Schlagwort-Archive: ASO

110. Tour de France Etappe 14 Daten

TOUR DE FRANCE 2023 – STAGE 14
ANNEMASSE – MORZINE LES PORTES DU SOLEIL

22: SPANISH ALL-TIME RECORD!
The days of the 99 stages drought are long gone for Spain, and with a bang, since Carlos Rodriguez becomes the youngest Spanish winner of a Tour stage at 22 years, 5 months, 13 days. Beats the record of Jose Gonzalez: 24 years 2 months 8 days in Vorst 1970 (Time Trial, a half-stage).
Rodriguez is the youngest winner at the Tour since Tadej Pogacar took three stages in the 2020 edition, before turning 22 years old on the day after the final stage in Paris.

33-22: TWO RECORDS FOR INEOS IN BACK-TO-BACK STAGES!
Rodriguez is also the youngest winner for Ineos/Sky, beating Tom Pidcock last year in Alpe d’Huez was 22 years 11 months 14 days old.
…and yesterday Michal Kwiatkowski was the oldest stage winner for Ineos at 33 years 1 month and 12 days!

2018: BACK-TO-BACK INEOS
Two Ineos wins in two days: it’s a first since Geraint Thomas in La Rosière and L’Alpe d’Huez 2018. The previous time that Ineos (Sky) won in consecutive stages with two different riders was in 2012 with Bradley Wiggins in the Chartres ITT (st.19) and Mark Cavendish in Paris (st.20). Those were the last two in a streak of 3, as Cavendish had also won in Brive-la-Gaillarde (st.18).

58,6 KM/H”: RODRIGUEZ TAKES FLIGHT ON THE DOWNHILL
Trailing by 25’’ at Col de Joux Plane, Carlos Rodriguez sped up on the downhill to Morzine to get back to Jonas Vingegaard and Tadej Pogacar, before he dropped them and soloed to the win with an average of 58.6 km/h in the last 12 kilometres (2km/h faster than Vingegaard and Pogacar). His maximum on the downhill was 93.4km/h according to the speeds recorded by NTT Data.

21-11: POGACAR AND VINGEGAARD SHARED PODIUMS
• 21st stage podium for Tadej Pogacar (10 wins, 4 second places, 7 thirds)
• 11th stage podium for Jonas Vingegaard (2 wins, 6 second places, 3 thirds).
Out of these, they’ve been together in the top 3 on nine occasions, with one of them winning the stage almost every time. There are two exceptions:
• Wout van Aert, winner of the Rocamadour ITT last year (stage 20)
• Carlos Rodriguez, winner in Morzine today (stage 14).

2015: SPAIN MAKES IT THREE
Three Spanish wins in a single Tour – it hadn’t happened since 2015: Joaquim Rodriguez in Huy and Plateau de Beille and Ruben Plaza in Gap.
This year Spain has won with three different riders: Pello Bilbao, Ion Izagirre and Carlos Rodriguez. To find another edition with three Spaniards winning, we have to go back to 2009, with Luis Leon Sanchez, Alberto Contador (twice) and Juan Manuel Garate.

20: VINGEGAARD CATCHES VOECKLER, AND…
20th Maillot Jaune for Jonas Vingegaard, the same of Thomas Voeckler. His current rival, 2nd in the standings, Tadej Pogacar, counts only one more (21)…

2: RAMAZ IS FOR TWO COUNTRIES ONLY
The tradition is maintained: only Belgian or French riders conquered the top of the Col de la Ramaz:
Frenchmen Hubert Linard in 1981 and Richard Virenque in 2003; Belgians Mario Aerts in 2010, Thomas de Gendt in 2016, Wout van Aert in 2023.

3: HC DOESN’T BRING LUCK THIS TIME
Third Hors Catégorie KOM for Jonas Vingegaard. In the previous two instances he won the stage: Col du Granon and Hautacam 2022, but those were placed at the finish. This time he had to settle for third.

110. Tour de France Etappe 14

Annemasse – Morzine les Portes du Soleil – 152 Km

1 RODRIGUEZ CANO Carlos ESP INEOS GRENADIERS 03:58:45
2 POGAČAR Tadej SLO UAE TEAM EMIRATES 00:05
3 VINGEGAARD Jonas DEN JUMBO-VISMA 00:05
4 YATES Adam GBR UAE TEAM EMIRATES 00:10
5 KUSS Sepp USA JUMBO-VISMA 00:57
6 HINDLEY Jai AUS BORA – HANSGROHE 01:46
7 GALL Felix AUT AG2R CITROEN TEAM 01:46
8 BILBAO LOPEZ Pello ESP BAHRAIN VICTORIOUS 03:19
9 YATES Simon GBR TEAM JAYCO ALULA 03:21
10 MARTIN Guillaume FRA COFIDIS 05:57
11 GAUDU David FRA GROUPAMA – FDJ 05:57
12 PIDCOCK Thomas GBR INEOS GRENADIERS 08:40
13 BUCHMANN Emanuel GER BORA – HANSGROHE 09:14

14 MAJKA Rafal POL UAE TEAM EMIRATES 09:43
15 CASTROVIEJO Jonathan ESP INEOS GRENADIERS 09:43
16 KELDERMAN Wilco NED JUMBO-VISMA 13:02
17 VAN AERT Wout BEL JUMBO-VISMA 13:02
18 GROSSSCHARTNER Felix AUT UAE TEAM EMIRATES 13:02
19 HARPER Chris AUS TEAM JAYCO ALULA 13:02
20 PINOT Thibaut FRA GROUPAMA – FDJ 13:47

Gesamt:

1 VINGEGAARD Jonas DEN JUMBO-VISMA 57:47:28
2 POGAČAR Tadej SLO UAE TEAM EMIRATES 00:10
3 RODRIGUEZ CANO Carlos ESP INEOS GRENADIERS 04:43
4 HINDLEY Jai AUS BORA – HANSGROHE 04:44
5 YATES Adam GBR UAE TEAM EMIRATES 05:20
6 KUSS Sepp USA JUMBO-VISMA 08:15
7 YATES Simon GBR TEAM JAYCO ALULA 08:32
8 BILBAO LOPEZ Pello ESP BAHRAIN VICTORIOUS 08:51
9 GALL Felix AUT AG2R CITROEN TEAM 12:26
10 GAUDU David FRA GROUPAMA – FDJ 12:56
11 PIDCOCK Thomas GBR INEOS GRENADIERS 14:22
12 MARTIN Guillaume FRA COFIDIS 16:50
13 BUCHMANN Emanuel GER BORA – HANSGROHE 21:21
14 PINOT Thibaut FRA GROUPAMA – FDJ 23:02
15 LANDA Mikel ESP BAHRAIN VICTORIOUS 25:38
16 CASTROVIEJO Jonathan ESP INEOS GRENADIERS 29:38
17 MADOUAS Valentin FRA GROUPAMA – FDJ 39:25
18 HARPER Chris AUS TEAM JAYCO ALULA 40:13
19 MAJKA Rafal POL UAE TEAM EMIRATES 45:43
20 BERTHET Clément FRA AG2R CITROEN TEAM 45:59

Jai Hindley rutscht trotz beherztem Kampf nach Sturz auf der 14. Etappe der Tour de France auf Rang vier der Gesamtwertung

Bereits nach 6 km ereignete sich auf der zweiten Alpenetappe der Tour heute ein schwerer Massensturz, in den auch Jai Hindley verwickelt war. Glücklicherweise konnte Jai das Rennen, das für 30 min unterbrochen wurde, wieder aufnehmen. Über den Rest der Etappe entbrannte ein weiteres Mal eine wahre Schlacht um den Etappensieg. Keine Gruppe wurde entscheidend weggelassen und am vorletzten Anstieg lag eine kleine Gruppe der Favoriten an der Spitze des Rennens. Jai Hindley war zu diesem Zeitpunkt noch vorne mit dabei, während Emanuel Buchmann bereits abreißen lassen musste. Am Col de Joux Plane wurde das Tempo weiter erhöht und als nur noch 6 Fahrer an der Spitze waren, musste Jai etwa sechs Kilometer vor der Bergwertung abreißen lassen. Trotz eines unglaublichen Kampfes verlor er am Ende 1:46 zum Etappensieger C. Rodriguez, der damit nun eine Sekunde vor Jai auf Rang drei der Gesamtwertung liegt.

Von der Ziellinie
“Nach dem Sturz hatte ich Schmerzen. Ich denke nicht, dass es was Ernstes ist, eher muskulär. Aber es war schmerzhaft, besonders wenn ich aus dem Sattel ging, also alles andere als optimal. Aber was will man machen, das gehört halt dazu. Unter diesen Umständen bin ich mit dem Tag eigentlich ganz zufrieden und jetzt geht es zuallererst einmal darum, dass ich mich erhole.” – Jai Hindley

“Das Niveau ist so unglaublich hoch, dass jedes Detail den Unterschied macht. Wenn du nicht genug trinkst, wirst du abgehängt. Wenn du überhitzt, wirst du abgehängt. Wenn du am Anfang stürzt, ist das natürlich alles andere als ideal. Dennoch denke ich, dass Jai die Situation sehr gut gemeistert hat. Er hat um jede Sekunde gekämpft und ist einen guten Rhythmus gefahren. Wir sind jetzt mehr oder weniger zeitgleich mit Rodriguez. Heute war das Glück nicht auf unserer Seite, ich hoffe, morgen ist das wieder anders.” – Enrcio Gasparotto, Sportlicher Leiter

Carlos Rodriguez, the birth of a champion

Carlos Rodriguez took advantage of the rivalry between Jonas Vingegaard and Tadej Pogacar to catch them and ride away from them in the downhill of col de Joux-Plane to become the youngest ever Spanish stage winner at the Tour de France at the age of 22. Vingegaard retained the yellow jersey.

MEINTJES, CHAVES AND BARDET ABANDON
The start proper of stage 14 was given to 165 riders at 13.23. The race was put on halt for half an hour after 6.5km due to a massive crash that forced Louis Meintjes (Intermarché-Circus-Wanty) and Antonio Pedrero (Movistar) to withdraw from the Tour de France. A second start was given at 14.01. Esteban Chaves (EF Education-EasyPost) pulled out in pain at km 15 while the first significant breakaway took shape with Lars van den Berg (Groupama-FDJ) being joined by Julian Alaphilippe (Soudal-Quick Step) and Krists Neilands (Israel-Premier Tech) and later by Dani Martinez (Ineos Grenadiers) and Alexey Lutsenko (Astana). Romain Bardet (DSM-Firmenich) and James Shaw (EF Education-EasyPost) crashed out in the downhill of col de Saxel at km 25.

2 CAT. 1 KOM FOR CICCONE
After tons of attempts, attacks, counter-attacks and riders being dropped, a lead group of 21 riders took shape. It included three men from the top 20 overall: Thibaut Pinot (Groupama-FDJ), Guillaume Martin (Cofidis) and Mikel Landa (Bahrain Victorious). Tobias Halland Johannessen (Uno-X) and Giulio Ciccone (Lidl-Trek) were very active, both interested in the King of the Mountains competition. Ciccone outsprinted polka dot jersey wearer Neilson Powless (EF Education-EasyPost), Alaphilippe and Pinot at cat. 1 col de Cou (km 35.3). The Italian also crested cat. 1 col du Feu (km 52) first and forged on by himself in the downhill until Pinot, Landa, Alex Aranburu (Movistar) Wout Poels (Bahrain Victorious) and Michael Woods (Israel-Premier Tech) came across. Pinot, Landa, Poels, Martin, Martinez, Ciccone, Alexey Lutsenko (Astana), Alex Aranburu and Gorka Izagirre, (Movistar), Hugo Houle and Woods (Israel-PremierTech) managed to stay away while Jumbo-Visma kept them on a leash. Ciccone passed the line of the intermediate sprint at col de Jambaz (km 65.5) in first position. Ciccone and Woods rode away at the beginning of the ascent to col de la Ramaz (km 101). Their former breakaway companions got reeled in 10km before the top while the yellow jersey group was down to about thirty riders including six from Jumbo-Visma and six from UAE Team Emirates. Ciccone surrendered two kilometres further. Van Aert crested col de la Ramaz in first position.

VINGEGAARD BEATS POGACAR ATOP JOUX-PLANE
16 riders were reunited at the front with 30km to go: Van Aert, Sepp Kuss, Wilco Kelderman, Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma), Felix Grossschartner, Rafal Majka, Adam Yates, Tadej Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates), Jai Hindley (Bora-Hansgrohe), Carlos Rodriguez (Ineos Grenadiers), Pello Bilbao (Bahrain Victorious), David Gaudu (Groupama-FDJ), Simon Yates, Chris Harper (Jayco-AlUla), Guillaume Martin (Cofidis) and Felix Gall (Ag2r-Citröen). The team of the yellow jersey led the charge up to col de Joux-Plane, the 250th hors-category climb of the Tour de France since the inception of the label in 1979. 5km before the top, Hindley couldn’t hold the pace set by Kuss, the American being followed by A. Yates, Pogacar, Vingegaard and Rodriguez. With 3.7km of climbing remaining, Pogacar attacked. The Slovenian remained 4’’ ahead of the Dane for two kilometres. Vingegaard made it across and sprinted to collect 8’’ time bonus and the lead in the KOM competition atop col de Joux-Plane. Rodriguez and Yates made the junction in the downhill. Rodriguez rode away solo with 8km to go and remained at the front till the end. He even moved one step up to take place in the top 3 instead of Hindley for one second.

110. Tour de France Etappe 13 Daten

TOUR DE FRANCE 2023 – STAGE 13
CHÂTILLON-SUR-CHALARONNE – GRAND COLOMBIER

43’51”: POGACAR FLIES ON GRAND COLOMBIER

While Michal Kwiatkowski held off his chasers with an average speed of 22.1km/h up Grand Colombier, Tadej Pogacar was stronger than anyone… even stronger than himself in 2020. According to the speeds recorded by NTT Data, the Slovenian 2-time winner of the Tour covered the 17-km ascent in 43’51’’ (23.5km/h). That’s also 1’46’’ faster than the Strava KOM he set on the climb when he powered to victory in 2020. Pogacar had an impressive kick at 36.4km/h inside the last 500 metres to distance his rivals.

1030: 7TH WIN FOR POLAND
Michal Kwiatkowski wins his second Tour stage, 1030 days after his first one: La Roche-sur-Foron, 17th of September 2020.
It’s the 7th win for Poland at the Tour: 3 by Rafal Majka, 2 for Kwiatkowski, 1 for Zenon Jaskula and Maciej Bodnar.

9: IT’S A CLOSE AFFAIR
9” between Maillot Jaune and runner-up, the 6th smallest gap in history after stage 13:
• 1” Cadel Evans – Fränk Schleck, 2008
• 3” Raphael Geminiani – Vito Favero, 1958
• 6” Rinaldo Nocentini – Alberto Contador, 2009
• 6” Fabio Aru – Chris Froome, 2017
• 7” Laurent Fignon – Greg Lemond, 1989
• 9” Jonas Vingegaard – Tadej Pogacar, 2023

5: MOUNTAIN INEOS
The last 5 wins by team Ineos (formerly Sky) at the Tour all came in high mountain or uphill finishes:
• Geraint Thomas: La Rosière and L’Alpe d’Huez 2018;
• Michal Kwiatkowski: La Roche-sur-Foron 2020 and Grand Colombier 2023;
• Tom Pidcock: L’Alpe d’Huez 2020.
And in 2019, Egan Bernal was also first at Col d’Iseran, but there was no stage winner on that day as the race had to be interrupted for safety reasons.
The British team’s previous success came in Düsseldorf (Germany), when Thomas won the opening time-trial of the Tour 2017.

1: POLAND AND HORS CATEGORIE
Winning a Hors Catégorie climb is a first for Michal Kwiatkowski, but not for a Polish rider: Rafal Majka collected 5 (Pla d’Adet 2014, Tourmalet 2015, Grand Colombier and Bisanne 2016, Aubisque 2018).

20: POGACAR IN THE TOP-3
Tadej Pogacar finished 3rd, taking his top-3 placements in Tour stages to 20 (out of 76 stages, a ratio of 26%). The breakdown is: 10 wins, 3 second places, 7 third places.

19: VINGEGAARD ADDS ANOTHER ONE
19th Maillot Jaune for Jonas Vingegaard, joining at the 25th all-time spot Fausto Coppi, André Darrigade, Rudi Altig, Roger Pingeon, Felice Gimondi, Dietrich Thurau and Vincenzo Nibali.

77: DRAMA FOR ITALY
Italy’s win drought reaches 77 individual stages, equalling the worst streak by the country (Dijon 1979-Nantes 1983). The last winner for Italy was Vincenzo Nibali, in Val-Thorens, 2019.
Italy posted its maiden win at the Grande Boucle at the 92nd stage in history (Ernesto Azzini, Paris 1910).

10: THE WAY TO THE TOP
10th green jersey for Jasper Philipsen, the same as his compatriot Roger De Vlaeminck. The Belgian record is „just“ 60 stages ahead: Freddy Maertens collected 70 green jerseys, the third all-time value behind the 130 of Peter Sagan and 86 by Erik Zabel.

110. Tour de France Etappe 13

Châtillon-Sur-Chalaronne – Grand Colombier – 138 Km

1 KWIATKOWSKI Michal POL INEOS GRENADIERS 03:17:33
2 VAN GILS Maxim BEL LOTTO DSTNY 00:47
3 POGAČAR Tadej SLO UAE TEAM EMIRATES 00:50
4 VINGEGAARD Jonas DEN JUMBO-VISMA 00:54
5 PIDCOCK Thomas GBR INEOS GRENADIERS 01:03
6 HINDLEY Jai AUS BORA – HANSGROHE 01:05

7 SHAW James GBR EF EDUCATION – EASYPOST 01:05
8 TEJADA CANACUE Harold Alfonso COL ASTANA QAZAQSTAN TEAM 01:05
9 YATES Simon GBR TEAM JAYCO ALULA 01:14
10 YATES Adam GBR UAE TEAM EMIRATES 01:18
11 RODRIGUEZ CANO Carlos ESP INEOS GRENADIERS 01:20
12 KUSS Sepp USA JUMBO-VISMA 01:20
13 ZIMMERMANN Georg GER INTERMARCHÉ – CIRCUS – WANTY 01:34
14 GALL Felix AUT AG2R CITROEN TEAM 01:41
15 MEINTJES Louis RSA INTERMARCHÉ – CIRCUS – WANTY 01:45
16 GAUDU David FRA GROUPAMA – FDJ 01:45
17 BILBAO LOPEZ Pello ESP BAHRAIN VICTORIOUS 01:45
18 MOHORIC Matej SLO BAHRAIN VICTORIOUS 02:06
19 BARDET Romain FRA TEAM DSM – FIRMENICH 03:29
20 HARPER Chris AUS TEAM JAYCO ALULA 03:29
21 PINOT Thibaut FRA GROUPAMA – FDJ 03:29
22 LANDA Mikel ESP BAHRAIN VICTORIOUS 03:29
23 MARTIN Guillaume FRA COFIDIS 03:29
24 BUCHMANN Emanuel GER BORA – HANSGROHE 03:45

Gesamt:

1 VINGEGAARD Jonas DEN JUMBO-VISMA 53:48:50
2 POGAČAR Tadej SLO UAE TEAM EMIRATES 00:09
3 HINDLEY Jai AUS BORA – HANSGROHE 02:51
4 RODRIGUEZ CANO Carlos ESP INEOS GRENADIERS 04:48
5 YATES Adam GBR UAE TEAM EMIRATES 05:03
6 YATES Simon GBR TEAM JAYCO ALULA 05:04
7 BILBAO LOPEZ Pello ESP BAHRAIN VICTORIOUS 05:25
8 PIDCOCK Thomas GBR INEOS GRENADIERS 05:35
9 GAUDU David FRA GROUPAMA – FDJ 06:52
10 KUSS Sepp USA JUMBO-VISMA 07:11
11 PINOT Thibaut FRA GROUPAMA – FDJ 09:08
12 BARDET Romain FRA TEAM DSM – FIRMENICH 09:33
13 MEINTJES Louis RSA INTERMARCHÉ – CIRCUS – WANTY 09:41
14 GALL Felix AUT AG2R CITROEN TEAM 10:33
15 MARTIN Guillaume FRA COFIDIS 10:46
16 LANDA Mikel ESP BAHRAIN VICTORIOUS 11:44
17 BUCHMANN Emanuel GER BORA – HANSGROHE 12:00

Jai Hindley gewinnt ein paar Sekunden im Kampf um das Podium auf der ersten Alpenetappe der Tour de France

Am französischen Nationalfeiertag stand heute die erste Alpenetappe auf dem Programm der Tour de France. Eine große Ausreißergruppe setzte sich in der ersten Hälfte der Etappe erfolgreich vom Feld ab, während dort der ganze Fokus auf die Bergankunft am Grand Colombier gerichtet war. M. Kwiatkowski attackierte aus der Spitzengruppe etwa 8 km vor dem Ziel und feierte am Ende einen ungefährdeten Etappensieg. BORA – hansgrohe lieferte Jai Hindley perfekt am Fuß des Schlussanstiegs ab, bevor Emanuel Buchmann Jai bis sechs Kilometer vor dem Ziel unterstützen konnte. Rund 2 km vor dem Ende begannen die Attacken aus der Gruppe der Favoriten und T. Pogacar konnte sich noch den 3. Etappenrang sichern. Jai Hindley zeigte erneute eine starke Leistung in den Bergen und erreichte letztlich Rang sechs, wobei er auf seine direkten Konkurrenten im Kampf um das Podium ein paar Sekunden gutmachen konnte.

Von der Ziellinie
“Die Jungs haben mich super in den letzten Berg gebracht. Es war wieder sehr heiß und am Beginn des Anstiegs haben Nils und Emu mich gut mit Getränken und Eis versorgt. Ich habe mich ziemlich gut gefühlt, bin aber defensiv gefahren, da klar war, dass Pogacar am Ende noch attackieren würde. Ich konnte seinem Antritt nicht folgen, war aber nah dran. Das ist sicherlich ein gutes Zeichen und von da her bin ich zufrieden, denn ich konnte ein paar Sekunden auf einige andere Jungs gutmachen. Heute war aber nur die erste von drei schweren Bergetappen und jeder Tag kann entscheidend sein. Wir müssen also weiter fokussiert bleiben und jeden Tag bereit sein.” – Jai Hindley

“Für uns war das heute definitiv ein guter Tag. Die Jungs haben Jai sehr gut vor dem letzten Anstieg platziert, da stimmt das Timing jetzt. Nils war wie gestern wieder sehr stark. Auch Emu hat einen guten Job gemacht, aber am Ende können wir natürlich nur hoffen, dass Jai gute Beine hat. Seine Leistung war ebenfalls sehr gut und er konnte am Ende sogar ein paar Sekunden gegenüber Rodriguez gutmachen. Wir sind also happy. Spannend wird, wer morgen das Rennen kontrollieren wird, denn da gibt es natürlich viele Möglichkeiten anzugreifen.” – Rolf Aldag, Sportlicher Leiter

Kwiatkowski conquers Grand Colombier

The mountain top finish of Grand Colombier welcomed the second Tour de France stage victory of Michal Kwiatkowski after stage 17 in 2020, the seventh for Polish riders in the history, after Zenon Jaskula, Rafal Majka and Maciej Bodnar did so as well. The Ineos Grenadiers rider stayed away from the early escape to win solo before former breakaway companion Maxim Van Gils whereas Jonas Vingegaard maintained his overall lead by nine seconds.

LOTS OF ATTACKS BEFORE 19 RIDERS GO CLEAR

The start proper of stage 13 was given at 13.55 to 167 riders. After many unfruitful skirmishes, 19 riders took the lead after 26km of racing: Quentin Pacher (Groupama-FDJ) who initiated this move a few kilometres before, Michal Kwiatkowski (Ineos Grenadiers), Alberto Bettiol, James Shaw (EF Education-EasyPost), Kasper Asgreen (Soudal-Quick Step), Matej Mohoric, Fred Wright (Bahrain Victorious), Jasper Stuyven (Lidl-Trek), Adrien Petit, Mike Teunissen, Georg Zimmerman (Intermarché-Circus-Wanty), Nelson Oliveira (Movistar), Hugo Houle (Israel-PremierTech), Luca Mozzato (Arkea-Samsic), Maxim Van Gils (Lotto-Dstny), Cees Bol, Harold Tejada (Astana), Anthon Charmig (Uno-X), Pierre Latour (TotalEnergies). UAE Team Emirates was prompt to set the pace of the peloton. The time gap was 2’25’’ with 60km to go.

PACHER ALONE UP THE HILL, THEN KWIATKOWSKI

Teunissen won the intermediate sprint at Hauteville-Lompnès (km 87.3). Matteo Trentin, Mikkel Bjerg and Vegard Stake Laengen continued to do all the work at the head of the pack for UAE Team Emirates. Bol was the first rider dropped, followed by Petit who fought hard to try and come across. Latour who finished second at Puy de Dôme couldn’t hold the pace in a downhill with 35km remaining. The deficit of the peloton was 3’55’’ at the beginning of the 17.4km long ascent to Grand Colombier. Pacher rode away from the front group 16km before the summit. Tejada, Van Gils and Shaw brought him back with 12.8km to go. Kwiatkowski overhauled them and kept going solo one kilometre further.

POGACAR ATTACKS 400 METERS BEFORE THE END

Kwiatkowski had 3’15’’ lead over the peloton with 10km to go. It was reduced to 2’20’’ at the 5km to go mark. Adam Yates sped up with 3km remaining and split the 15-man yellow jersey group into pieces. Vingegaard remained vigilant and Kwiatkowski dealt with the strength he had kept to stay ahead and win 47’’ seconds before Van Gils, the only other breakaway rider who fended off Pogacar. The Slovenian attacked just b

110. Tour de France Etappe 12 Daten

TOUR DE FRANCE 2023 – STAGE 12
ROANNE – BELLEVILLE-EN-BEAUJOLAIS

2X3: THE JOY AFTER THE LONG WAIT
Spain won 2 stages in 3 days after going 99 stages without a win. And it’s the first time they won twice in such a short timespan since Alberto Contador and Juan Manuel Garate in 2009 won on the 23rd and 25th of July.

12: ANOTHER LONG WAIT IS OVER
Ion Izagirre won his second stage 6 years 11 months and 20 days since his first one (Morzine 2016).
This is the 12th longest timespan between first and second win in history.
The record belongs to Cedric Vasseur: from La Châtre 1997 to Marseille 2007 (his only Tour wins) he had to wait 10 years and 8 days. Vasseur is Ion Izagirre’s manager at the head of Cofidis.

2: FROM NOTHING TO THE RECORD
Cofidis first won this year with Victor Lafay in San Sebastian after a wait of 15 years (since 2008) without a single win at the Tour.
In this edition they already posted 2 wins, equalling their best Tours (2004, 2008).

12: SWEET 12
This was the first time Mathieu van der Poel raced stage 12 of the Tour, after he had abandoned on stage 9 in 2021 and in stage 11 in 2022, and he went on to claim the most aggressive rider for the first time.

2015: INCREDIBLE TURNAROUND FOR SPAIN
For the first time since 2015, Spanish riders take two victories in a single edition of the Tour. And the two winners are at least 33 years old… which only happened in 2015 for Spain:
• Joaquim Rodriguez won at Huy and Plateau de Belle at 36 years old, Ruben Plaza won in Gap at 35 years old.
• Pello Bilbao won in Issoire at 33 years old and Ion Izagirre is 34 years old.
In 1964 Federico Bahamontes alone won 2 stages within 10 days of his 36th birthday.

3: UNLUCKY ASTANA
3 abandons for Astana, out of a total of 9 so far in this edition (33%).
Their three retirements came from three crashes: Luis Leon Sanchez, Mark Cavendish on day 8 and now David De la Cruz.

24/34: YOUNG OR OLD?
Both Mathieu Burgaudeau and Matteo Jorgenson scored their first Tour top-3 placement.
They are 10 years younger than today’s winner Ion Izagirre (24 to 34).

124: BECOMING A LUCKY NUMBER
Number 124 (Izagirre’s one) hadn’t scored a single win at the Tour from 1995 to 2020, then it was winner in two Tours out of three: Ben O’Connor in Tignes 2021 and Izagirre today.
Last year #124 went close to winning with Louis Meintjes: 2nd at Alpe d’Huez.

110. Tour de France Etappe 12

Roanne – Belleville-en-Beaujolais – 169 Km

1 IZAGUIRRE INSAUSTI Ion ESP COFIDIS 03:51:42
2 BURGAUDEAU Mathieu FRA TOTALENERGIES 00:58
3 JORGENSON Matteo USA MOVISTAR TEAM 00:58
4 BENOOT Tiesj BEL JUMBO-VISMA 01:06
5 JOHANNESSEN Tobias Halland NOR UNO-X PRO CYCLING TEAM 01:11
6 PINOT Thibaut FRA GROUPAMA – FDJ 01:13
7 MARTIN Guillaume FRA COFIDIS 01:13
8 TEUNS Dylan BEL ISRAEL – PREMIER TECH 01:27
9 ALMEIDA GUERREIRO Ruben POR MOVISTAR TEAM 01:27
10 CAMPENAERTS Victor BEL LOTTO DSTNY 03:02
11 VAN GILS Maxim BEL LOTTO DSTNY 04:14
12 POGAČAR Tadej SLO UAE TEAM EMIRATES 04:14
13 BERTHET Clément FRA AG2R CITROEN TEAM 04:14
14 POLITT Nils GER BORA – HANSGROHE 04:14
15 STUYVEN Jasper BEL LIDL – TREK 04:14
16 VINGEGAARD Jonas DEN JUMBO-VISMA 04:14
17 VAN DEN BERG Lars NED GROUPAMA – FDJ 04:14
18 YATES Adam GBR UAE TEAM EMIRATES 04:14
19 GENIETS Kévin LUX GROUPAMA – FDJ 04:14
20 CASTROVIEJO Jonathan ESP INEOS GRENADIERS 04:14
21 BERNAL Egan COL INEOS GRENADIERS 04:14

Gesamt:

1 VINGEGAARD Jonas DEN JUMBO-VISMA 50:30:23
2 POGAČAR Tadej SLO UAE TEAM EMIRATES 00:17
3 HINDLEY Jai AUS BORA – HANSGROHE 02:40
4 RODRIGUEZ CANO Carlos ESP INEOS GRENADIERS 04:22

5 BILBAO LOPEZ Pello ESP BAHRAIN VICTORIOUS 04:34
6 YATES Adam GBR UAE TEAM EMIRATES 04:39
7 YATES Simon GBR TEAM JAYCO ALULA 04:44
8 PIDCOCK Thomas GBR INEOS GRENADIERS 05:26
9 GAUDU David FRA GROUPAMA – FDJ 06:01
10 PINOT Thibaut FRA GROUPAMA – FDJ 06:33
11 KUSS Sepp USA JUMBO-VISMA 06:45
12 BARDET Romain FRA TEAM DSM – FIRMENICH 06:58
13 MARTIN Guillaume FRA COFIDIS 08:11
14 MEINTJES Louis RSA INTERMARCHÉ – CIRCUS – WANTY 08:50
15 BUCHMANN Emanuel GER BORA – HANSGROHE 09:09
16 LANDA Mikel ESP BAHRAIN VICTORIOUS 09:09
17 GALL Felix AUT AG2R CITROEN TEAM 09:46

Erneuter Ausreißersieg, während Jai Hindley die Alpen auf Rang drei der Gesamtwertung bei der Tour de France in Angriff nimmt

Eine weitere unvorhersehbare Etappe vor den großen Alpenpässen am Wochenende wurde von den Fahrern abermals für ein spektakuläres Rennen genutzt. Es dauerte mehr als 90 km, bevor sich eine Gruppe lösen konnte, und auf dem hügeligen Profil flog das Feld völlig auseinander. Jai Hindley war immer an der Seite des Gelben Trikots, während einige der Mitfavoriten um den Gesamtsieg teilweise mehr als drei Minuten abgehängt waren. Als die Spitzengruppe stand, beruhigte sich das Rennen etwas und das Feld lief wieder zusammen. Am Ende holte J. Izaguirre den Etappensieg aus der Spitzengruppe, während Jai sicher im Feld das Ziel erreichte und damit auf Rang drei der Gesamtwertung die Alpen in Angriff nimmt.

Von der Ziellinie
“Die Etappe wurde gefahren, als wäre die Tour morgen zu Ende. Zum Glück war es heute nicht ganz so heiß dafür was das Tempo unglaublich. Trotz der Anstiege wurde in den ersten beiden Rennstunden ein Schnitt von 47 km/h gefahren. Nils hatte einen wahnsinnig guten Tag und war die ganze Zeit bei Jai, was unglaublich wichtig war. Emu ist am Anfang hinter einen Sturz aufgehalten worden und war dann im zweiten Feld. Zum Glück konnte er später auch zurückkommen und gegen Ende waren wir ganz gut aufgestellt. Aber so ein Tag zehrt. An den Kräften der Fahrer und an den Nerven bei uns im Auto.” – Rolf Aldag, Sportlicher Leiter

Ion Izagirre doubles up

Inspired by the end of the 15-year drought for Cofidis and the end of the 5-year drought for Spain in terms of stage wins at the Tour de France, Ion Izagirre, 34, claimed his second stage win in Belleville-en-Beaujolais, seven years after his first one in Morzine as he emulated his team-mate Victor Lafay and his compatriot Pello Bilbao, a Basque rider like him who started with an exceptional motivation in Bilbao. Jonas Vingegaard retained the yellow jersey in an action packed stage in the vineyards.

CLASSICS SPECIALISTS ON THE MOVE

The start proper of stage 12 was given at 13.27 to 168 riders. One non-starter: Fabio Jakobsen (Soudal-Quick Step). Mads Pedersen (Lidl-Trek) was the first on the attack but no one wanted to go with him as he’d be hard to beat from a breakaway group. He was brought back by the compact bunch after 3km and that led to successive and unfruitful attacks for more than an hour. Matej Mohoric (Bahrain Victorious), Julian Alaphilippe (Soudal-Quick Step), Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Deceuninck) and Wout van Aert (Jumbo-Visma) were among the specialists of the big classics eager to break away. David De La Cruz (Astana) crashed out in a downhill to St-Vincent-de-Reins (km 28). At km 45, Van Aert managed to go clear but he was brought back after 8km alone in the lead.

15 RIDERS IN THE LEAD

A strong leading group was eventually formed at half way into stage 12 by 13 riders in several waves: Tiesj Benoot (Jumbo-Visma), Thibaut Pinot (Groupama-FDJ), Andrey Amador (EF Education-EasyPost), Mads Pedersen (Lidl-Trek), Van der Poel (Alpecin-Deceuninck), Guillaume Martin, Ion Izagirre (Cofidis), Ruben Guerreiro, Matteo Jorgenson (Movistar), Dylan Teuns (Israel-PremierTech), Victor Campenaerts (Lotto-Dstny), Tobias Halland Johanessen (Uno-X) and Mathieu Burgaudeau (TotalEnergies). Alaphilippe (Soudal-Quick Step) and Jasper Stuyven (Lidl-Trek) came across on the line of the intermediate sprint at Régnié-Durette where Pedersen scored 20 points in first position. The peloton was divided in three groups with the likes of Sepp Kuss, Mikel Landa, Emanuel Buchmann and Louis Meintjes among the stragglers, which inclined AG2R-Citroën to pace the yellow jersey group in order to get Felix Gall move up on GC. Van der Poel and Amador rode away from the leading group with 55km to go. The Dutchman sped up and continued solo up the côte de Montmain.

IZAGIRRE ALONE IN THE LAST 31KM

32km before the end, Pinot and Jorgenson caught up with Van der Poel. It became an 8-man group with the reinforcement of Martin, I. Izagirre, Benoot, Guerreiro and Burgaudeau. Izagirre rode away by himself 31km before the finish. After the Kuss group caught up with the yellow jersey group, Ineos Grenadiers set the pace of that main peloton as Pinot was threatening the fourth place overall of Carlos Rodriguez. Izagirre reached an advantage of 50’’ with 15km to go. He forged on as the cooperation in the chasing group wasn’t great. Jorgenson and Burgaudeau attacked with 3km to go to round out the stage podium. The yellow jersey peloton crossed the line 4’14’’ after the Spanish winner.

TOUR DE FRANCE FEMMES AVEC ZWIFT HOW THE TOUR CHANGED MY LIFE (IV/VI) Liane Lippert

Liane Lippert: „Everybody will be at the top of their shape“


Plomi Foto

25-year-old Liane Lippert is the puncher on everyone’s lips right now. Her second-place finish in the Flèche Wallonne, coming a year after she took the bottom step of the podium in the Amstel Gold Race, painted a bright future for her in the Ardennes Classics. And the Tour? While the German champion describes her participation in the inaugural edition as „a great experience“, she makes no secret of the fact that she failed to achieve the hoped-for results after crashing in the stage she had marked in red. She is heading back to France and dreaming of finally raising her arms in victory, but she now races for a different squad. Last winter, she brought down the curtain on her time at DMS, the team where she had turned pro in 2017 right after her promotion from the Junior ranks. Annemiek Van Vleuten has taken her under her wing in Movistar, where the German hopes to repay the favour by propelling her team leader to the top of the podium in Pau.

Liane Lippert (Movistar Team)
Born in Friedrichshafen (Germany) on 13 January 1998
Teams
Team Sunweb (2017 to 2020), Team DSM (2021 to 2022) and Movistar Team (2023)
Major results
2016: Junior European champion
2018: German champion, stage 3 and the overall of the Lotto Belgium Tour
2020: Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race, second in the Brabantse Pijl and eighth in the Flèche Wallonne
2021: second in stage 3 of the Ceratizit Challenge by La Vuelta, silver medal in the European Championships
2022: German champion, second in the Tour of Scandinavia, third in the Amstel Gold Race, third in the Brabantse Pijl and fourth in the Worlds
2023: second in the Flèche Wallonne, third in the Brabantse Pijl, seventh in the Itzulia Women and eighth in Liège–Bastogne–Liège

Signature trait: Liane Lippert was raised on the shores of Lake Constance, in Germany, where she still lives: „It’s a beautiful place not far from Austria and Switzerland. It’s perfect for training. I got started when I was eight. My father used to cycle recreationally. I signed up for his club and have never stopped pedalling!“

How would you describe the impact of the first edition of the Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift on your life?
I would say pretty much. In Germany, women’s cycling is not very big, now it’s a bit more. Since the Tour de France, for sure, more and more people know about it. If I say I’m a cyclist, they know there was a Tour de France Femmes. That’s changed a lot, especially because I have the national champion jersey. It was nice to come back home. I won’t say people recognised me on the street, but they recognised me more. It was changing a lot. I get more fans and publicity. I get more interviews, more people from my area give me feedback after races.

And what about your career?
Firstly, I didn’t have the result I wished. I wanted to go for some stages, but I had some bad luck with the crash, and I had to work for Lorena [Wiebes, the winner of stages 1 and 5] in the sprints and for Juliette [Labous] for the GC, so for my results, it has not changed so much. It was just a great experience, I would say.

„I’m working to be able to fight with the climbers“

This sense of frustration must have been strong after the stage to Épernay? You were at the front of the race after the Côte de Mutigny. Then, you crashed on the descent…
Yes, it was, for sure. I had a chance with the team, I was ready for it, it was a good finish for me, and then I crashed and the race was finished. It was disappointing at the moment. It was my goal, and then we had to take the GC and go for sprint stages, there was a lot to do, so I could forget about it because I was busy.

After six years with DSM, you are now in a new team. What motivated you to move from DSM to Movistar?
After 6 years, I wanted to see something else, to find a new team. Movistar had a good plan for me, they really see me as a leader for the future. For me, it was a super opportunity.

Can we say that your move from DSM to Movistar is the sign that you also want to become a GC rider and succeed Van Vleuten at the top of the women’s cycling?
No, we are two completely different riders. I showed this year how strong I can be in the Ardennes classics [second in the Flèche Wallonne and eighth in Liège–Bastogne–Liège]. This is something where I want to focus, and to aim one step higher on the podium. For the GC, I have to see. I’m also working to be able to survive on longer climbs and be able to fight with the climbers. For sure, I want to test my legs this year on one of the Grand Tours. But I don’t want to change the rider I am because I think it’s a bad idea.

Tell us about your relationship with Annemiek and the role she has for you.
Annemiek really likes to share her experience, her knowledge, that’s really useful for the races. She’s one of the best. It was also nice to win the Vuelta together [Van Vleuten claimed the Spanish Grand Tour for the third time in a row last June]. It was a special feeling that I’ve never had before.

„The Tour is the biggest race where you can win“

What is your ambition for the second Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift?
We want to win with the team. Like last year, Annemiek wants to win the Tour. As for me, I’ll focus on stages. The fourth one, with the steep climb at one kilometre to go, suits me best. And I will support Annemiek for GC

Last year, the Tour came to the Vosges with two gruelling mountain stages. This year, it is going even higher in the Pyrenees. Would you say that the Tour brings new challenges to women’s cycling?

Yes, I would say so. But I also think the flat stages last year were hard too, which says a lot about the level of the Tour. Everybody will be at the top of their shape in the Tour. It will be very difficult to win because everyone is at such a high level.

Even if it has only had one edition so far, would you say that it is already the biggest race?
Yes, I would say so. I would love to win one of the Ardennes classics, but a stage in the Tour is the biggest race where you can win. I’ll do the nationals, the Giro and then the Tour. The races are planned to allow me to improve my shape for the Tour.

110. Tour de France Etappe 11 Daten

2: THERE ARE ONLY TWO!
Jasper Philipsen wins his 6th Tour stage, the 4th in this edition.
He becomes the second active rider with at least 4 wins in a single Tour after Mark Cavendish (record: 6 in 2009, the last time with 4: 2021).

60.1: A FURIOUS RUN-IN TO MOULINS
Jasper Philipsen dominated a particularly fast and furious ending of stage 11, covering the last 20 kilometres with an average speed of 60.1km/h. The Belgian sprinter upped the ante to 65.6km/h in the last kilometre, with a top speed of 71.1km/h according to the records of NTT Data.

4X11: SO MANY, SO EARLY
4 wins in the first 11 stages for Jasper Philipsen: the best value since 2017, when Marcel Kittel posted 5, the second all-time value so early in the Tour behind the 6 of François Faber in 1909.

25: A WAIT OF A QUARTER OF A CENTURY
Jasper Philipsen is the first Belgian with 4 wins in a single Tour since Tom Steels in 1998 (stages 1, 12, 18 and 21). Wout van Aert won 3 stages in 2021 and in 2022 as well.

8: THANKS JASPER!
8th win for the Alpecin Team at the Tour. Without Jasper Philipsen, their total would be 2 and their last win would be the 3rd stage of 2021 (Tim Merlier in Pontivy): all the last 6 stages for them are signed by Philipsen.

4-1: COUNTRIES HEAD-TO-HEAD
Since the start of 2020 (Tadej Pogacar’s debut at the Tour), the two most successful countries at the Tour are Belgium (17 stage wins) and Slovenia (13). This year Belgium leads Slovenia 4-1 for stage wins so far.

52/58: PARIS IS GETTING CLOSER
The riders went past the halfway point of the Tour 2023 yesterday. Now that they’ve completed stage 11: they’ve covered 1973.8 of the 3,405.6 kilometres (58%) from Bilbao to Paris and they’ve also overcome more than half of the total elevation of the Tour: 30,371 metres out of 58,037 (52%).
The hardest part is yet to come. The stage with most elevation so far was on day 6, with 3,916 metres to overcome on stage 6 (Pau > Laruns). Three stages beat that score on the remaining way to Paris:
• 4,246 m on stage 14 (Annemasse > Morzine Les Portes du Soleil)
• 4,394 m on stage 15 (Les Gets Les Portes du Soleil > Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc)
• 5,149 m on stage 17 (Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc > Courchevel)

12: WINNER OR SECOND?
Dylan Groenewegen obtains his 12th podium stage at the Tour: now he has scored equally 5 wins and 5 second places, plus 2 third places.
This is his first top-3 in this Tour and since he was second, again behind Philipsen, last year at the Champs Elysées.

3: GETTING THERE
Third top-3 at this Tour for Phil Bauhaus (3rd) after a 2nd place in Bayonne and a 3rd in Nogaro.

110. Tour de France Etappe 11

Clermont-Ferrand – Moulins – 180 Km

1 PHILIPSEN Jasper BEL ALPECIN-DECEUNINCK 04:01:07
2 GROENEWEGEN Dylan NED TEAM JAYCO ALULA 00:00
3 BAUHAUS Phil GER BAHRAIN VICTORIOUS 00:00
4 COQUARD Bryan FRA COFIDIS 00:00
5 PEDERSEN Mads DEN LIDL – TREK 00:00
6 KRISTOFF Alexander NOR UNO-X PRO CYCLING TEAM 00:00
7 MOZZATO Luca ITA TEAM ARKEA – SAMSIC 00:00
8 SAGAN Peter SVK TOTALENERGIES 00:00
9 VAN AERT Wout BEL JUMBO-VISMA 00:00
10 WELSFORD Sam AUS TEAM DSM – FIRMENICH 00:00
11 MEEUS Jordi BEL BORA – HANSGROHE 00:00
12 BOL Cees NED ASTANA QAZAQSTAN TEAM 00:00
13 GIRMAY Biniam ERI INTERMARCHÉ – CIRCUS – WANTY 00:00
14 STRONG Corbin NZL ISRAEL – PREMIER TECH 00:00
15 EWAN Caleb AUS LOTTO DSTNY 00:00

Gesamt:

1 VINGEGAARD Jonas DEN JUMBO-VISMA 46:34:27
2 POGAČAR Tadej SLO UAE TEAM EMIRATES 00:17
3 HINDLEY Jai AUS BORA – HANSGROHE 02:40
4 RODRIGUEZ CANO Carlos ESP INEOS GRENADIERS 04:22
5 BILBAO LOPEZ Pello ESP BAHRAIN VICTORIOUS 04:34
6 YATES Adam GBR UAE TEAM EMIRATES 04:39
7 YATES Simon GBR TEAM JAYCO ALULA 04:44
8 PIDCOCK Thomas GBR INEOS GRENADIERS 05:26
9 GAUDU David FRA GROUPAMA – FDJ 06:01
10 KUSS Sepp USA JUMBO-VISMA 06:45
11 BARDET Romain FRA TEAM DSM – FIRMENICH 06:58
12 MEINTJES Louis RSA INTERMARCHÉ – CIRCUS – WANTY 08:50
13 BUCHMANN Emanuel GER BORA – HANSGROHE 09:09
14 LANDA Mikel ESP BAHRAIN VICTORIOUS 09:09
15 PINOT Thibaut FRA GROUPAMA – FDJ 09:36

Philipsen holt vierten Etappensieg, während Jordi Meeus gerade noch einen Sturz vermeiden kann im Sprint der 11. Etappe der Tour de France

Die 11. Etappe der Tour de France war eine der letzten Chancen für die Sprinter im Feld. Entsprechend wurde das Rennen auch kontrolliert, als sich ein Trio absetzen konnte. Der letzte der Ausreißer wurde 8 km vor dem Ziel gestellt und alles war für einen Sprint angerichtet. BORA – hansgrohe zeigte sich mit 20 km an der Spitze des Feldes, um Jai Hindley aus Schwierigkeiten zu halten, aber auch, um Jordi Meeus vor dem Finale zu platzieren. Regen erschwerte die letzte Phase des Rennens und am Ende sicherte sich J. Philipsen seinen bereits vierten Tagessieg. Jordi Meeus war an der 500 m Marke in guter Position, wurde dann aber in Richtung Absperrung gestoßen und konnte gerade noch einen Sturz vermeiden, um letztlich Rang 11 zu belegen.

Von der Ziellinie
“Das Finale war heute besonders nervös, weil es am Ende auch noch geregnet hat. Ich war an den letzten Kreisverkehren sehr gut platziert und hatte eigentlich auch das richtige Hinterrad. Dann ging aber das Tempo runter und einige Fahrer kamen von hinten. Ich wurde Richtung Barriere gedrückt und habe einen Zuschauer berührt, ich konnte gerade noch einen Sturz vermeiden. Ich habe noch einmal versucht, in Position zu kommen, aber dann hat sich Pedersen unter meinem Arm verhakt und ich habe wieder die Balance verloren. Da war der Sprint für mich zu Ende. Es ist frustrierend, denn bisher bin ich nie in eine Position gekommen, um einen freien Sprint zu fahren.” – Jordi Meeus

Jasper the master

Jasper Philipsen took place in the modern history of the Tour de France as he became the second active rider with at least four stage wins in a single Tour after Mark Cavendish as he outclassed Dylan Groenewegen and Phil Bauhaus in Moulins where Jonas Vingegaard collected the 17th Maillot Jaune of his career.

AMADOR, LOUVEL AND OSS AT THE FRONT

The start proper of stage 11 was given to 169 riders at 13.26. Andrey Amador (EF Education-EasyPost) was first out of the peloton, although at a slow speed. Two riders joined him: Tony Gallopin (Lidl-Trek) and Matîs Louvel (Arkea-Samsic). Gallopin sat up but Daniel Oss (TotalEnergies) substituted him as he made the jump. This leading trio easily took some advantage to reach a maximum of 3’20’’ at km 25 where Alpecin-Deceuninck decided to take the responsibilities to pace the peloton. The teams of the top sprinters left with no win in the first four bunch gallops, namely Jayco-AlUla, Lotto-Dstny and Soudal-Quick, respectively for Dylan Groenewegen, Caleb Ewan and Fabio Jakobsen.

OSS UNTIL 13.5KM TO GO

The peloton delayed the regrouping as long as possible but crosswinds led GC teams to speed up in their move to position their captains close to the helm. With 54km to go, Louvel sat up, so did Amador 5km further. Oss remained alone. He forged on even when the rain made its first appearance on the roads of the Tour de France this year. The Italian veteran was reeled in 13.5km before the end. Soudal-Quick positioned Fabio Jakobsen at the front with 10km remaining.

IT’S PHILIPSEN AGAIN

Jumbo-Visma took over from the sprinters’ teams, firstly to keep Jonas Vingegaard out of trouble until 3km to go, secondly to pave the way for Wout van Aert. Dylan Groenewegen got the best lead out and launched the sprint but Philipsen was smart to follow his slipstream in the absence of Mathieu van der Poel in the finale this time around. The Belgian passed him to score his fourth stage win this year.

110. Tour de France Etappe 10 Daten

TOUR DE FRANCE 2023 – STAGE 10
VULCANIA – ISSOIRE
100: WELCOME BACK, SPAIN!

At the 100th stage since their last win, Spain wins again at the Tour with Pello Bilbao. Their previous one had been the 2018 Mende stage with Omar Fraile.
The Spanish drought was the longest since the 1978-1983 period, 118 stages long. At the time Angel Arroyo closed it winning at the Puy de Dôme, a stage which followed Issoire, the same finish of today.
Pello Bilbao before today had obtained only one top-3 finish at the Tour: 2nd in Bagnères-de-Bigorre in 2019.

168X2: THE COMMITMENT FOR GINO
To honour Gino Mäder, Pello Bilbao announced he would make donations based on the number of riders he would beat in the Tour 2023, following the example set in previous years by his late teammate.
The Basque rider had already finished ahead of 1,204 riders in the first 9 days of the race, with his best result on stage 2 (5th). This time, he beat 168 riders to take the win – and he announced he would double the donation in the case of a stage win!
The money will go to a Basque association, Basoak SOS, which buys up deforested land to replant it with local species of plants.

33: THE NEW YOUNGSTERS
The winners of the last two stages are the “less young” of this year:
• Michael Woods: 36 years 8 months 27 days
• Pello Bilbao: 33 years 4 months 16 days (his first win as a 33 year-old).
The only other winner above 30 years is Adam Yates (Bilbao): 30 years 10 months 24 days.

3: SO CLOSE TO GLORY…
Krists Neilands went 3,1 kilometers from giving Latvia their 3rd win. The previous two came in 1994, by Piotr Ugrumov (Cluses, Avoriaz), the last one on the 22nd of July, 27 days before Neilands was born.

2: GERMANY IS ALMOST THERE
First Tour stage podium for Georg Zimmerman (2nd). Germany this year had already scored two top-3 placements, with Phil Bauhaus, 2nd in stage 3 and 3rd in stage 4.
The last win from Germany is now more than 2 years away (8th of July 2021: Nils Politt in Nimes).
Rather than Germany, Spain is the 8th nation to win a stage in this Tour, after Great Britain, France, Belgium, Australia, Slovenia, Denmark and Canada.
In third place, Australian Ben O’Connor had already seen a compatriot win this year: his friend Jai Hindley in Laruns.

10: ALAPHILIPPE FILLING THE VOID
There have been hard times for Julian Alaphilippe recently, but today’s stage gave signs of hope as he scored his first top-10 placement at the Tour (10th) since Nimes in 2021 (9th).
Soudal is trying to up its pace: it’s the 2nd top 10 for them this year, after Fabio Jakobsen finished 4th on day 3.
By stage 10, they had won at least once in each of the last 10 editions. The last time they failed to win a stage in the first 10 days of racing, was back in 2012, when they finished the Tour without a success.

15: ALL-TERRAIN BARGUIL
Warren Barguil was first at the Col de la Croix, his 15th KOM conquered at the Tour. He scored them in all the possible ways:
• Hors catégorie: 5
• Cat. 1: 3
• Cat. 2: 3
• Cat. 3: 2
• Cat. 4: 2
Among this year’s entrants, Barguil is in 4th place for career KOMs:
• Julian Alaphilippe 18
• Rafal Majka and Neilson Powless 16
• Warren Barguil 15

9: HOLDING ON TO THE POLKA-DOT
9th polka-dot jersey for Neilson Powless, the same, among this year’s entrants of Simon Geschke.
Only four riders in the peloton have more:
• Benoit Cosnefroy 16
• Rafal Majka 14
• Warren Barguil 13
• Julian Alaphilippe 12

16: ONE MORE
Jonas Vingegaard takes his 16th Maillot Jaune, joining Maurice De Waele (winner in 1929) at the 38th all-time spot for stages in the lead in the Tour’s history. Among the Dane’s direct rivals, Tadej Pogacar has 21 yellow jerseys.

110. Tour de France Etappe 10

Vulcania – Issoire – 167 Km

1 BILBAO LOPEZ Pello ESP BAHRAIN VICTORIOUS 03:52:34
2 ZIMMERMANN Georg GER INTERMARCHÉ – CIRCUS – WANTY 00:00
3 O’CONNOR Ben AUS AG2R CITROEN TEAM 00:00
4 NEILANDS Krists LAT ISRAEL – PREMIER TECH 00:00
5 CHAVES Jhoan Esteban COL EF EDUCATION – EASYPOST 00:00
6 PEDRERO Antonio ESP MOVISTAR TEAM 00:03
7 JENSEN Skjelmose Mattias DEN LIDL – TREK 00:27
8 KWIATKOWSKI Michal POL INEOS GRENADIERS 00:27
9 BARGUIL Warren FRA TEAM ARKEA – SAMSIC 00:30
10 ALAPHILIPPE Julian FRA SOUDAL QUICK-STEP 00:32
11 STUYVEN Jasper BEL LIDL – TREK 02:53
12 JOHANNESSEN Tobias Halland NOR UNO-X PRO CYCLING TEAM 02:53
13 ARANBURU DEBA Alex ESP MOVISTAR TEAM 02:53
14 VAN GILS Maxim BEL LOTTO DSTNY 02:53
15 EENKHOORN Pascal NED LOTTO DSTNY 02:53
16 NIELSEN Magnus Cort DEN EF EDUCATION – EASYPOST 02:53
17 ABRAHAMSEN Jonas NOR UNO-X PRO CYCLING TEAM 02:53
18 BERTHET Clément FRA AG2R CITROEN TEAM 02:53
19 KÜNG Stefan SUI GROUPAMA – FDJ 02:53
20 BURGAUDEAU Mathieu FRA TOTALENERGIES 02:53
21 VINGEGAARD Jonas DEN JUMBO-VISMA 02:53
22 HINDLEY Jai AUS BORA – HANSGROHE 02:53
23 PEREZ Anthony FRA COFIDIS 02:53
24 DE LA CRUZ David ESP ASTANA QAZAQSTAN TEAM 02:53

Gesamt:

1 VINGEGAARD Jonas DEN JUMBO-VISMA 42:33:13
2 POGAČAR Tadej SLO UAE TEAM EMIRATES 00:17
3 HINDLEY Jai AUS BORA – HANSGROHE 02:40
4 RODRIGUEZ CANO Carlos ESP INEOS GRENADIERS 04:22
5 BILBAO LOPEZ Pello ESP BAHRAIN VICTORIOUS 04:34
6 YATES Adam GBR UAE TEAM EMIRATES 04:39
7 YATES Simon GBR TEAM JAYCO ALULA 04:44
8 PIDCOCK Thomas GBR INEOS GRENADIERS 05:26
9 GAUDU David FRA GROUPAMA – FDJ 06:01
10 KUSS Sepp USA JUMBO-VISMA 06:45
11 BARDET Romain FRA TEAM DSM – FIRMENICH 06:58
12 MEINTJES Louis RSA INTERMARCHÉ – CIRCUS – WANTY 08:50
13 BUCHMANN Emanuel GER BORA – HANSGROHE 09:09
14 LANDA Mikel ESP BAHRAIN VICTORIOUS 09:09
15 PINOT Thibaut FRA GROUPAMA – FDJ 09:36
16 GALL Felix AUT AG2R CITROEN TEAM 09:46

Ausreißer entscheiden verrückte 10. Etappe bei der Tour de France

Nach dem ersten Ruhetag entbrannte zum Beginn der 10. Etappe eine wahre Schlacht im Peloton. Nach 30 km war das Feld in mehrere Gruppen zersplittert und einige der GC-Favoriten befanden sich mehrere Minuten hinter der Spitze. Jai Hindley und Emanuel Buchmann konnten sich immer in der ersten Gruppe halten und als sich das Rennen etwas beruhigte, setzten sich 14 Fahrer vom Feld ab. Hinter der Spitze lief das Feld wieder zusammen, während vorne ein Kampf um den Tagessieg entbrannte. Am Ende sicherte sich P. Bilbao den Sieg aus einer 6-Mann-Gruppe und rückt in die Top Ten der Gesamtwertung auf. Jai Hindley beendete die Etappe sicher im Feld und liegt weiter auf dem dritten Gesamtrang.

Von der Ziellinie
“Das war ein richtig harter Tag. Nach dem Ruhetag weiß man nie so genau, wie es läuft und dann kam auch noch die Hitze dazu. Die ersten eineinhalb Stunden waren brutal, ich denke, jeder war da am Limit. Ich war echt froh, als die Gruppe weggefahren ist, auch wenn Bilbao dabei war. Er hat den Sieg definitiv verdient und auch von mir Gratulation dazu. Meine Beine wurden während der Etappe immer besser und die Jungs haben mich auch gut unterstützt. Am Anfang war Emu bei mir, als das Feld zusammenlief, haben vor allem Marco und Bob einen super Job gemacht. Wenn es so heiß ist, ist die Unterstützung besonders wichtig, denn man braucht genug Flaschen und Eis. Wir können mit dem Tag zufrieden sein, aber man sieht, dass bei der Tour jede Etappe entscheidend sein kann.” – Jai Hindley

Bilbao was on a mission since… Bilbao

A star of the Grand Départ in Bilbao on his home soil in the Basque Country, Pello Bilbao claimed his first ever Tour de France victory in Issoire at the end a very hard fought breakaway day. He put an end to a 99-stage drought of Spanish wins (since Omar Fraile in Mende in 2018) as he outsprinted Georg Zimmermann and Ben O’Connor. The 33 year old dedicated his victory to his team-late Gino Mäder who tragically passed away at the Tour de Suisse last month. He moved up to fifth overall while Jonas Vingegaard who went in a breakaway along with Tadej Pogacar in the early part of the race retained the yellow jersey.

VINGEGAARD AND POGACAR AND IN AN EARLY BREAKAWAY

The start proper of stage 10 has been given to 169 riders at 13.17. Following several skirmishes, a group of 22 riders was formed at the front after the col de la Moréno crested firstly by Anton Charmig (Uno-X). Interestingly, Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) and Tadej Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates) were part of it, along with Simon Yates (Jayco-AlUla) and Romain Bardet (DSM-Firmenich). The duellists sat up at some stage, 13 riders remained in the lead but the peloton reacted strongly and several top riders got dropped, including Bardet, Wout van Aert (Jumbo-Visma) and David Gaudu (Groupama-FDJ). After the col de Guéry (cat. 3, km 27.3) where Wout Poels (Bahrain Victorious) passed first in front of Krists Neilands (Israel-Premier Tech), Julian Alaphilippe (Soudal-Quick Step) and Matej Mohoric (Bahrain Victorious) rode away in the downhill. They didn’t get the green light.

14 RIDERS IN THE LEAD, INCLUDING BILBAO AND ALAPHILIPPE

Kasper Asgreen (Soudal-Quick Step), Georg Zimmermann (Intermarché-Circus-Wanty), Nick Schultz (Israel-Premier Tech), Esteban Chaves (EF Education-EasyPost), Pello Bilbao (Bahrain Victorious), Warren Barguil (Arkea-Samsic), Mattias Skjelmose (Lidl-Trek) formed a new leading group at km 41. Ben O’Connor (AG2R-Citroën), Harold Tejada (Astana), Alaphilippe (Soudal-Quick Step), Neilands (Israel-Premier Tech), Antonio Pedrero (Movistar), Anthony Perez (Cofidis), Michal Kwiatkowski (Ineos Grenadiers) launched a counter-attack. Once the main peloton slowed down, the Gaudu-Bardet-Van Aert group managed to get back on. Asgreen lost contact and was substituted in the 7-man escape by O’Connor who jumped by himself. The regrouping of the 14 men occurred with 86km to go, after which Chaves rode away solo up the hill of Saint-Victor-la-Rivière.

TWO STRONG ATTACKS BY KRISTS NEILANDS

Neilands rode away solo with 53km to go in order to keep the chances of the escape alive while Alpecin-Deceuninck and Jayco-AlUla were swapping turns at the head of the peloton as the deficit had gone down from 3 to 2 minutes. Van Aert and Van der Poel escaped from the peloton in a downhill with 46km to go. They were successively brought back by the pack led by Ineos Grenadiers while Neilands had gone away by himself once again with 33km remaining. The Latvian was brought back at the 3km to go mark. O’Connor tried to avoid a sprint finish with 1.8km to go but he was marked. Bilbao and Zimmermann took an advantage in the last straight line. They were also reeled in but Bilbao still had some speed in his legs to win. His best result at the Tour de France so far was second at Bagnères-de-Bigorre in 2019.