Leggy Vingegaard loses ground on Pogacar in Tour time trial
CAEN, France - Denmark's Jonas Vingegaard (Visma-Lease a Bike) lost over a minute on Slovenia's Tadej Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates-XRG), who took the Tour de France's leader's yellow jersey, during the stage five time trial on Wednesday.
Twice Tour champion Vingegaard finished 13th, one minute 21 seconds behind stage winner Remco Evenepoel (Soudal Quick-Step) and one minute five seconds adrift of Pogacar. Third overall before the start of the stage, he is now in fourth place, trailing Slovenian Pogacar by a minute and 13 seconds.
"My legs were not feeling so good. I was fighting with my bike and my legs today," Vingegaard told reporters. "I was a bit surprised about my legs but that's racing. One minute seems like quite a lot but in the last few years, the Tour has been won for more than that."
Vingegaard's race director Grischa Niermann was unable to understand the Dane's struggles.
"I don't have an explanation. We didn't expect a loss that much but it happened and we will fight again tomorrow," he said.
The result shocked Pogacar, the three-times Tour winner who claimed the yellow jersey for the first time this year.
"For sure I was surprised, I'm not going to lie. I was not expecting to be so far ahead of him in this time trial. I was expecting him to be closer to Remco than me," Pogacar told a press conference.
Vingegaard, however, remains optimistic about his chances of regaining the lead, with the high-mountain stages not coming before stage 12 in the Pyrenees.
"Luckily, the Tour is long, I still believe in myself and in our plan and still believe that we can win," he said. REUTERS
Hashtags

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

Straits Times
an hour ago
- Straits Times
Kenya's Faith Kipyegon, Beatrice Chebet break world records in Eugene
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox – Kenya's Beatrice Chebet smashed the women's 5,000 metres world record and compatriot Faith Kipyegon broke her own 1,500m record again as the Eugene Diamond League meet lived up to its billing on July 5. Olympic champion Chebet ran 13min 58.06sec to better the time set by Gudaf Tsegay by over two seconds, the Ethiopian's 14:00.21 obliterated when the Kenyan left Tsegay for dust with 200 metres to go as she sprinted for the line. Chebet looked in shock when she saw the time, adding to her world 10,000m record set in Eugene in 2024, but she had been threatening the record, running 14:03.69 in Rome in June. 'I'm so happy. After running in Rome, I said I have to prepare for a record, because in Rome I was just running to win a race, but after running 14:03, I said that I'm capable of running a world record,' the 25-year-old said. ' So, let me go back home, and then come to Eugene. When I was coming here to Eugene, I was coming to prepare to run a world record, and I said I have to try.' Tsegay, along with Kenyan Agnes Jebet Ngetich, kept pace with Chebet for almost the entire race, but had no answer when Chebet kicked for home, and Jebet Ngetich finished second in 14:01.29, the third-fastest time ever. The 50th Prefontaine Classic promised fireworks, and in the final race of the evening Kipyegon ran a time of 3min 48.68sec, improving her previous world mark of 3:49.04 set in Paris last July. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. World Trump's ambassador nominee to Singapore Anjani Sinha has a rough day at Senate hearing Asia Dr Mahathir at 100: Still haunted by the Malay Dilemma Singapore What's next for PSP following its post-GE leadership shake-up? Singapore 'Give a positive review': Hidden AI prompt found in academic paper by NUS researchers Multimedia 60 objects to mark SG60: Which is your favourite? Singapore Apex court upholds SMC's conviction of doctor who gave patients unapproved hormones Singapore Singaporean fugitive arrested in Thailand for suspected drug trafficking and handed over to CNB World Trump issues tariff notices to 7 minor trading partners, hits Brazil with 50% tariff Kipyegon, thrice Olympic champion over the distance, recently fell short in her attempt to become the first woman to run a mile in under four minutes, but she shook that disappointment off in style. The 31-year-old Kenyan upped the pace down the back straight, powering around the final bend and pushed for the line, her eyes wide in disbelief as she glanced at the clock as she broke the tape. Faith Kipyegon celebrating after winning the women's 1,500m in a world record 3:48.68 on July 5. PHOTO: REUTERS But Sweden's Armand Duplantis failed in his bid to break his own world pole vault record for a 13th time. Duplantis, who recorded his best jump of 6.28m in Stockholm in June, faced little competition, with nobody else left at 5.90m, and after clearing 6.00m he attempted 6.29m but was unsuccessful in all three tries. The men's 100m was dominated by Jamaican Olympic silver medallist Kishane Thompson, winning in a time of 9.85sec, one-tenth of a second off his personal best set eight days ago, with Briton Zharnel Hughes in second. 'I'm the only one that can stop me,' Thompson said. 'I don't say that to brag, but to be honest, once I better my execution, amazing things are going to happen.' Olympic 400m hurdles champion and world record holder Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone took on the flat race at the same distance and held off a late surge from fellow American Aaliyah Butler. American Yared Nuguse looked like threatening the world mile record before a late collapse saw him caught before the line by Dutchman Niels Laros. 'I didn't get the record, but I'm still at a really good place right now,' Nuguse said. Meanwhile, in Bengaluru, Olympic javelin star Neeraj Chopra headlined what was billed as India's inaugural world-class field competition on July 5, living up to his goal of elevating domestic talent while also walking away with another gold medal. Chopra, who won gold at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021 and silver at the 2024 Paris Games, triumphed with a throw of 86.18m at the 12-athlete javelin Neeraj Chopra Classic event. He finished ahead of former world champion Julius Yego of Kenya (silver) and Sri Lanka's Rumesh Pathirage (bronze). REUTERS

Straits Times
an hour ago
- Straits Times
Noah Lyles to open 200m season against Letsile Tebogo in Monaco
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Letsile Tebogo after crossing the line to win gold ahead of silver medallist Kenneth Bednarek and bronze medallist Noah Lyles at the Paris Olympics. MONACO – Noah Lyles makes his much-anticipated return to elite competition when he competes in the 200m at the Diamond League meet in Monaco on Friday. As athletes continue to fine-tune their form ahead of September's World Championships in Tokyo, the American will line up against Olympic champion Letsile Tebogo. Here are four stand-out disciplines at the 10th meeting of the 15-event Diamond League at the Stade Louis II. 1. Men's 200m Olympic 100m champion Lyles makes his return to action in the 200m on a track where his one previous appearance, in 2020, saw him clock a sensational 19.46 seconds. The 27-year-old ran a 400m in Atlanta in April, but is yet to compete over the 100 or 200m this season. Lyles' season and European debut in the half-lap race will see him line up against Botswana's Olympic 200m champion Tebogo. It will be the duo's first race since that final in Paris last summer when a Covid-struck Lyles claimed bronze. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. World Trump's ambassador nominee to Singapore Anjani Sinha has a rough day at Senate hearing Asia Dr Mahathir at 100: Still haunted by the Malay Dilemma Singapore What's next for PSP following its post-GE leadership shake-up? Singapore 'Give a positive review': Hidden AI prompt found in academic paper by NUS researchers Multimedia 60 objects to mark SG60: Which is your favourite? Singapore Apex court upholds SMC's conviction of doctor who gave patients unapproved hormones Singapore Singaporean fugitive arrested in Thailand for suspected drug trafficking and handed over to CNB World Trump issues tariff notices to 7 minor trading partners, hits Brazil with 50% tariff Tebogo heads to Monaco as the sprinter to beat. He set the fastest time of the season over 200m in Eugene on Saturday, in 19.76sec, having recovered from a poor start to the season. 'For me, this is the tip of an iceberg,' said Tebogo. 'The 19.7 is a shock to me because we just recovered from an injury which took a lot of weeks of training, so I'm happy with how I performed.' 2. Women's 400m hurdles Femke Bol, the world champion, double European champion and four-time Olympic medallist, boasts an incredible streak of 25 consecutive victories in the Diamond League since 2021, including four final wins. She first competed in Monaco in 2020, finishing third in the 400m flat on her Diamond League debut. 'I've trained well this year. Monaco is one of the meetings I haven't won yet and I would love to change that this year,' said the Dutchwoman. 'I hope to run a great race and fully enjoy the atmosphere.' Bol will have some serious competition from Dalilah Muhammad and fellow American Anna Cockrell, Olympic silver medallist in Paris. 3. Men's pole vault Armand 'Mondo' Duplantis again headlines the pole vault competition, the US-born Swede fresh from another victory last weekend in Eugene. The two-time Olympic champion won that with a vault of 6.00m, comfortably ahead of Americans Sam Kendricks and Austin Miller. The question on everyone's lips whenever Duplantis takes to the field is whether everything aligns for him to have another pitch at bettering his own world record. That currently stands at 6.28m, which he set in Stockholm three weeks ago, the 12th time he has improved the world record. At the Stade Louis II, he will seek to erase the blip of 2023 when he finished fourth with 5.72m, far from his usual standards. 4. Women's 100m Olympic champion Julien Alfred saw her winning streak ended by in-form American Melissa Jefferson-Wooden in Eugene. Saint Lucia's Alfred, whose gold in Paris was the first-ever for her tiny Caribbean island nation, finished second in 10.77, two-hundredths off the American and her own fastest time of the season. In Monaco, Alfred will be up against the Jamaican Clayton twins, Tia and Tina, New Zealander Zoe Hobbs and a US trio in the form of Aleia Hobbs, Jacious Sears and Maia McCoy. Could the meeting record of 10.72sec set by Marion Jones in 1998 be under threat? AFP

Straits Times
6 hours ago
- Straits Times
Tavatavanawai gets All Blacks shot, Tuipulotu comes in for injured skipper
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox WELLINGTON - All Blacks coach Scott Robertson has made two enforced changes to his starting side for the second test against France and given centre Timoci Tavatavanawai the chance to win his first cap off the bench on Saturday. Patrick Tuipulotu has been named in the second row in place of captain Scott Barrett, who has been ruled out of the rest of the series by a calf tear, and Caleb Clarke comes into the side for Sevu Reece. Reece was concussed when the All Blacks edged a weakened France team 31-27 in Dunedin last Saturday, a performance Robertson will want to see an improvement on this weekend at Wellington Regional Stadium. "Both teams now have a better idea of what they're going to get on Saturday night, and both will lift for this next occasion," Robertson said. "We know where we need to improve." Tavatavanawai, who left Fiji at the age of 16 to pursue his rugby dreams in New Zealand, comes onto the bench in place of Quinn Tupaea as cover for the centre partnership of Billy Proctor and Jordie Barrett. The 27-year-old earned his call-up with a brilliant Super Rugby Pacific campaign in which he was a constant threat to the opposition with his power and pace as well as his presence over the ball at the breakdown. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. World Trump's ambassador nominee to Singapore Anjani Sinha has a rough day at Senate hearing Asia Dr M at 100: Still haunted by the Malay Dilemma Asia South Korean court orders arrest of ex-president Yoon: Yonhap Singapore Singaporean fugitive arrested in Thailand for suspected drug trafficking and handed over to CNB Singapore COE prices rise for all categories Singapore Govt watching job situation for fresh graduates closely, exploring further support: Gan Siow Huang Singapore Man who killed cats by throwing them off HDB blocks has jail term doubled to 27 months Singapore $43k fine for undischarged bankrupt doctor who failed to disclose assets worth over $4m Rieko Ioane continues in his new position on the wing but swaps sides to allow Clarke to take up his usual spot on the left flank. Ardie Savea steps up from vice-captain to skipper the team in his home city and is likely to retain the role for next week's final test in Hamilton. Team: 15–Will Jordan, 14–Rieko Ioane, 13–Billy Proctor, 12–Jordie Barrett, 11–Caleb Clarke, 10–Beauden Barrett, 9–Cam Roigard, 8–Christian Lio-Willie, 7–Ardie Savea, 6–Tupou Vaa'i, 5–Fabian Holland, 4–Patrick Tuipulotu, 3–Fletcher Newell, 2–Codie Taylor, 1–Ethan de Groot Replacements: 16–Samisoni Taukei'aho, 17–Ollie Norris, 18–Pasilio Tosi, 19–Samipeni Finau, 20–Du'Plessis Kirifi, 21–Cortez Ratima, 22–Timoci Tavatavanawai, 23–Damian McKenzie REUTERS