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Pogacar claims 100th victory on stage four of Tour

Pogacar claims 100th victory on stage four of Tour

BBC Newsa day ago
Defending champion Tadej Pogacar outsprinted Mathieu van der Poel and Jonas Vingegaard as he claimed his 100th professional victory on stage four of the Tour de France. The result means that the Slovenian moves level on time with Dutch rider at the top of the general classification with Van der Poel retaining the leader's yellow jersey on count-back. With five categorised climbs in the final 50km of the 174.2km route into Rouen, all the main favourites were involved in a series of attacks that split the race open and delivered a compelling finale. However, Pogacar, delivered a show of strength on another classics-style stage to surge away from Van der Poel in an uphill dash to the finish having initially distanced all his rivals, bar Danish rival Vingegaard, on the short but punishing climb up the Rampe Saint-Hilaire, five kilometres out. "I hope today that everyone was on the limit. I tried with an attack on the second last climb and last climb and Jonas [Vingegaard] followed me and everything came together," Pogacar said."Joao [Almeida] did such an amazing job to lead me out to the end even if everyone was attacking. I am super proud of the team today. Amazing. It was such a nice victory."To win at the Tour is incredible, in this jersey even more and to have 100 victories is amazing. "With so many good riders in the final, you're always a bit on the edge and nervous about what's going to happen. You get this adrenaline and it's pure racing and I enjoy it."It is the 18th time Pogacar, 26, has won a stage in cycling's greatest race as he goes for a fourth Tour triumph.Meanwhile, Scotland's Oscar Onley, 22, who is featuring in only his second Tour, produced a superb ride despite being delayed by a late crash to finish fourth among the elite GC riders, to move up to seventh in the overall race.On Wednesday the riders tackle the first of two individual time trials on a 33km course around Caen, on a stage that Remco Evenepoel has been tipped to triumph in.The 25-year-old Belgian world and Olympic champion in the discipline is currently almost a minute down on Pogacar in the GC race.
Stage four results
1. Tadej Pogacar (Slo/UAE Team Emirates-XRG) 3hrs 50mins 29secs2. Mathieu van der Poel (Ned/Alpecin - Deceuninck) Same time3. Jonas Vingegaard (Den/Visma - Lease a Bike) "4. Oscar Onley (GB/Picnic PostNL) "5. Romain Grégoire (Fra/Groupama - FDJ) "6. Joao Almeida (Por/UAE Team Emirates - XRG) "7. Remco Evenepoel (Bel/Soudal Quick-Step) +3secs8. Matteo Jorgenson (US/Visma-Lease a Bike) "9. Mattias Skjelmose (Den/Lidl-Trek)+7secs 10. Kévin Vauquelin (Fra/Arkea-B&B Hotels) +10secs
General classification after stage four
1. Mathieu Van der Poel (Ned - Alpecin-Deceuninck) 16hrs 46mins 00secs2. Tadej Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates-XRG) Same time3. Jonas Vingegaard (Visma-Lease a Bike) +8secs4. Matteo Jorgenson (Visma-Lease a Bike) +19secs5. Kevin Vauquelin (Arkéa-B&B Hotels) +26secs6. Enric Mas (Spa-Movistar) +48secs7. Oscar Onley (GB/Picnic PostNL) +55secs8. Joao Almeida (Por/UAE Team Emirates-XRG) Same time9. Remco Evenepoel (Bel/Soudal Quick-Step) +58secs10. Mattias Skjelmose (Den/Lidl-Trek) +1min 02secs
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Key takeaways as England get Euros title defence back on track
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Key takeaways as England get Euros title defence back on track

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Key takeaways as England get Euros title defence back on track
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Key takeaways as England get Euros title defence back on track

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Key takeaways as England get Euros title defence back on track
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Glasgow Times

timean hour ago

  • Glasgow Times

Key takeaways as England get Euros title defence back on track

The Lionesses responded to the pressure an opening-round defeat to France had placed them under as a Lauren James double and goals from Georgia Stanway and Ella Toone secured victory. Here are the key takeaways from a far better day at the office… There is a reason Lauren James starts After England's opening-round defeat to France, much scrutiny had been placed on Sarina Wiegman's decision to hand Lauren James a first start since April. It seemed there was nothing to worry about, with James a key instigator in the opening stages of the Lionesses' loss, and now it has been proved completely ill-judged. As Alessia Russo raced onto Hannah Hampton's pinged ball forward on 22 minutes there was no one you would rather see underlapping to her left. The Chelsea star received the ball on the edge of the box before turning on the pace to move clear of two defenders and whipping a shot at goal that put England ahead. It was the customary moment of magic that Lionesses fans have come to expect of James and it is exactly why Wiegman has chosen her to start despite a lack of minutes. If any further vindication was needed, James provided it in abundance during the near 70 minutes she spent on the pitch. She popped up again perfectly-placed in the 60th minute to turn home a rebound from Ella Toone. Wiegman finds her formula Against France, England's midfield looked unbalanced and exposed as Les Bleues sat tight to the likes of Keira Walsh and Georgia Stanway. While the Netherlands gave the Lionesses a far easier time in Zurich, Wiegman's switch to play Ella Toone in the No.10 role and move James out to the right in place of Beth Mead proved revelatory. Toone played the role to perfection, instigating a high press well and providing needed protection to the pairing of Stanway and Walsh behind. James was still afforded the freedom to roam across the midfield but operated predominantly off the right. And if Wiegman needed any more confirmation than a truly dominant display at the Stadion Letzigrund, then James and Toone bagging three of England's four goals on the night will certainly have provided just that. Russo deserves a goal Alessia Russo had been unlucky not to open the scoring against France on Saturday after Beth Mead was deemed offside by the barest of margins in the build-up to her first-half goal. It meant what appeared to be an important opener was overturned by VAR and England's momentum stuttered to an abrupt stop. Russo had the opportunity to open the scoring once more against the Dutch but sent a glancing header just wide while uncontested in the air. For the nervous England fans, it looked like a golden opportunity missed but Russo went on to put in a brilliant performance, despite not getting on the scoresheet. Her hold up play was smart and England's tactic to use her a target for searching balls forward worked to perfection. She first received the ball over the top and set up James' opener, before chasing down another and set up Toone to score. It looked as if she had finally got her goal when she nodded home in the second half, but once more an offside in the build-up saw it ruled out by VAR. A hat-trick of assists will have proven just reward in this match, but no doubt she will be chasing that first tournament goal against Wales despite already putting the ball in the net twice. No signs of missing Earps Hannah Hampton was a pivotal influence, with her ability on the ball crucial in England's attacking efforts. Though tested little defensively, her distribution worked to brilliant effect as she earned a pre-assist by pinging the ball out to Alessia Russo, who in turn supplied Lauren James' for the opener. It is a clear strength of the Chelsea goalkeeper, who Wiegman announced was ahead of Mary Earps in the pecking order earlier in the year. In the first half, Hampton often positioned herself high between the two centre-backs as if to create a back five and help keep position. After her display today, it is abundantly clear exactly how Wiegman wants to use the ball-playing attributes of her goalkeeper and why Hampton was the first-choice pick. Women's football continues to grow While the tournament is not on our doorsteps in the same way it was in 2022, the Netherlands-England match provided yet another milestone for women's football. With a full round of group games still to go, the 22,600 here helped set new record for the highest combined attendance across a Women's EURO group stage. That attendance stands at 287,438 with Switzerland opting to host all their group stage matches at major grounds. It is another reminder, if at all needed, that women's football is continuing its rapid rise with audiences across Europe and beyond continuing to flock to games in their numbers. With it being impossible to walk more than 100m without seeing an advert relating to Euro 2025 in Zurich, in Switzerland there is no doubt that everyone watches women's sport.

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