logo
UAE Team Emirates dominate Tour de France as Wellens wins stage, Pogacar maintains lead

UAE Team Emirates dominate Tour de France as Wellens wins stage, Pogacar maintains lead

Khaleej Timesa day ago
Tim Wellens of Team UAE Emirates won a baking and hilly stage 15 of the Tour de France at Carcassonne on Sunday after a 45km solo rampage towards the walled citadel.
Wellens' teammate Tadej Pogacar held on to the overall lead with a 4min 13sec advantage on Jonas Vingegaard, who had to fight to catch up when caught behind an early mass fall.
Wellens had been part of an early break which only really got away once the fall sent a shockwave though the race.
It was a large and mixed group that was whittled down to five before the Belgian champion suddenly accelerated and caught the others napping.
This was a fifth win for Team UAE with Pogacar previously having won four stages on a thoroughly dominant Tour for the team.
Wellens was so far ahead at the finish line he had time to high five dozens of Belgian fans on the run in on the eve of Belgium's national holiday.
"This makes me happier than winning a stage myself," said Pogacar. "He helps me keep this thing every day," he said pointing to the jersey.
Having previously won stages on the Giro d'Italia and the Vuelta a Espana this triumph completes the set of stage wins on the three big tours for Wellens.
"Everybody wants to win a stage at the Tour de France, this is the special one," said Wellens.
"I knew I was going to complete the trilogy and was enjoying the home straight with the fans. I'd been planning to lift the bike in the air, but I was so happy I forgot to do it"
Alaphilippe red faced
The remaining 167 of 184 riders embarked towards Carcassonne on yet another nervy stage.
After a mass fall early on with Florian Lipowitz and Vingegaard involved, the Pogacar group raced on, leaving two-time winner Vingegaard and a pack of 30 riders to exhaust themselves catching up.
There was embarrassment for Frenchman Julian Alaphilippe, who celebrated at the line thinking he had won when in fact he was third.
Sprinting for third place long after Wellens and Victor Campenaerts took the top two spots, Alaphilippe pipped Wout van Aert at the line.
Poor Alaphilippe hung his head when his horrified compatriots told him.
He had been part of the early fall, losing his race radio, and had no idea the stage had already been won, he explained.
Pogacar 'coughing'
Pogacar entered the Pyrenees on Thursday trailing in second behind surprise yellow jersey Ben Healy but emerged with two more stage wins and a four-minute advantage at the top of the overall standings in his bid for a fourth Tour de France title.
The defending champion said he had been ill.
"Half the peloton is coughing," said Pogacar. "I've got this red nose. It's because of all the ice packs and air conditioning I think, but I'm better now."
Monday is the final rest day before the 2025 edition soars into the Alps on Tuesday's stage 16 with the 15.8km ascent of Mont Ventoux at 7.9 percent gradient to its 1901m high summit.
"Mont Ventoux is for after the day off, so I don't want to talk about it now," Pogacar said after the podium ceremony at Carcassonne.
"All I know is that Jonas will be attacking, I just don't want to think about it."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Defending champion Team Emirates-XRG's Pogacar out to bury ghosts in final Tour de France week
Defending champion Team Emirates-XRG's Pogacar out to bury ghosts in final Tour de France week

Gulf Today

time2 hours ago

  • Gulf Today

Defending champion Team Emirates-XRG's Pogacar out to bury ghosts in final Tour de France week

UAE Team Emirates-XRG's Tadej Pogacar is riding not just for the yellow jersey on the Tour de France, but also to bury the ghosts of the past. As the 2025 Tour de France heads into its final and most punishing mountain stages, the defending champion is about to tackle climbs where he cracked or struggled before. The Mont Ventoux and Col de la Loze await again. But this time, things feel different. 'I'm almost confident to say the route was designed to scare me,' Pogacar said with a smile on Monday. 'But I always look at it as a race situation. I actually like all of these climbs.' This year, he has already won at Hautacam, where his Tour hopes vanished in 2022 when he was beaten by chief rival Jonas Vingegaard, who ended up 2:10 behind the Slovenian. Pogacar is 4:13 ahead of the Dane in the general classification as he marches towards a fourth Tour title. In his sixth campaign, Pogacar speaks with the assurance of a man determined to make peace with painful memories. 'Col de la Loze, for me, is one of the hardest climbs I've ever done,' he conceded. 'I'm not looking for revenge. I just want to have better legs than those days in the past.' In 2023, Pogacar experienced what he then called the 'worst day' of his life on a bike when he cracked in the ascent of the Col de la Loze, effectively losing the Tour to Vingegaard. While the UAE Team Emirates-XRG rider appears firmly in control, Pogacar knows better than anyone that one bad day can change everything. Although Vingegaard has suffered two rare off days, he insists he is not out of contention. 'I do think I can win it. Of course, it looks very hard now - it's a big gap,' the Dane said. 'But normally my strength is in the third week. We have to attack.' Vingegaard, however, has no illusions about the challenge ahead. 'The biggest difference is my two off days, where I lost most of the time,' he said. 'But I don't think the gap is as big as it looks. I know that's not my level - I can do a lot better than that. 'I'm also willing to sacrifice second to try to achieve first.' Visma-Lease a Bike's sports director Grischa Niermann underlined the urgency of the mission. 'It's four minutes - you don't make that up with an attack in the last 500 metres,' Niermann said. 'For that to happen, we need to see a weakness in Tadej. So far, he hasn't shown one. But the Tour is over only when we reach Paris.' Visma-Lease a Bike, however, seem to have lost the collective power that made them a formidable squad in 2022 and 2023, when Vingegaard won his two Tour titles. 'They tend to overtrain their riders and after two or three years, they're completely empty,' a senior official in another Tour team said. 'They have plans, but don't have the capacities to execute them. They should be more humble.' Pogacar is ready for anything that might come at him. 'We're ready for a fight with everybody,' he said. 'Especially with Jonas.' Meanwhile, heading into the final week of the Tour de France, emerging German star Florian Lipowitz is third in the overall standings and the highest-ranked rider under 25 in the world's greatest bike race. The 24-year-old from the Red Bull Bora team is not only the new face of cycling in his homeland, but also the new face standing alongside the likes of reigning Tour champion Pogacar and Vingegaard on the big-race podiums. Lipowitz climbed to third in the rankings on Saturday, the day when double Olympic champion Remco Evenepoel pulled out during the gruelling Tourmalet stage. Having made the podium at both Paris-Nice and the Criterium du Dauphine this year, he was described by Pogacar, who met him in a lift at a team hotel, as 'a nice guy, very cool, and really strong on a bike.' The shy rider from southern German had an unusual route into cycling, coming to the sport from biathlon, a sport in which his brother Philipp was junior world champion. Agencies

England face dark horses Italy with sights set on Euros 2025 final berth
England face dark horses Italy with sights set on Euros 2025 final berth

Gulf Today

time2 hours ago

  • Gulf Today

England face dark horses Italy with sights set on Euros 2025 final berth

Having come back from the brink of elimination against Sweden in the last eight, England will hope to live up to their billing as favourites when they face Italy in the semi-finals of Women's Euro 2025 on Tuesday. The holders are tantalisingly close to another major tournament final, with a showdown next Sunday against either Germany or world champions Spain the reward for Sarina Wiegman's team should they get the better of the Azzurre in Geneva. The Lionesses could be forgiven for feeling that their name is on the trophy after the dramatic nature of their victory over Sweden in Zurich on Thursday. England were 2-0 down late on but two goals in the space of three minutes forced extra time before they eventually triumphed 3-2 in a remarkable penalty shoot-out. Now they find themselves in a sixth consecutive semi-final between Women's Euros and World Cups, and it would be a shock if they slipped up against Italy. Ranked 13th in the world, the Italians are surprise semi-finalists while England are where they were expected to be as they look to repeat their triumph at the last Euros on home soil in 2022. 'I really had a sense throughout the game, even when we were down, that it wasn't our time to go,' defender Esme Morgan told English media this weekend as she reflected on the unlikely comeback against Sweden. 'I thought about three times we were out,' admitted Wiegman, who remains on course to win a third consecutive Women's Euros having guided her native Netherlands to victory on home soil in 2017 before triumphing with England three years ago. England have been exposed against top-level opposition at this European Championship, having been defeated by France in their opening group game before being torn apart in the first half against Sweden. But the nature of their recovery in the latter match, inspired by substitutes Michelle Agyemang and Chloe Kelly, will give them confidence and so can their recent record against Italy. England won 5-1 when the nations last met in a friendly in Spain in February last year, and were 2-1 victors a year earlier in the Arnold Clark Cup in Coventry. Italy finished second in their group behind Spain but then got the better of Norway in the quarter-finals with veteran Cristiana Girelli scoring twice including a last-minute winner. Now they are in the semis of a major tournament for the first time since the 1997 Euros. 'It's exciting because we are going to face the reigning champions,' defender Martina Lenzini told AFP at the Italian team's base near Lucerne. 'Getting to the semi-finals for us is a result in itself, a bit unexpected in the eyes of others and by everyone around us, but we believed we could do this. 'We are always humble but we were aware that we could get to this stage and have the chance to face a team of this calibre.' Meanwhile England have been hoping that captain Leah Williamson will be fit in time to feature after being forced off with an ankle injury against Sweden -- her fellow defender Morgan said over the weekend the team were 'very optimistic that Leah will be fine'. England football chiefs have alerted police after defender Carter revealed she has been the target of 'a lot of racial abuse' during the Women's Euros in Switzerland. The 27-year-old, who has started all of the defending champions' matches so far, said she would take a step back from social media to focus on the tournament. Football Association chief executive Mark Bullingham said his organisation 'immediately contacted UK police' as soon as it was made aware of the abuse and vowed to ensure 'those responsible for this hate crime are brought to justice'. The England team said instead of taking a knee to highlight racism, they would remain standing before Tuesday's semi-final against Italy, adding: 'It is clear we and football need to find another way to tackle racism.' Writing on her social media accounts, Carter, who has 49 England caps, said: 'From the start of the tournament I have experienced a lot of racial abuse. Agencies

Tour de France breakout talent Lipowitz shooting for the stars
Tour de France breakout talent Lipowitz shooting for the stars

Khaleej Times

time5 hours ago

  • Khaleej Times

Tour de France breakout talent Lipowitz shooting for the stars

Heading into the final week of the Tour de France, emerging German star Florian Lipowitz is third in the overall standings and the highest-ranked rider under 25 in the world's greatest bike race. The 24-year-old from the Red Bull Bora team is not only the new face of cycling in his homeland, but also the new face standing alongside the likes of reigning Tour champion Tadej Pogacar and Jonas Vingegaard on the big-race podiums. Lipowitz climbed to third in the rankings on Saturday, the day when double Olympic champion Remco Evenepoel pulled out during the gruelling Tourmalet stage. Having made the podium at both Paris-Nice and the Criterium du Dauphine this year, he was described by Pogacar, who met him in a lift at a team hotel, as "a nice guy, very cool, and really strong on a bike." The shy rider from southern German had an unusual route into cycling, coming to the sport from biathlon, a sport in which his brother Philipp was junior world champion. After nagging knee injuries he took up cycling, crossing the Pyrenees and Alps with his parents as a teenager. "I realised after a ride from Geneva to Nice that I had no ill effects whatsoever in my body," Lipowitz said this week. The year he gave up biathlon, he took it upon himself to seek out Red Bull team manager Ralph Denk, who was deeply impressed that the plucky youngster had cycled 100km each way to knock on his door. "I asked him if his mum was coming to pick him up, it was freezing. I was impressed when he told me he lived so far away," Denk said. His team's sports director Rolf Aldag also heaps praise on Lipowitz, describing him as unbreakable. "He's a very calm, down-to-earth person, and very reserved. It comes from his upbringing. He's not a loudmouth, but a hard worker, a true German," Aldag told AFP. "He has a big motor, and is incredibly powerful. The longer it is, the better for him. "I haven't found a single weakness in him yet. He's very agile on a bike which is rare for someone who came to cycling so late." On the Tour so far Lipowitz has placed in the top five in the three Pyrenean stages, and sixth in the major time trial. He also has the highly experienced Primoz Roglic as team leader, which would help given the Slovenian is also shy and softly spoken and started life in winter sports before winning five Grand Tours. "I'm happy, I'm really happy, and I hope that he keeps the level, and that he keeps it up until the finish," Roglic said this week. Roglic has never won the Tour de France, but perhaps his protege, given time, can go on to land cycling's ultimate prize.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store