Archiv für den Tag: 13. August 2020

CRITÉRIUM DU DAUPHINÉ 2020 STAGE 1: There’s no stopping Van Aert

Saint-Christo-en-Jarez, Wednesday, August 12th 2020 – Already winner of the Strade Bianche and Milano-Sanremo since the return of competitive cycling, Wout van Aert (Team Jumbo-Visma) keeps his triumphant series going with an impressive uphill sprint at the end of stage 1 of the Critérium du Dauphiné. After 218.5 demanding kilometres, the Belgian star made the most of very steep slopes and a perfect team work to dominate Daryl Impey (Mitchelton-Scott) and Egan Bernal (Team Ineos), who already snatches a few bonus seconds ahead of the mountain challenges expecting the riders for the rest of the week.
Clermont-Ferrand – Saint-Christo-en-Jarez (218,5 km)
1 WOUT VAN AERT (TEAM JUMBO – VISMA) 5:27:42
2 DARYL IMPEY (MITCHELTON – SCOTT) 0:00:00
3 EGAN BERNAL (TEAM INEOS) 0:00:00
4 ALEJANDRO VALVERDE (MOVISTAR TEAM) 0:00:00
5 TADEJ POGACAR (UAE TEAM EMIRATES) 0:00:00
6 ALEXEY LUTSENKO (ASTANA PRO TEAM) 0:00:00
7 SERGIO HIGUITA (EF PRO CYCLING) 0:00:00
8 BENOIT COSNEFROY (AG2R LA MONDIALE) 0:00:00
9 PRIMOŽ ROGLIC (TEAM JUMBO – VISMA) 0:00:00
10 GUILLAUME MARTIN (COFIDIS) 0:00:00
11 TIESJ BENOOT (TEAM SUNWEB) 0:00:00
12 NAIRO QUINTANA (TEAM ARKEA – SAMSIC) 0:00:00
13 JULIAN ALAPHILIPPE (DECEUNINCK – QUICK – STEP) 0:00:00
14 PIERRE LATOUR (AG2R LA MONDIALE) 0:00:00
15 WARREN BARGUIL (TEAM ARKEA – SAMSIC) 0:00:00
16 EMANUEL BUCHMANN (BORA – HANSGROHE) 0:00:00
17 SÉBASTIEN REICHENBACH (GROUPAMA – FDJ) 0:00:00
18 ROMAIN BARDET (AG2R LA MONDIALE) 0:00:00
19 THIBAUT PINOT (GROUPAMA – FDJ) 0:00:00
20 DAVIDE FORMOLO (UAE TEAM EMIRATES) 0:00:00

Gesamtwertung
1 WOUT VAN AERT (TEAM JUMBO – VISMA) 5:27:32
2 DARYL IMPEY (MITCHELTON – SCOTT) 0:00:04
3 EGAN BERNAL (TEAM INEOS) 0:00:06
4 ALEJANDRO VALVERDE (MOVISTAR TEAM) 0:00:10
5 TADEJ POGACAR (UAE TEAM EMIRATES) 0:00:10
6 ALEXEY LUTSENKO (ASTANA PRO TEAM) 0:00:10
7 SERGIO HIGUITA (EF PRO CYCLING) 0:00:10
8 BENOIT COSNEFROY (AG2R LA MONDIALE) 0:00:10
9 PRIMOŽ ROGLIC (TEAM JUMBO – VISMA) 0:00:10
10 GUILLAUME MARTIN (COFIDIS) 0:00:10

Emanuel Buchmann zeigt gute Form auf der Auftaktetappe des Criterium du Dauphiné

Das Criterium du Dauphiné, die Generalprobe für die Tour de France, begann mit einem hochkarätig besetzten Feld. Die erste Etappe startete in Clermont – Ferrand und endete mit einem abschließenden Rundkurs um Saint Christo-en-Jarez. 218,5 wellige Kilometer und sieben Bergwertungen standen auf dem Programm, darunter der 2,4 km lange und rund fünf Prozent steile Schlussanstieg zum Col de la Gachet. Nachdem eine frühe 5-Mann Ausreißergruppe einige Zeit das Rennen bestimmte, zerfiel die Spitze unter dem Tempodruck des Feldes in der zweiten Rennhälfte. Mit noch 85 km bis zum Ziel ging Emanuel Buchmann zu Boden, zog sich aber keine Verletzungen zu und konnte so das Rennen wieder fortsetzen. Auf den letzten 17 km war es auch um den verbleibenden Ausreißer geschehen, und auf dem finalen Anstieg fiel das Feld auseinander. Kurz danach kam es zu mehreren Attacken aus der Favoritengruppe und es gelang W. van Aert im Bergaufsprint als Erster die Ziellinie zu überqueren. Emanuel Buchmann kam zeitgleich auf dem 16. Platz ins Ziel.

Reaktionen im Ziel
„Die Dauphiné begann mit einer sehr schnellen Etappe, da Jumbo-Visma ein sehr hohes Tempo an der Spitze des Feldes vorlegte. Die Jungs haben den ganzen Tag hart gearbeitet und mich auf den letzten Kilometern in eine gute Position gebracht. Es war ein etwas kniffliges Finale, aber ich habe die Ziellinie in der Spitzengruppe überquert, und so bin ich mit meinem Start ins Renngeschehen ziemlich zufrieden.“ – Emanuel Buchmann

„Wie erwartet, war es eine lange und harte Etappe mit vielen Steigungen. Wir hatten erwartet, dass eine größere Gruppe ins Ziel kommen würde und dass Peter und Gregor den Sprint bestreiten würden, aber leider waren sie am Ende nicht in der Spitzengruppe. Das Team arbeitete sehr stark für Emu, der in guter Form ist und sich heute gut fühlte. Er war in einen Sturz verwickelt, aber es scheint nichts Ernstes gewesen zu sein, was natürlich eine Erleichterung ist. Wir haben noch vier weitere harte Etappen vor uns, auf denen wir uns darauf konzentrieren werden, in der Gesamtwertung mit Emu gut abzuschneiden, und auch gleichzeitig die letzten Vorbereitungen für die Tour de France vorzunehmen.“ – Enrico Poitschke, Sportlicher Leiter
© BORA – hansgrohe

The Tour to the power of 10 / 1970: Leblanc, a team rider with huge potential (7/10)

1970: Leblanc, a team rider with huge potential (7/10)

At the turn of each decade, the Tour de France has gone through organisational changes and backstage struggles that have variously turned out to be decisive or utterly inconsequential. The journey back in time proposed by letour.fr continues in 1970, in the slipstream of Jean-Marie Leblanc, a rider competing in his second Tour de France after some minor successes in other races. A career in journalism beckons for the man from northern France, who has no idea yet that he will one day become the director of the Tour. Yet the seeds of the attributes needed to helm the race have already taken root in this humble team rider.

Those who still have vivid memories of cycling in the late 1960s would no doubt argue that Jean-Marie Leblanc was a good rider despite his modest results -no offence meant to the Grand Prix d’Aix-en-Provence or the Circuit d’Armorique. He was also what journalists know as „a good customer“, someone who can be relied upon to offer a quote that will grab the reader’s attention before the start of the race and never fails to spice up conversations with anecdotes that can be used to flesh out the „news in brief“ section. A paradigmatic example can be found in the coverage of the 1970 Tour by L’Équipe. The Bic rider was working as a devoted domestique for Jan Janssen and Luis Ocaña in what was only his second Tour de France (58th in 1968), but he seemed to appear in the newspapers far more often than would have been expected from his performance on the road. The mystery was solved in the first week of racing, when author Guy Lagorce wrote A brief portrait of a future colleague and gave the floor to Leblanc: „Starting a career in journalism would also be a way for me to prove to the world that cyclists are more than just a bunch of lads with big thighs […] I won’t deny it: every time that things get tough out there and a press car overtakes me, I feel a pang of jealousy when I peek inside. You have no idea how soft the cushions of a car look when seen from the saddle of a bike.“
Just as Leblanc showed glimpses of the potential of a future journalist, he also had the makings of a man devoted to the best interests of cycling.

Aware that he would never be good enough to earn a champion’s wages, the young father and media darling was already planning his future in a different field. By 1970, he had ample experience in this area after taking advantage of the winter breaks to lay the groundwork for his transition. Half a century later, he still remembers his first foray into the sports press clearly: „I was shy, but in the winter of 1966–67 my friend Philippe Crépel persuaded me to call Émile Parmentier, the sports editor of La Voix du Nord. He welcomed me with open arms and I’ll never be able to thank him enough for it. He sent me to report on cyclo-cross, of course, and put me in charge of the boxing section. I loved it and I even obtained a coaching diploma to be a credible source in such a special world.“ A cyclist in the summer and journalist in the winter, the young Economics graduate was definitely not your average cyclist.
Jean-Marie Leblanc continued to learn in the 1970 Tour, eagerly fielding questions. „I loved hearing them talk about this profession I wanted to practise“, insisted the aspiring reporter, who would eventually be hired by La Voix du Nord in 1971, right after the end of his final season in the peloton. Just as Leblanc showed the promise of the future journalist who a few years later would receive a call from the chief editor of L’Équipe, Noël Couëdel, offering him the post of cycling editor, he also had the makings of a man devoted to the best interests of cycling. It was his thorough understanding of the matter that led to him becoming the secretary-general of the National Union of Professional Cyclists (UNCP), where he proved his mettle as a leader: „At UNCP, for example, we fought to get two-year contracts for neo-pros, which did not exist before that. I had always wanted to help organise my profession, and when I became a journalist, I took on an active role in the trade union of French sports journalists (USJSF)“. Jean-Marie Leblanc took it to a whole new level in 1988, when he became the director of the Tour de France a mere 20 years after his first participation as a rider.

Discover or rediscover the previous episodes in the series:
1960: When President de Gaulle greeted the Tour (6/10)
1950: Divorce Italian style (5/10)
1940: The Tour that wasn’t (4/10)
1930: The Tour revolutionizes (3/10)
1920: “sportsmen”according to Desgrange (2/10)
1910: Alphonse Steinès’great deception (1/10)
More information on www.letour.fr/en/
@ASO

Gran Piemonte 2020

Santo Stefano Belbo – Barolo (187,0 km)
1 George Bennett (Jumbo-Visma) 4:38:23
2 Diego Ulissi (UAE Emirates) 0:00:00
3 Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Fenix) 0:00:04
4 Aleksandr Vlasov (Astana) 0:00:04
5 Simon Geschke (CCC) 0:00:04
6 Alex Aranburu (Astana) 0:00:04
7 Dries Devenyns (Deceuninck-Quick Step) 0:00:04
8 Robert Stannard (Mitchelton-Scott) 0:00:07
9 Giulio Ciccone (Trek-Segafredo) 0:00:07
10 Attila Valter (CCC) 0:00:07
11 Antwan Tolhoek (Jumbo-Visma) 0:00:09
12 Simone Petilli (Circus-Wanty Gobert) 0:00:09
13 Lorenzo Rota (Vini Zabù-KTM) 0:00:09
14 Pieter Serry (Deceuninck-Quick Step) 0:00:09
15 Ben Hermans (Israel Start-Up Nation) 0:00:14