MARSEILLE, France — Mark Cavendish will never be the greatest Tour de France rider,  because he will never win the race five times like Eddy Merkcx of  Belgium and Frenchman Bernard Hinault. Still, the sprinter with thighs  like thick hams could outdo both those legends — by winning more stages  at cycling’s premier race. By Cavendish’s warp-speed standards,  his 24th stage win on Wednesday was a ride in the park. The teammates  who led Cavendish to the finish, sucking him along in their wheels,  building up his speed, were toiling like clockwork. Stamping on his  pedals, head down, thighs pumping like pistons, Cavendish then whooshed  off alone for the last 150 meters (yards), leaving everyone else in his  wake. Cavendish was carrying so much momentum and this win in  Marseille, France’s second-largest city, was so comfortable that he was  able to sit up in the saddle and make a hand motion like cracking a whip  as he crossed the line. One more stage win will tie Cavendish  with Andre Leducq, the Frenchman who got 25 stage wins in the 1920s and  1930s, putting him third on the all-time list. Beyond Leducq is Hinault,  who notched up 28 wins in the 1970s and ’80s. Merckx’s monument is 34,  won from 1969 to 1975. Jacques Anquetil and Miguel Indurain also won  five Tours, but didn’t win as many stages as Hinault and Merckx.  Anquetil won 16; Indurain got 12. All seven of Lance Armstrong’s Tour  wins were stripped or doping. This 100th Tour is the first since  Armstrong’s fall last year. Cavendish says he isn’t fixated on  Hinault or Merckx’s numbers. He notes that for many riders, winning just  one stage — let alone the 11 he needs to draw level with Merckx — is a  career-defining feat. “You have to show the Tour de France the respect it deserves,” he said. But  then Cavendish isn’t any other rider. Before this edition, he collected  on average nearly five wins at every Tour since 2008. In 2009, he got  six. He won the last four sprint finishes on the Champs-Elysees in  Paris, where he is unbeaten since 2009. While Merckx’s record is still a  way off, Hinault and most certainly Leducq look within Cavendish’s  grasp. “Obviously I aim to win multiple stages each year. But to  set any goals, any number … it does one of two things: It sets you up  to fail for something or it puts like a mark on what you want to achieve  and it can kind of stop you trying to move forward,” he said. Were  Cavendish to overtake Hinault, it wouldn’t mean he is a better overall  rider than the famously bad-tempered “Badger,” who was strong on every  terrain. But in a sprint, Cavendish has no equal, at least in this  generation. Although Cavendish downplays the chase for stage-win  milestones, he is certainly very aware of them. The Tour director,  Christian Prudhomme, says that more than a year ago, at the Tour of  Oman, he quietly tested Cavendish’s knowledge of Tour de France history  and was delighted when he rattled off the names of Andre Darrigade, who  won 22 stages in the 1950s and ’60s, as well as Leducq, Hinault, Merckx  and their respective totals. “He is aware of what does it take …  to become No. 1 on the list of most winning riders ever,” confirmed  Rolf Aldag, one of the managers of Cavendish’s Omega Pharma-Quick Step  team. “He has a chance to make history,” he said. “It’s a goal, it’s a target.” Cavendish  would be the first to note that, unlike Merckx, he doesn’t win alone.  His teammates worked tirelessly to maneuver him into place in Marseille.  They helped reel in breakaway riders who scooted off ahead and then  delivered him like express mail to within sight of the line. Omega’s  Italian rider, Matteo Trentin, surged to the front and pedaled as hard  as he could up to and around the final left-hand bend, pulling Gert  Steegmans and Cavendish behind him. Exhausted, Trentin then made  way for Steegmans, who led Cavendish at top speed to the signboard  marking 150 meters to go. From there, the man known as the “Manx  Missile,” because he comes from the Isle of Man, did the rest. “Perfect, man, perfect,” Trentin said. “The  basic plan never changes,” Aldag said. “The basic plan is always we  believe he’s the fastest sprinter and we do everything that needs to be  done to try to make him win.” “I didn’t do anything,” Cavendish  said. “Gert went with such speed that I could accelerate off his wheel  and just carried on the speed he delivered me at.” Stage 6 on  Thursday — 176.5 kilometers (110 miles) from Aix-en-Provence to  Montpellier — should also suit Cavendish, because it is flat. With his  short, muscular frame, he doesn’t like steep climbs. Simon Gerrans  of Australia will again wear the yellow jersey, after keeping the race  lead on Wednesday’s bumpy 228.5-kilometer (142-mile) trek from the beach  resort of Cagnes-sur-Mer.
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