logo
Philipsen wins windy Tour de France opener as Evenepoel trapped in split

Philipsen wins windy Tour de France opener as Evenepoel trapped in split

LILLE, France: There were mixed fortunes for the thousands of Belgian fans who poured over the border for the opening stage of the Tour de France on Saturday as Jasper Philipsen won, but star rider Remco Evenepoel faltered in his long-range bid for the title itself.
Philipsen took the yellow jersey in a frantic sprint finish at the northern city of Lille, his tenth Tour de France win crowned with a rare race lead for a rider usually chasing sprint points.
Title favourites Tadej Pogacar and Jonas Vingegaard both finished safely in the lead pack.
But Vingegaard was on red alert as the split started and his explosive acceleration helped stun the peloton and leave his Visma team delighted with the damage done by the day's work with a 40sec advantage over several important rivals.
"It was our plan to use the wind at 20km and it worked," said Vingegaard.
Known for his pounces in the mountains, Vingegaard has won the Tour in 2022 and 2023.
The 28-year-old grew up in a remote fishing community, racing into strong winds on the coastal roads in Denmark.
Defending champion Pogacar appeared flustered at the finish line.
"It was as frantic as we had expected, but when the split came fortunately I was near the front," said the 26-year-old Slovenian.
"I'm just happy day one is done. Nine days to go before the first rest day."
Billed as the third man here after finishing behind Pogacar and Vingegaard on his debut Tour in 2024, Evenepoel was in sombre mood at his team bus.
"We were asleep, we thought any danger was over," Evenepoel said of the split where both he and his team's sprinter Tim Merlier found themselves trapped just 20km from the finish.
Around 40 riders in the first group contested the sprint where one of the day's many falls happened.
Primoz Roglic and Florian Lipowitz of Red Bull, and Team UAE's Joao Almeida were also caught out in the blustery winds.
Another UAE man, Adam Yates, lost minutes, meaning Pogacar's two deputies are off the pace if something happens to the UAE star man.
Africa's sole rider Biniam Girmay, winner of three stages in 2024, was second on the day as Philipsen got ahead of him with 100m to go.
But Girmay, winner of the 2024 best sprinter's green jersey, ended the stage with the white jersey for the best 25-and-under rider.
Philipsen, however, was the man in yellow.
"It's a day I will never forget. This is why I have been getting up early and training hard each day," said Philipsen.
"What an experience! Those final kilometres, to be part of that," beamed the 27-year-old Belgian.
Fans packed the route in one of France's more modest regions passing First World War memorials, red-brick houses and slagheaps from long-closed coal mines along the Belgian border.
Under overcast skies with the temperature a manageable 22C, the peloton cut a fast pace despite the windy conditions.
Racing towards an intermediate sprint over cobbles, escapee Benjamin Thomas slid sideways and took out his sole rival Matteo Vercher in one spectacular fall and the pair were still bickering when the peloton shot past them.
Former time-trial world champion Filippo Ganna was one rider who will take no further part after a clumsy fall on a corner.
The Italian would have been a contender on the lengthy stage five individual time-trial, as well as key in the Ineos team's campaign to get veteran Geraint Thomas into the top 10 on his 14th and final Tour de France.
Philipsen, in yellow, will lead the peloton out for Sunday's second stage, a hilly 209km route to the beaches of Boulogne-sur-Mer. — AFP
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Van der Poel Wins Stage 2, Takes Yellow at Tour de France
Van der Poel Wins Stage 2, Takes Yellow at Tour de France

The Sun

time3 hours ago

  • The Sun

Van der Poel Wins Stage 2, Takes Yellow at Tour de France

ALPECIN'S Mathieu van der Poel edged Tadej Pogacar to win the second stage of the Tour de France in a tense hilltop finale at Boulogne-sur-Mer on Sunday. The victory saw the Dutch rider take the lead in the overall standings after depriving Pogacar of his 100th career win as around 30 riders broke away in the final 2km. It was a second Tour de France stage win for Van der Poel, who took the yellow jersey from his teammate Jasper Philipsen -- the winner of Saturday's opening stage. Denmark's Jonas Vingegaard seemed at ease as he crossed the line in third with Frenchman Romain Gregoire fourth and his compatriot Julian Alaphilippe fifth. Van der Poel also won stage two on the 2021 Tour de France and then dug deep to retain the yellow jersey for six gruelling days. 'Winning again four years after the last time, that's just great. In recent years I tried to get here on top form but never quite did,' said Van der Poel, adding that racing the recent Criterium du Dauphine had done the trick. 'I also watched a video of the final kilometre three times this morning and knew exactly how to take it.' The Dutch rider is the grandson of French cycling legend Raymond Poulidor, who came second in the Tour de France seven times, but never won and also never got to wear the yellow jersey. 'It was more emotional last time because he (Poulidor) had just died. I had so wanted to win it while he was still alive,' said Van der Poel. Poulidor's grandson had punched the ground and screamed wildly on realising he had taken the jersey on his previous Tour de France stage win at the Mur de Bretagne. There were no such scenes this time. 'I had a feeling I could win the stage today but taking the yellow jersey is a nice bonus,' said Van der Poel, normally better suited to the ultra-long Monument races, of which he won Milan-San Remo and Paris-Roubaix this season. His teammate Philipsen may have lost the yellow jersey, but he will set off Monday wearing the green one assigned to the peloton's best sprinter. Defending champion Pogacar was also invited onto the podium due to the points he won atop the four hills of the day's stage that saw him earn the right to don the polka-dot king of the mountains tunic. Team UAE's Slovenian rider is second in the overall standings, with Visma's Vingegaard just two seconds behind him in third. - Stolen bikes and heavy rain - The race got going as Pogacar and Vingegaard tested each other over the final 20km with three short, sharp climbs on narrow roads. That struggle blew up a peloton that had been largely sedate until then. Heavy rain left giant puddles at the tiny start town of Lauwin Planque as the 182 riders set off on the 209km run towards the coastal port. Regional police estimated that one million spectators had lined the roadsides on the opening day of action, but the rain dissuaded that kind of turnout on Sunday. French team Cofidis had to scramble Sunday morning as they had 11 bikes stolen from a team truck during the night. Monday's third stage is a 178km flat run to Dunkirk, where a mass bunch sprint is expected unless the peloton gets splintered by winds as it did on stage one. The first section of the Tour is raced through the north and west of France. The volcanic landscape of the Puy de Dome present the first mountains as late as stage 10, with two more colossal climb days in the Pyrenees before the blockbuster final week in the Alps - AFP

Dutch powerhouse Van der Poel takes Tour de France lead
Dutch powerhouse Van der Poel takes Tour de France lead

The Sun

time3 hours ago

  • The Sun

Dutch powerhouse Van der Poel takes Tour de France lead

ALPECIN'S Mathieu van der Poel edged Tadej Pogacar to win the second stage of the Tour de France in a tense hilltop finale at Boulogne-sur-Mer on Sunday. The victory saw the Dutch rider take the lead in the overall standings after depriving Pogacar of his 100th career win as around 30 riders broke away in the final 2km. It was a second Tour de France stage win for Van der Poel, who took the yellow jersey from his teammate Jasper Philipsen -- the winner of Saturday's opening stage. Denmark's Jonas Vingegaard seemed at ease as he crossed the line in third with Frenchman Romain Gregoire fourth and his compatriot Julian Alaphilippe fifth. Van der Poel also won stage two on the 2021 Tour de France and then dug deep to retain the yellow jersey for six gruelling days. 'Winning again four years after the last time, that's just great. In recent years I tried to get here on top form but never quite did,' said Van der Poel, adding that racing the recent Criterium du Dauphine had done the trick. 'I also watched a video of the final kilometre three times this morning and knew exactly how to take it.' The Dutch rider is the grandson of French cycling legend Raymond Poulidor, who came second in the Tour de France seven times, but never won and also never got to wear the yellow jersey. 'It was more emotional last time because he (Poulidor) had just died. I had so wanted to win it while he was still alive,' said Van der Poel. Poulidor's grandson had punched the ground and screamed wildly on realising he had taken the jersey on his previous Tour de France stage win at the Mur de Bretagne. There were no such scenes this time. 'I had a feeling I could win the stage today but taking the yellow jersey is a nice bonus,' said Van der Poel, normally better suited to the ultra-long Monument races, of which he won Milan-San Remo and Paris-Roubaix this season. His teammate Philipsen may have lost the yellow jersey, but he will set off Monday wearing the green one assigned to the peloton's best sprinter. Defending champion Pogacar was also invited onto the podium due to the points he won atop the four hills of the day's stage that saw him earn the right to don the polka-dot king of the mountains tunic. Team UAE's Slovenian rider is second in the overall standings, with Visma's Vingegaard just two seconds behind him in third. - Stolen bikes and heavy rain - The race got going as Pogacar and Vingegaard tested each other over the final 20km with three short, sharp climbs on narrow roads. That struggle blew up a peloton that had been largely sedate until then. Heavy rain left giant puddles at the tiny start town of Lauwin Planque as the 182 riders set off on the 209km run towards the coastal port. Regional police estimated that one million spectators had lined the roadsides on the opening day of action, but the rain dissuaded that kind of turnout on Sunday. French team Cofidis had to scramble Sunday morning as they had 11 bikes stolen from a team truck during the night. Monday's third stage is a 178km flat run to Dunkirk, where a mass bunch sprint is expected unless the peloton gets splintered by winds as it did on stage one. The first section of the Tour is raced through the north and west of France. The volcanic landscape of the Puy de Dome present the first mountains as late as stage 10, with two more colossal climb days in the Pyrenees before the blockbuster final week in the Alps - AFP

Norris in dream land after epic home win at Silverstone
Norris in dream land after epic home win at Silverstone

The Sun

time3 hours ago

  • The Sun

Norris in dream land after epic home win at Silverstone

LANDO Norris said it was 'everything I dreamed of' after making the most of McLaren team-mate Oscar Piastri's misfortune to secure an emotion-charged British Grand Prix victory on Sunday. The beaming 25-year-old Briton claimed his maiden home triumph in stirring fashion to trim Piastri's lead in the drivers' world title race to eight points after the Australian was handed a 10-second penalty for driving erratically while leading behind the safety car. Piastri was understandably aggrieved at the stewards' decision and requested that McLaren instructed Norris to swap positions with him, but he was told the team would not issue any team orders. 'I don't really understand it,' he said of the penalty meted out after he caused Max Verstappen of Red Bull to overtake him shortly before a re-start that saw the Dutchman slide off-track and drop eight positions. 'I need to look back and see it again because I don't think I did anything different or anything wrong,' he said. 'I mean I did what I did at the first re-start and, apparently, one needed a penalty and other didn't.' Piastri's misery, after McLaren's fifth 1-2 of the season, was Norris's joy as he celebrated with his family and friends after surviving a testing afternoon of torrential rain, multiple safety car interventions and collisions in treacherous conditions. 'Incredible race' 'It's beautiful,' said Norris. 'Everything I dreamed of, I guess. Everything I've ever wanted to achieve. Apart from a championship, I think this is as good as it gets in terms of feelings and in terms of achievement, being proud, all of it. 'This is where it all started for me, I was actually watching on TV many years ago and now thankfully I've been able to have my go. 'An incredible race, stressful as always, but the support from the fans -- it made the difference today so I've got to thank them for it all. 'The last few laps, I was just looking into the crowd. I was just trying to take it all in, enjoy the moment, because it might never happen again. 'I hope it does, but these are memories that I'll bring with me forever. An incredible achievement.' The McLaren drivers congratulated each other and the team, Piastri describing his car as a rocket-ship. 'With all the safety cars and everything, to win by such a big margin is impressive,' he said of their 34-second lead ahead of third-placed Nico Hulkenberg of Sauber. At the midway point in this year's 24-race championship, after 12 races, Piastri leads with 234 points ahead of Norris on 226 and Verstappen on 165 while in the constructors' title race McLaren lead with 460 to Ferrari on 222 and Mercedes on 210. It was McLaren's first home triumph at Silverstone since seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton won in 2008. For Norris, it was a first home win, his fourth win of the year and the eighth of his career. For Hulkenberg, 37, and in his 16th season, finishing third delivered his long-awaited first podium in his 239th race, but also ended Hamilton's run of 12 podiums in his home event - AFP

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