Marcel Kittel sprints home to second stage win in London

German speedster takes final stage in England on The Mall

The peloton make their way up the short climb in the village of Finchingfield in north Essex during stage three of the Tour de France from Cambridge to London.  Photograph:  Nick Ansell/PA
The peloton make their way up the short climb in the village of Finchingfield in north Essex during stage three of the Tour de France from Cambridge to London. Photograph: Nick Ansell/PA

Marcel Kittel's Tour de France sprint supremacy continued on Monday as the German won stage three of the Tour de France on The Mall in London.

The 155-kilometre route from Cambridge was the third and final stage in England ahead of the race’s return to France and was always destined to end in a sprint finish.

The peloton raced near Mark Cavendish’s Essex home, but the partisan crowd were deprived of the 25-times stage winner’s presence by his withdrawal with a shoulder injury sustained on stage one in Harrogate.

Kittel (Giant-Shimano) won four stages to Cavendish’s two in the 2013 Tour and already has two wins from three stages a year on after triumphing on Saturday’s opening day and again in front of Buckingham Palace, where he once again proved he is the new sprint king.

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Peter Sagan (Cannondale) was second, with Cavendish's Omega Pharma-QuickStep team-mate Mark Renshaw third.

Italian Vincenzo Nibali (Astana), who assumed the yellow jersey by winning in Sheffield on day two, finished safely in the bunch to retain the overall lead.

After glorious weather in Yorkshire, the first rainfall of the race arrived after the riders had passed by the Olympic Park in East London.

The day’s breakaway pair – NetApp-Endura’s Jan Barta and Jean-Marc Bideau (Bretagne-Seche Environnemen) – were swept up in the final 6km and Kittel’s Giant-Shimano squad led through Parliament Square and along Birdcage Walk.

Lotto-Belisol took to the front outside Buckingham Palace, but then Kittel’s squad took over once more and no one could match the German’s power.