Italy outsprints Belgian to win latest Tour de France stage, Pogacar still in yellow
Photo:
SARAH MEYSSONNIER
Italy's Jonathan Milan fought off Belgian Wout van Aert to win stage eight of the Tour de France from Saint-Meen-le-Grand to Laval, with defending champion Tadej Pogacar retaining the yellow jersey.
Milan, riding his first Tour, looked to have been caught off guard when Australian Kaden Groves hit the front, but the Italian battled back to take the lead and held off the challenge of Van Aert, while Groves came in third.
Slovenia's Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates) remains 54 seconds ahead of Belgian Remco Evenepoel in the overall standings.
Milan came close on stage three, beaten into second place by Tim Merlier, but this time the Italian, who has four Giro d'Italia stage wins to his name, powered home ahead of the experienced Van Aert who was chasing his 10th individual Tour stage win.
"In the third one, we were pretty close to the victory," Milan said.
"We know that we just went a bit too early but today we were really focused, we were really believing in it. My guys did an amazing job until the final. It was a really tough final."
After the last few action-packed stages, where the yellow jersey went back and forth between Pogacar and Mathieu Van der Poel, Saturday's race was expected to be a chance for the sprinters to return to the fore on the mostly flat 171.4km ride.
The peloton trundled along for the opening 90km, apart from a brief spurt at the intermediate sprint where Milan took maximum points, before French duo Matteo Vercher and Mathieu Burgaudeau (TotalEnergies) launched the first attack.
With several teams looking to set up their sprinters for the stage win, the break was never allowed to get too far ahead, though they managed to extend their lead to just over one minute with 20km remaining.
Burgaudeau went solo with 13km to go but was reeled in by the chasing pack after four kilometres and the tactical game of cat and mouse began.
Van Aert took the wheel of Groves as the Australian's team led the bunch into the final kilometre. Groves went early and did not have the legs to hold off Milan, while the Italian was able to withstand Van Aert's late burst.
Milan is the first Italian Tour de France stage winner since Vincenzo Nibali in 2019 and, having worn the green jersey on behalf of Pogacar in Saturday's stage, Milan is now the leader of the points classification.
New Zealander Lawrence Pithie is 85th in general classification, after finishing in the Peleton in today's stage.
Sunday's stage nine takes the riders 174.1km from Chinon to Chateauroux, a flat ride where the sprinters will again fancy their chances.
- Reuters
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
3 hours ago
- RNZ News
Tennis: Britain's Moore handed four-year ban after CAS upholds ITIA appeal
Tara Moore has been handed a four-year ban after an appeal was upheld. Photo: Photosport Britain's Tara Moore, who was previously cleared of an anti-doping rule violation, has been handed a four-year ban after the Court of Arbitration for Sport upheld an appeal filed by the International Tennis Integrity Agency. Moore, Britain's former number one-ranked doubles player, was provisionally suspended in June 2022 due to the presence of prohibited anabolic steroids Nandrolone and boldenone. Moore said she had never knowingly taken a banned substance in her career and an independent tribunal determined that contaminated meat consumed by her in the days before sample collection was the source of the prohibited substance. Moore lost 19 months in the process before she was cleared of the ADRV but CAS upheld the ITIA's appeal against the first instance "No Fault or Negligence" ruling with respect to nandrolone. "After reviewing the scientific and legal evidence, the majority of the CAS Panel considered that the player did not succeed in proving that the concentration of nandrolone in her sample was consistent with the ingestion of contaminated meat," CAS said in a statement. "The panel concluded that Ms Moore failed to establish that the ADRV was not intentional. The appeal by the ITIA is therefore upheld and the decision rendered by the Independent Tribunal is set aside." Moore had previously said how she saw her reputation, ranking and livelihood "slowly trickling away" for 19 months during her initial suspension. The 32-year-old had also filed a cross-appeal at CAS "seeking to dismiss the ITIA appeal, dismiss the nandrolone result in the ADRV or alternatively confirm that she bears no fault or negligence". However, CAS said the cross-appeal was declared inadmissible and her four-year period of ineligibility would start from 15 July, with credit for any provisional suspension that has already been served. "Our bar for appealing a first instance decision is high, and the decision is not taken lightly," ITIA chief executive Karen Moorhouse said in a statement. "In this case, our independent scientific advice was that the player did not adequately explain the high level of nandrolone present in their sample. Today's ruling is consistent with this position." - Reuters

RNZ News
7 hours ago
- RNZ News
Tour de France: George Bennett impressed with fellow Kiwi Laurence Pithie
FROM FIRST UP IV - ON AIR WED 0550AM New Zealand cyclist Laurence Pithie. Photo: Red Bull Content Pool / Red Bull - BORA - hansgrohe / Oriol Castello Kiwi cyclist George Bennett wasn't able to make it to the start line for the 2025 Tour de France, but he's been closely following 'La Grande Boucle' from his training base in Andorra as he prepares for another of cycling's grand tours, the Vuelta a Espana. The efforts of fellow Kiwi Laurence Pithie have made an impression on Bennett. The 22-year-old is riding in his first Tour de France campaign and while he's back in 105th place after 10 stages, it's not his job to chase the yellow jersey. His role is to support Red Bull - Bora - Hansgrohe teammate Primoz Roglic. "He's a he's a big, strong boy from Canterbury." Bennett told RNZ's First Up . "He's definitely not scared to get his elbows out. He's a guy that likes to throw his weight around, and to have a guy like that on your team is really valuable. I love racing with guys like Laurence, but I hate racing against guys like Laurence. And that's why he's there for Primoz, and he's had a busy week protecting him." This year marks 50 years since the Tour first finished on the Champs circuit . To celebrate the occasion, organisers have altered the route of the final stage to include three laps of the Champs and three climbs up the Butte Montmartre. Normally the 21st stage is a largely ceremonial affair with the leaders sipping champagne on the road into Paris before a sprint finish. Bennett isn't a fan, and feels even without the changes, the final stage into Paris is a lot tougher than people realise. George Bennett in 2023. Photo: PHOTOSPORT "I hate it." he said. "On TV it kind of looks just like they cruise around and have a bunch sprint. The reality is that's one of the most horrific stages as it is, the cobbles are rough, it's uphill. It's it's such a horrific stage. If you win the Champ sprint then it's the biggest sprint of the year. But to make it another general classification day where suddenly you finish in the Alps, you take the charter flight to Paris and then you have to do this extremely dangerous (stage). Crashing on the cobbles is the worst, you don't get road rash, it takes big chunks out of you. It just, it just makes the whole last day so horrible." Although not having to ride it has altered his perspective a little. "When I was originally going on the tour and I saw that last stage, I wasn't very happy, but now that I'm sitting on my couch watching it, I think, yeah, cool." Once recent change Bennett is more positive about is the introduction of a punishment system for dangerous riding, first trialled during 2024. "In the past it was the wild west, and there weren't really consequences, but they've produced a bit of a yellow card system for dangerous riding. They've already handed out a few cards this year, and if you get two cards, you're out, so I don't know if it's making things safer, but it's probably adding a little bit of sort of justice for a few rogue operators that are repeat offenders." The tour resumes on Wednesday night New Zealand time with the 181 kilometre stage 12 from Auch to Hautacam. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
a day ago
- RNZ News
Sports News for 15 July 2025
New Zealand is through to the final of the under-20 rugby World Cup after beating France 34-26 in their semi-final in Italy. Tags: To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following: See terms of use.