Tour de France: Demare silences critics as Thomas stays in yellow

Frenchman denies accusations he held on to team car in Wednesday’s mountain stage

France’s Arnaud Demare celebrates as he crosses the finish line to win the 18th stage  of the Tour de France  between Trie-sur-Baise and Pau. Photograph: Jeff Pachoud/AFP/Getty Images
France’s Arnaud Demare celebrates as he crosses the finish line to win the 18th stage of the Tour de France between Trie-sur-Baise and Pau. Photograph: Jeff Pachoud/AFP/Getty Images

Arnaud Demare silenced his critics by claiming a comfortable win in the bunch sprint of the 18th stage of the Tour de France on Thursday, the first victory this year for a French team in the race.

The Frenchman, who had been accused by fellow sprint specialist Andre Greipel of holding on to his team car in Wednesday's mountain stage to avoid missing the time cut, was perfectly set up by Italian team-mate Jacopo Guarnieri.

He beat compatriot Christophe Laporte and Norway's Alexander Kristoff, who were second and third respectively as Welshman Geraint Thomas retained the overall leader's yellow jersey after 171km from Trie sur Baize.

“I did not fight for nothing in the mountains, I was thinking of a possible victory when I was suffering,” said Groupama-FDJ rider Demare.

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On Wednesday, Greipel hinted on Twitter that Demare held on to his team car in the final climb up to the Col du Portet, which the Frenchman denied.

Reuters understands that Demare sent his power and time data to Greipel, who had quickly deleted his tweet.

“Today I thought of him,” said Demare of Greipel, who abandoned the race last week along with several other top sprinters, exhausted by extreme heat and gruelling efforts in the mountains.

Demare grinded his teeth though the mountain stages, narrowly avoiding missing the time cut on a couple of occasions.

“I had good legs and today all the hard work I did paid off,” he said.

“I stayed strong in my head. [Cheating] is not my philosophy. I gave everything, I worked super hard in the mountains ahead of the Tour de France. Several sprinters are home today and I’m still here. I deserved this victory, the whole team deserved it for their hard work.”

Five men, including former Paris-Roubaix winners Niki Terpstra and Matthew Hayman, formed the day's breakaway, but they were kept on a tight leash by the peloton and were reined in way before the line.

World champion Peter Sagan did not contest the final sprint after his crash on Wednesday left him in pain. "It was hard but I thought it would actually be harder," said the Slovak.

The only incident in an otherwise dull stage raced in searing hot temperatures came 105km from the finish when Colombian Nairo Quintana, fifth overall after his stage win on Wednesday, hit the asphalt when he and Briton Adam Yates were caught in a pile-up.

Dan Martin remains in ninth place on general classification after coming home in the bunch sprint.