logo
Philipsen in yellow as Vingegaard shows intent

Philipsen in yellow as Vingegaard shows intent

CNA19 hours ago
LILLE, France :Jasper Philipsen powered to victory in a reduced bunch sprint to claim his 10th career Tour de France stage win and seize the yellow jersey, as Jonas Vingegaard showed aggressive intentions in the opening stage on Saturday.
Belgian Philipsen outsprinted Eritrean Biniam Girmay and Norway's Soren Waerenskjold in impressive fashion while Dane Vingegaard and defending champion Tadej Pogacar of Slovenia crossed the line in the leading group.
Absent from that mini peloton were podium contenders Remco Evenepoel and Primoz Roglic, who were caught at the wrong end of a split caused by a brutal acceleration from Vingegaard's Visma-Lease a Bike 17km from the line, and finished 39 seconds behind.
The decisive move on narrow roads with crosswinds caught the duo off guard, while Pogacar stayed alert.
The stage had already been marked by drama and disappointment, with Italy's Filippo Ganna the first rider to abandon the race, soon followed by fellow time-trial specialist Stefan Bissegger after both crashed.
Adding to the day's surprises, Giro d'Italia champion Simon Yates, riding in a supporting role for Vingegaard, struggled to hold the pace of the front group and was distanced in the finale.
The chaotic opening day lived up to its reputation, with multiple crashes heightening the nervous atmosphere and underlining the unforgiving nature of the Tour's early stages.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Arsenal sign Spain midfielder Zubimendi from Real Sociedad
Arsenal sign Spain midfielder Zubimendi from Real Sociedad

CNA

time11 minutes ago

  • CNA

Arsenal sign Spain midfielder Zubimendi from Real Sociedad

Arsenal have signed defensive midfielder Martin Zubimendi from Real Sociedad on a long-term contract, the Premier League club said on Sunday as the club reinforced a key position weakened by departures last month. Financial details were not disclosed but British media reports said the 26-year-old had a 60 million euros ($70.67 million) release clause at Sociedad where he had a contract until 2027. Zubimendi is Arsenal's second recruit in the close-season after goalkeeper Kepa Arrizabalaga as Mikel Arteta looks to strengthen a squad that can get over the line in the title race after finishing runners-up in the last three Premier League seasons. "This is a huge moment in my career. It's the move I was looking for and one I wanted to make. As soon as you set foot here, you realise how big this club and this team are," Zubimendi said in a statement. "I set my sights on Arsenal because their style of play is a good fit for me. They have shown their potential recently and the best is yet to come." Zubimendi's arrival is a welcome reinforcement for Arsenal in midfield after Jorginho and Thomas Partey left at the end of their contracts last month. Renowned for his mobility, his deep-lying playmaking skills as well as his defensive nous, Zubimendi will give Arsenal's midfield a measure of steel while also controlling the tempo in the role of a number six. His arrival would potentially allow Declan Rice, Arsenal's player of the season, to play in an advanced role alongside skipper Martin Odegaard. With Spain, Zubimendi won the European Championship in 2024, coming on for the injured Rodri in the final to help secure the trophy, while he also scored in the Nations League final earlier this month when they lost to Portugal on penalties. Getting Zubimendi on board early would also give Arteta time to work with him in pre-season ahead of a tough opening spell in the Premier League next season. Arsenal play Manchester United, Liverpool, Manchester City and Newcastle United in their first six games of the campaign.

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

Straits Times

time4 hours ago

  • Straits Times

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

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox England's Leah Williamson (foreground, left) and Alex Greenwood looking dejected after their 2-1 defeat by France on July 5. 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 July 5, saying they failed to leave them in the dressing room before kick-off. 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 end, 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 half-time) 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 the video assistant referee (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 at Stadion Letzigrund in Zurich. 'I'm not the referee but I'm upset,' she said. England have been slow off the mark in previous major tournaments, edging out 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 .' Meanwhile, France staked their claim to be contenders for the title with their inspired showing in Zurich. Player of the Match Delphine Cascarino said: I was expecting a good game from us. We worked a lot to prepare for this English team... 'We got a fright in the beginning but we remained calm and we managed to get to our objective. We stuck to the game plan, and I believe we really controlled the game.' England now face a mammoth task on July 9 against the Netherlands, 3-0 winners over Wales in the other Group D game on July 5. That earlier game saw Vivianne Miedema scored her 100th international goal, with Victoria Pelova and Esmee Brugts also find the net. 'It's special. When you're a child, you don't even dream of this, or maybe you do dream, but achieving it is special,' Miedema told NOS Sport. REUTERS, AFP

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

CNA

time12 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.

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