Events

Louis Meintjes rides high to finish 5th after crash

By Press Office · 14 comments

Louis Meintjes put in a magnificent ride on today’s final stage in the Pyrenees, claiming 5th place at the top of the Plateau de Beille. Joaquim Rodriguez (Katusha) would be the rider to cross the line first, winning the 195km stage.

It was after the intermediate sprint at kilometer 20 that a big group of 22 riders jumped clear of the peloton. Louis was one of the first riders to force the pace as the young South African was motivated for today’s tough stage. The 22 riders gradually built their lead up to 12 minutes over the yellow jersey group, ensuring the break would decide the stage win. The day’s route included 4 major climbs and Louis was looking at ease on the uphill gradients, always riding in the front positions.

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Two of the riders in the break, Michal Kwiatkowski (Etixx-Quickstep) and Sep Vanmarcke (Lotto-Jumbo) set off together just before the race hit the Port de Lers, prying open a 1’50” advantage on the chasers before the climb. Louis group brought the 2 leaders to within 10″ by the summit before the duo attacked on the downhill again. The weather had taken a turn for the worse on the back side of the climb and wet roads awaited the riders.

It was on these wet roads that our hearts jumped to our throats as Louis would crash heavily on his right side while in the chase group that now only consisted of 7 riders. Thankfully Louis was able to get up and started chasing back straight away. Our young South African had ripped his MTN-Qhubeka p/b Samsung kit to shreds with a bloody shoulder, ribs, elbow and hip exposed, but he was able to regain contact with the chase group.

The climb to the line would be over the course of the tough 15.8km Plateau de Beille. Rodriguez, Jakob Fuglsang (Astana) and Romain Bardet (AG2R La Mondiale) would prove to be the strongest climbers in the break as they began attacking from the chase as soon the road tilted upwards. Louis would match them, toe for toe until Rodriguez put in the telling move with 10km to go. Vanmarcke and Kwiatkowski were caught and passed by the chasers with around 8km still to go. There was no stopping Rodriguez as Fuglsang had to settle for 2nd place with Bardet in 3rd.

In the end, after spending over 160km in the breakaway, crashing and then chasing back, Louis would cross the line in 5th place. Gorka Izagirre (Movistar) just pipped Louis for 4th on the line, an amazing ride by our young African champion.

I really wanted to get into the breakaway today, it was the plan for the team. Edvald really helped me to get into the breakaway. We were pushing it all race and the pressure was on, on the descents and unfortunately I took a bit too much of a risk and came down but got back to the group pretty quickly. On the final climb I just didn’t have the legs to go with the front guys.
Louis Meintjes – Rider

It was a fantastic performance by our youngster, Louis, to finish 5th on such a super tough stage of the Tour de France. 195km with 4 really hard climbs. It was the plan to have either Louis or Merhawi in the break today and Louis made it in the big group that came together after the first sprint. There were 22 riders but this group became smaller and smaller after each climb. On the 2nd last climb the rain started and Louis crashed on the descent but he was up quickly. He looked a bit damaged with a cut up jersey and some bleeding on his sides with some serious wounds but he was fighting on the last climb. The big names made it, Rodriguez, Fuglsang and Bardet with Louis sprinting it out for 4th with Izagirre.

This is a huge result for him and the team are very happy with his performance. So once again we were in the move and again we were fighting for a top 5. We were even going for the win but if you see the names ahead of him we must also accept that there were 3 riders stronger than him.
Jens Zemke – Sport Director

Comments

Mongoose!

Jul 16, 2015, 4:58 PM

Great stuff. You really makes us so proud!

J∆kk∆ls

Jul 16, 2015, 7:26 PM

Amazing effort today. And to continue blasting down the mountain post crash to catch up shows real courage, what a champ!

Shebeen

Jul 16, 2015, 8:02 PM

Well done boytjie

Hackster

Jul 16, 2015, 8:19 PM

Makes me proud to be a saffer.

TDK

Jul 16, 2015, 9:03 PM

Well done boytjie! Flippen proud

bassasdaindia

Jul 17, 2015, 2:39 AM

amazing

Pieterg

Jul 17, 2015, 5:03 AM

Super  cycling 

ynot-mtb

Jul 17, 2015, 5:56 AM

well done Louis... great ride , pity about

the fall but a great comeback. It was really

nice to see a Saffer up there with the best.

Keep these proud moments coming young man.....

CliveJames

Jul 17, 2015, 6:33 AM

Well done Louis, to fall down & get back up & finish 5th takes some BIG......

TheJ

Jul 17, 2015, 7:25 AM

Well done Louis, to fall down & get back up & finish 5th takes some BIG......

 

...calves.

Ratty

Jul 17, 2015, 8:06 AM

I just wish they would show more of team of our team and riders.

 

They showed the crash, but after that you didn't really here his name mentioned so had no idea where he was.

Chro Mo

Jul 17, 2015, 11:41 AM

Glad he's coming good....he's my last surviving reserve!

 

Well done!

Wannabe

Jul 17, 2015, 11:47 AM

Ja, with the "highlights package" they did not even show him going over the line. (or was it so fast that I missed it? :whistling: )

 

edit = spelling.

HeyYou

Jul 17, 2015, 3:02 PM

Updated:  July 17, 2015 1:04pm Race: Tour de France
Meintjes sore but proud after showing climbing talent at the Tour de France

MTN-Qhubeka rider makes breakthrough performance in the Pyrenees

Louis Meintjes admitted he still felt tired as he headed to the start of the stage to Rodez but was also quietly proud of his fifth place on the tough mountain stage to Plateau de Beille.

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The MTN-Qhubeka rider and African continental champion was in the break of the day, making the key selection, before he crashed hard on a wet decent but got back up to fight all the way to the finish atop Plateau de Beille - arguably the toughest mountain finish in this year’s Tour de France.

Meintjes is still only 23 and has already shown signs of his climbing talent but performing so well at the Tour de France has boosted his confidence in his own ability, and convinced him that he can take on the best in the world.

“It was tough to sleep because of my injuries but the satisfaction of doing a good ride helps cancel out the pain a little bit,” Meintjes told Cyclingnews as he headed to the start of 13 in Muret.

He has no regrets about the crash and what he could have done. “It’s always nice when you have something to show for what you went through. It’s definitely better than crashing and finishing at the back,” he said.

 

“You can never say (how it would have gone) because there are so many things involved but you have to be able to stay on your bike to win the race. It’s just one of those things.”

MTN-Qhubeka team manager Brian Smith is convinced that Meintjes produced a breakthrough performance in the Pyrenees that will boost his confidence and allow him to produce similar performances in the future, perhaps even in the Alpine stages later in the Tour de France.

“He’s sore now after the crash but his confidence is sky high,” Smith told Cyclingnews. “Since the start of the Tour we’ve been telling him that he can do rides like that. On the morning of the stage to the Mur de Huy we said: ‘we’re going with you today’ and he said: ‘give me 24 hours’ notice next time’. But it doesn’t happen like that in pro cycling and especially at the Tour de France.”

He’s still trying to find to his place in the peloton but he’s been sitting too far back. If you do that in the Tour de France you miss so many chances. Yesterday I told Edvald Boasson Hagen to make sure he took Louis to the front and got him in that first move. That happened and he went on to do a great ride. Now he knows, he’s gained a lot of confidence and he knows he’s got a team that will help him.

“It’s never easy for a young guy to come into the Tour de France and get respect from the big names and the strongest teams. But you’ve got to try to break down that respect barrier and ride your own race. Yesterday was his goal and he road incredibly well. He even crashed but he didn’t panic, he got back up and rode so well all the way to the finish. We’re really proud of him.”

This is year’s Tour de France is a huge baptism of fire for the MTN-Qhubeka team, and for Meintjes, but the team has showed that it deserved its wild card invitation to the race and is proudly flying the flag for African cycling.

“Every now and then it goes through your mind that ‘Wow. This is pretty big stuff.’ Meintjes toldCyclingnews. “The Tour de France is a pretty crazy race. You ride your bike and you think ‘This is the stuff I’ve been watching on TV for the last few years and dreaming about doing myself.’”

Meintjes will need a few days to recover from his crash injuries and his huge effort in the Pyrenees but he and the team are looking ahead to more opportunities in the Alps.

“I still believe we can get more from Louis in the Alps,” Smith said. “We need him to recover in the next few days and get focused for the ‘Alps. We believe that if he gets in the break again, there can be another great opportunity for him.”

“Today I’m pretty sore and so we’ll see how my body reacts but take every opportunity that comes,” Meintjes said. “It (my ride) has given me extra motivation and encouragement. Being able to be up there is good, so I’ll give it another go in the Alps.”

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