 2025: Everything you need to know about the stages of this year's race

The white roads of Strade Bianche, fearsome mountain passes and a Balkan Grande Partenza

Read more
Juan Ayuso and Primoz Roglic

Giro d’Italia 2025 contenders: who will win the 108th edition?

Rouleur takes a look at the contenders to win the Maglia Rosa in Italy this month

Read more

READ RIDE REPEAT

JOIN ROULEUR TODAY

Get closer to the sport than ever before.

Enjoy a digital subscription to Rouleur for just £4 per month and get access to our award-winning magazines.

SUBSCRIBE