Van der Poel edges out Pogacar in sprint finish to win Tour stage two
A large leading group stayed together for much of the stage which boiled up into a mass sprint for the line, Van der Poel edging out Pogacar in a photo finish with Denmark's Jonas Vingegaard taking third place.
Alpecin-Deceuninck's Van der Poel also claimed the race leader's yellow jersey after winning the longest stage of the Tour, a 209.1km route from Lauwin-Planque to the northern coastal city of Boulogne-sur-Mer.
'It was super difficult, the final was actually harder than I thought,' Van der Poel said.
'People said I was a favourite for today, but if you see which riders were up there on the climbs, I think I did a really good job to be there.'
Alpecin-Deceuninck can celebrate their second Tour win this year after Belgian Jasper Philipsen won the opening stage on Saturday.
Due to adverse weather conditions that caused logistical issues, the start of the stage was delayed by about 15 minutes.
Stage three is a 178.3km route over flat terrain from Valenciennes to Dunkirk on Monday.
Hashtags

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

TimesLIVE
10 hours ago
- TimesLIVE
Van der Poel edges out Pogacar in sprint finish to win Tour stage two
The Netherlands' Mathieu van der Poel won stage two of the Tour de France ahead of Slovenian Tadej Pogacar in a sprint finish on Sunday. A large leading group stayed together for much of the stage which boiled up into a mass sprint for the line, Van der Poel edging out Pogacar in a photo finish with Denmark's Jonas Vingegaard taking third place. Alpecin-Deceuninck's Van der Poel also claimed the race leader's yellow jersey after winning the longest stage of the Tour, a 209.1km route from Lauwin-Planque to the northern coastal city of Boulogne-sur-Mer. 'It was super difficult, the final was actually harder than I thought,' Van der Poel said. 'People said I was a favourite for today, but if you see which riders were up there on the climbs, I think I did a really good job to be there.' Alpecin-Deceuninck can celebrate their second Tour win this year after Belgian Jasper Philipsen won the opening stage on Saturday. Due to adverse weather conditions that caused logistical issues, the start of the stage was delayed by about 15 minutes. Stage three is a 178.3km route over flat terrain from Valenciennes to Dunkirk on Monday.


eNCA
12 hours ago
- eNCA
Dutch powerhouse Van der Poel takes Tour de France lead
DUNKIRK - 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," Van der Poel said. 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. "I had a feeling I could win the stage today but taking the yellow jersey is a nice bonus," Van der Poel said. 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. 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. French team Cofidis had to scramble Sunday morning as they had 11 bikes stolen from a team truck during the night.


The Citizen
2 days ago
- The Citizen
Bayern Club World Cup clash with PSG a ‘perfect storm': Kompany
Bayern and PSG can rest easy on Saturday because of the roof at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta. Bayern Munich's Belgian head coach Vincent Kompany speaks during a press conference at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta on Friday, ahead of the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 quarter-final football match against France's Paris Saint-Germain on Saturday. Photo: Patricia DE MELO MOREIRA / AFP Bayern Munich coach Vincent Kompany said his team's Club World Cup quarter-final clash with Paris Saint-Germain on Saturday will be an enthralling encounter because of their similar 'extreme' styles of play. Both Luis Enrique's PSG and Kompany's Bayern, champions of the French and German leagues respectively, like to dominate the ball, press high and play attacking football. ALSO READ: Chelsea edge Palmeiras to reach Club World Cup semis 'You have teams who are able to make a lot of good use of the ball in nearly every game, against deep blocks, high presses, everything,' Kompany told a news conference Friday. 'That creates a sort of, what we've seen here a lot, thunderstorm, right? It's a perfect storm. These games are always interesting, and… I would pay to watch it.' Bayern and PSG can rest easy on Saturday because of the roof at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta which means there will be no storm disruption, and Kompany said the match would be one to savour. 'If I was a neutral, I would come to see this game, for sure,' he said. 'Both teams have quite 'extreme' principles, which is why it's usually an interesting game.' Despite the obvious strength of the Champions League winners, Kompany said there was no side he would rather face than the Parisians. 'There's no reason to think that they're not going to be absolutely at their best tomorrow, but I think it's the type of challenge you like,' he explained. 'If I could pick one team to face, as a professional athlete, as a competitor, it's always the winners, and they are the winners, so we get a chance to play against them. 'It's tough, it's the toughest game, maybe, but that's why we're here, so I wouldn't have it any other way.' – 'Completely over the top' – The Belgian coach also hailed his PSG counterpart Luis Enrique, who won the treble with the French side. In November PSG lost 1-0 against Bayern but Kompany said criticism of the Spaniard at the time was greatly overblown. 'I could follow (his press conference) on one of the big screens and all the questions that were asked to him were completely over the top,' said Kompany. 'Really tough questions, big statements, everything is over, you failed in your job, you can do nothing — all these big statements. 'But I remember watching his team before we played them, most games they should have won 5-0 but somehow it was 1-1 or they lost, so it wasn't reflective of the spirit of the team… (or) of the dominance they had in every game.' ALSO READ: Bayern stand before PSG in battle of Club World Cup favourites Kompany said he was happy to see Luis Enrique's determination rewarded. 'It's nice to see that in those moments consistency paid off for him, but most importantly that he was strong enough to continue,' said the coach. 'It's not a compliment I'm giving, it's just a fact… it's just interesting to do this (rematch) six months fast forward, and to see how much things can change.'