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A 23-year-old Mark Cavendish celebrates maiden victory on stage 5 of the 2008 Tour de France.

Retro Rewatch: Where it all began for Mark Cavendish at the 2008 Tour de France

Rolling back the years to where it all began for the Manx Missile – in the opening edition of a new series of retro race rewatches.

Mark Cavendish (Team Columbia) wins stage 5 of the 2008 Tour de France. Photo: © Cor Vos

Kit Nicholson
by Kit Nicholson 10.11.2024 Photography by
Cor Vos, Gruber Images
More from Kit +

As the year plunges ever deeper into off-season, the world darkens, and live road racing becomes a distant memory, it’s a good time to look back, take refuge in nostalgia, revisit the good times. So here begins a new series called ‘Retro Rewatch’ in which we, well, rewatch retro races; we’ll cover what happened, rediscover the characters in play and locate the event within the context of the time.

It has finally been confirmed – we’re pretty sure this time – that Mark Cavendish will in fact retire at the end of this season, or rather, he will not compete as a pro again after this weekend’s exhibition race, the Singapore Criterium. He’s technically not “raced” since that historic final Tour de France, which is appropriate really.

Mark Cavendish wins stage 5 of the Tour de France.
The day history was made: stage 5 of the 2024 Tour de France, 17 years after his first Tour stage win.

“It’s not even a bike race, it’s the Tour de France,” Cavendish told CyclingNews at the Saitama Criterium. “Like, I don’t understand why it’s not like that for every bike rider. I don’t understand it. If you’ve won one stage of the Tour it changes your life … It’s always been hard for me to get motivated for anything except the Tour.”

The Manxman made the Tour his life, and after 35 wins across 15 editions, he got his fairytale ending – and then stopped.

When you arrive at an ending, it’s hard not to look over your shoulder and see how far you’ve come. For Mark Cavendish, the Tour’s greatest ever sprinter and stage-win record holder, it all began in 2008. Then a 23-year-old whippersnapper, the ‘Manx Missile’ was by no means an unknown, but if 2007 was his coming-of-age, 2008 was the year he ascended to the throne.

So join us in rewatching the day Cavendish ‘opened his account’ at the Tour de France. It is July 9th 2008, stage 5 of the biggest race of the year, and the 173-strong peloton is racing from Cholet to Châteauroux …

If the name Châteauroux sounds familiar, it’s probably because it was the scene of Cav’s second (of four) stage wins at his comeback Tour in 2021.

Setting the stage:

The caption writes itself …
Australia’s Cadel Evans raced to his first Grand Tour podium at the 2007 Tour, bettering his fourth place the previous year, in part thanks to his superlative time-trialing abilities, taking his maiden Tour win on stage 13 (pictured here on stage 16 to Col d’Aubisque).
Cavendish entered the Grand Tour stage winners club on stage 4 of the 2008 Giro d’Italia, one week before his 23rd birthday. He’s seen here wearing the High Road logo of his team’s management company, which would give way to the blue of Team Columbia in time for the Tour.

How it happened:

N.B. we chose 10 minutes of highlights, but there is coverage of the entire stage available on YouTube if you wish to watch hours of a 232-kilometre sprint stage.

Jonny Long: “Hearing the voice of Phil and Paul is the serotonin hit I needed this winter.”
Brard, Jégou and Vogondy in the break.
A classic image from a classic Tour sprint stage.
That’s an all-star cast right there. And you can just about see Nicolas Vogondy grimacing against the barriers on the left side of the picture.

I woke up this morning and I said to the lads, ‘I’m going to win today,’ I just feel it, you know? It sounds arrogant, but I’d just prefer to say it on the line of confidence, you know? We’ve got such a strong team here and we’ve shown that the other days, and we had to come away with a stage sooner or later, and after the other day [he missed out on stage 2’s first chance for sprinters], I wasn’t going to let them down.”

Stage 5 top 10:

  1. Mark Cavendish (Columbia)
  2. Óscar Freire (Rabobank Pro Team)
  3. Erik Zabel (Milram)
  4. Thor Hushovd (Crédit Agricole)
  5. Baden Cooke (Barloworld)
  6. Robert Hunter (Barloworld)
  7. Leonardo Fabio Duque (Cofidis, le Crédit par Téléphone)
  8. Robbie McEwen (Silence-Lotto)
  9. Francesco Chicchi (Liquigas)
  10. Julian Dean (Garmin-Chipotle)

Not-so brief analysis:

With contributions from Joe Lindsey.

About a week after taking his second stage win at the 2008 Giro, Cavendish helped his teammate André Greipel to the German’s own maiden Grand Tour stage – the 11th of 158 pro wins, 22 of them at three-week stage races, and 11 at the Tour.
Left to right: Bernie Eisel, Cav and Adam Hansen, all now retired. (Pictured after winning stage 8 of the 2008 Tour.)

What happened next?

The young Cavendish would win again just a few days later, then again and again with back-to-back stages towards the end of the second week. Four down, 31 to go. The 23-year-old would then withdraw from the Tour on the morning of stage 15, and take a short break before travelling to his first Olympic Games in Beijing with none other than Bradley Wiggins as his Madison partner. The pair ultimately finished mid-pack as the Argentine duo of Juan Curuchet and Walter Pérez took gold, and just a week later, Cavendish began the last laps of his season at the relatively minor Tours of Ireland and Missouri, winning on six out of 12 race days.

His love story with the French Grand Tour continued the following year with a career-best six stage wins – but he had to wait until 2011 to win his first green jersey – and he’d keep coming back for more every season, bringing his tally up to 25 before the bubble burst on stage 1 of the 2014 race.

But Harrogate was not the end of the story, nor were the Epstein-Barr virus and mental health struggles that plagued him in the ensuing years. Cavendish almost saw his career fade away towards the end of 2020, but a breath of fresh air arrived with a Quick Step contract, which set him on the path to beating Eddy Merckx’s stage win record, emphatically positioning himself front and centre in the hall of fame.

As for his fellow cast members on this stage:

The Schleck brothers, Luxembourg national champion Frank and Tour debutant Andy in the white jersey that he’d wear from stage 16 to the end, alongside CSC teammate Fabian Cancellara.

Escape reflections:

Jonny: Is the quality of re-uploaded race highlights to YouTube that bad or is this how people used to watch bike racing?!

Joe: Jonny’s full of it, the coverage quality is fine. This was 2008! In America we were still watching on Outdoor Life I think (or Vs or whatever the hell it was called) and there was no legit online streaming option. I was writing a live blog for Bicycling for people who didn’t have a TV handy at work and wanted to watch. And internet at the time was of the level where routinely any pirate coverage would freeze to the point that it was basically a slideshow of still images. I’m amazed this video is even in 16:9 format. [End “old man yells at cloud” rant]

Jonny: Were the crowds bigger back then? Is this because no-one had internet connection and there was nothing else to do on a Wednesday afternoon in July?

Kit: The crowds are great, and everyone’s actually watching, there aren’t phones clutched in sweaty palms in every frame.

Jonny: The commentators announce the victory in a humdrum fashion, like they’re at a village fete reading out a car registration plate because someone has parked their vehicle in such a way that it’s blocking other people in.

Joe: As a final note, there’s a comment in there about how British fans don’t appreciate what he’s done in other races (he’d already been a world track champion in the Madison, and of course had won two Giro stages earlier in 2008) and that Brits think the Tour and the Olympics are all there is to cycling. And I’m struck by that because while he’s right, this was just two years before Sky started, and which reinforced that for the UK, just as for the US, the Tour really is the only race that matters to most people (not hardcore road racing fans, but most people). He’s Sir Mark Cavendish for one big reason: he won more Tour stages than anyone.

Did we do a good job with this story?