logo
Everybody is scared of crashes in the Tour opening week, says Evenepoel

Everybody is scared of crashes in the Tour opening week, says Evenepoel

CNA2 days ago
LILLE, France :Tour de France riders worry about crashes during the tense opening week of the race, Belgium's Remco Evenepoel said on Thursday.
"I think everybody is a little bit scared of that," Evenepoel told a press conference when asked about the risk of crashes in the first week.
"We don't want to go out with injuries after a few stages already. Before a race like this, we all hope that the most nervous stages just end up not being nervous or not being really hectic."
The 25-year-old rider, who took third in last year's Tour, is aiming to secure another podium finish in cycling's most prestigious race, which begins in Lille on Saturday with some challenging finishes in the early stages.
"First week is going to be difficult", he said.
The double Olympic champion, who finished fourth at last month's Criterium du Dauphine, aims to compete alongside Tadej Pogacar and Jonas Vingegaard.
"It's logical as they won together the last five editions, so it means they are top favourites for this year's edition again", the Soudal-Quick Step rider said.
"It would be unfair towards myself, towards the team, to say that I'm not here to compete with them. So I'm just here to try and compete against them, try to make it a bit harder for them.
"It's really difficult to say where I am exactly compared to them because last year I was the third guy and I think we're here to try and improve that a bit."
Despite battling serious injuries in recent years, the 2022 Vuelta a Espana champion has not shied away from his lofty career ambitions.
"I think everybody knows that my career goal is to try and win the three Grand Tours. I have one in the pocket, so two to go," Evenepoel said. "I came third last year, so it means that the capabilities are there."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

England captain Williamson blames England's poor defending on emotions
England captain Williamson blames England's poor defending on emotions

CNA

time5 hours ago

  • CNA

England captain Williamson blames England's poor defending on emotions

ZURICH :England captain Leah Williamson blamed emotions for her team's uncharacteristic performance in their 2-1 loss to France in their opening game of Women's Euro 2025 on Saturday, saying they failed to leave them in the dressing room before kickoff. Marie-Antoinette Katoto and Sandy Baltimore struck in the first half for France to leave England's travelling fans in stunned silence and while Keira Walsh pulled one back in the 87th minute and the Lionesses had some near-misses towards the close, it was too little too late for the reigning champions. "I'm disappointed there was some cheap sort of emotional defending in the first half, when you take waves of attack like that you leave yourself open to those sorts of things," Williamson said of their poor one-on-one defending. "I'm just frustrated because I think the football that we played near the end, and the game plan, could've worked. We just didn't execute it exceptionally well. "We spoke (at halftime) as players, we take responsibility individually and as a team. We have a calm environment at the minute but there was an injection of get the emotion out, leave it in the changing room, and go out and just be pragmatic about it and try and insert a bit of 'umph' into the game." The loss was manager Sarina Wiegman's first in a European Championship after leading both the Netherlands (2017) and England (2022) to titles. "Of course we're frustrated, we had three very good weeks and we trained really well but that's never a guarantee that you'll win the game," Wiegman said. "And you also know that France is a proper team too, so you have to do things really well. We just didn't get it right at those moments." The first goal of the night almost went to England but Alessia Russo's strike was chalked off after VAR ruled that Beth Mead had been offside in the buildup. Wiegman also believed Russo was fouled on France's second goal but a VAR review said otherwise. "I'm not the referee but I'm upset," she said. England have been slow off the start in previous major tournaments, edging Austria 1-0 to kick off Euro 2022 and Haiti 1-0 at the 2023 World Cup en route to their first final appearance. "I can't really compare all the first games in tournaments," Wiegman said. "I think playing against France is just totally different than every other start of a tournament because I think they're a world-class team, and I think we're a very good team too." England now face a mammoth task on Wednesday against the Netherlands, 3-0 winners over Wales in Saturday's other Group D game.

England captain Williamson blames England's poor defending on emotions
England captain Williamson blames England's poor defending on emotions

Straits Times

time5 hours ago

  • Straits Times

England captain Williamson blames England's poor defending on emotions

ZURICH - England captain Leah Williamson blamed emotions for her team's uncharacteristic performance in their 2-1 loss to France in their opening game of Women's Euro 2025 on Saturday, saying they failed to leave them in the dressing room before kickoff. Marie-Antoinette Katoto and Sandy Baltimore struck in the first half for France to leave England's travelling fans in stunned silence and while Keira Walsh pulled one back in the 87th minute and the Lionesses had some near-misses towards the close, it was too little too late for the reigning champions. "I'm disappointed there was some cheap sort of emotional defending in the first half, when you take waves of attack like that you leave yourself open to those sorts of things," Williamson said of their poor one-on-one defending. "I'm just frustrated because I think the football that we played near the end, and the game plan, could've worked. We just didn't execute it exceptionally well. "We spoke (at halftime) as players, we take responsibility individually and as a team. We have a calm environment at the minute but there was an injection of get the emotion out, leave it in the changing room, and go out and just be pragmatic about it and try and insert a bit of 'umph' into the game." The loss was manager Sarina Wiegman's first in a European Championship after leading both the Netherlands (2017) and England (2022) to titles. "Of course we're frustrated, we had three very good weeks and we trained really well but that's never a guarantee that you'll win the game," Wiegman said. "And you also know that France is a proper team too, so you have to do things really well. We just didn't get it right at those moments." Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore TTSH to demolish century-old pavilion wards, keeping one as heritage marker World Iran's Khamenei makes first public appearance since war with Israel World Elon Musk says he has created a new US political party Asia Poor sex education, policy gaps and stigma fuel HIV surge among young Filipinos Singapore Don't view your first property as a dream home, get a foothold in the market instead: PropNex's Ismail Gafoor Singapore How soya sauce could help treat cancer Tech Graduates are not screwed if they study engineering: James Dyson in response to Economist article Business When a foreign wife failed to turn up for a $10m divorce The first goal of the night almost went to England but Alessia Russo's strike was chalked off after VAR ruled that Beth Mead had been offside in the buildup. Wiegman also believed Russo was fouled on France's second goal but a VAR review said otherwise. "I'm not the referee but I'm upset," she said. England have been slow off the start in previous major tournaments, edging Austria 1-0 to kick off Euro 2022 and Haiti 1-0 at the 2023 World Cup en route to their first final appearance. "I can't really compare all the first games in tournaments," Wiegman said. "I think playing against France is just totally different than every other start of a tournament because I think they're a world-class team, and I think we're a very good team too." England now face a mammoth task on Wednesday against the Netherlands, 3-0 winners over Wales in Saturday's other Group D game. REUTERS

France coach says team can still improve after beating England
France coach says team can still improve after beating England

CNA

time5 hours ago

  • CNA

France coach says team can still improve after beating England

ZURICH :France can play even better despite putting on a strong performance to comfortably beat England 2-1 in their Women's Euros Group D opener on Saturday, Les Bleus manager Laurent Bonadei said. The victory in Zurich was the first time the reigning champions have lost the opening match in a title defence of the Women's Euros. "We can do better every time," Bonadei told reporters. "We have to improve in each department of the team, in defence, in midfield and offensively." The coach said France found the going tough at the start and end of the match when England were on top. But his team made the most of their chances, scoring twice during their dominant spell while England managed only a late consolation goal. "Each game is decided on the details and it's not easy to win this type of game," Bonadei said. "But I want to say that I am proud of my players, because they never give up in this game and keep control and keep calm in the difficult moments." The performance would give France confidence for the rest of the tournament, he said, adding: "We work at the training sessions every time to improve and to do better, and we want each game to make our fans proud."

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