Weather: Partly sunny to cloudy, some showers, highs in mid 60s, moderate southwesterly winds Stage winner: Fabian Cancellara (CSC) attacked with about 600 meters to go in the longest stage of the 94th Tour. A four-man breakaway was caught with just under one kilometer to go when the 2006 Paris-Roubaix winner uncorked an attack in front of the Compiègne castle to win for the second time in four days. “To win in the yellow jersey in front of where Paris-Roubaix starts was amazing,” he said. Race leader: Cancellara widened his lead to 33 seconds to Andreas Klöden (Astana) after taking a 20-second victory bonus. “Team CSC will defend the jersey with pride and honor as long as we can,” he said. Green jersey: Overnight leader Tom Boonen (QuickStep-Innergetic) widened his grip on the green after finishing fourth to 80-74 points to Robbie McEwen (Predictor-Lotto). “I didn’t have my train today but I am happy to finish ahead of McEwen,” Boonen said. King of the Mountains: David Millar (Saunier Duval-Prodir) ceded his two-day run in the jersey to Stéphane Auge (Cofidis), who bolted out of the pack to bridge out to a two-man break to snag the day’s lone climb at the Cote de Blérancourt at 202.5km. Auge tied Millar in KoM points in Sunday’s stage but Millar got the jersey based on his better GC position. “I am satisfied that I was able to take the jersey and I tried to save some strength for the sprint. We didn’t make it, but I’m satisfied,” Auge said. Best Young Rider: Vladimir Gusev (Discovery Channel), fifth in Saturday’s opening prologue, retained his six-second lead to Thomas Dekker (Rabobank). “This jersey makes me very happy, but we will see in the mountains,” he said. Best team: Astaná retained its two-second lead over Team CSC. Most aggressive rider: Matthieu Ladagnous (FDJeux) won the day’s prize, with the eight-man panel saying that “for attacking 6km into the longest stage of the Tour for trying to provoke one’s own destiny and sometimes it smiles on the most audacious.” Lanterne Rouge: Aleksandr Kuschynski (Liquigas) remains in last at 9:01 back. Top American: George Hincapie (Discovery Channel) sprinted to 16th and remained best-placed in GC at fourth overall at 43 seconds back. The peloton: Tomas Vaitkus (Discovery Channel), who broke his thumb in five places in Monday’s finish-line melee, didn’t start. The peloton now numbers 187 riders. Medical report:Soler (Barloworld), digestive troublesCrash at 16km – Hincapie (Discovery), superficial cuts and scrapes, including to right hand.Longo Borghini (Barloworld), contusion to right leg.Mayo and Ventoso (both Saunier Duval), leg pain linked to Monday’s finish line crash.Quinziato (Liquigas), headaches.Steegmans (QuickStep), crash at 197km, cuts to left knee. Blood controls: The UCI vampires swooped down on six teams – Astaná, Predictor-Lotto, FDJeux, Ag2r, Discovery Channel and T-Mobile – to test blood levels on 53 riders. None were declared unfit to race. Jury decisions:Leif Hoste (Predictor-Lotto), fined 100SF for not signing in.Zabriskie (CSC), Rodriguez (Predictor-Lotto), Boonen (QuickStep-Innergetic), fined 100SF for “comportement incorrect” Announcement: Dave Zabriskie (CSC) will receive “a basket of apples” before the start of Wednesday’s stage by local authorities, likely because Zabriskie was the last rider to roll into Compiègne today. Forecast: Continued instability with chance of afternoon showers, cool temperatures with highs in 60s