Libourne – Limoges – 201 Km
1 PEDERSEN Mads DEN LIDL – TREK 04:12:26
2 PHILIPSEN Jasper BEL ALPECIN-DECEUNINCK 00:00
3 VAN AERT Wout BEL JUMBO-VISMA 00:00
4 GROENEWEGEN Dylan NED TEAM JAYCO ALULA 00:00
5 EEKHOFF Nils NED TEAM DSM – FIRMENICH 00:00
6 COQUARD Bryan FRA COFIDIS 00:00
7 DE BUYST Jasper BEL LOTTO DSTNY 00:00
8 TILLER Rasmus NOR UNO-X PRO CYCLING TEAM 00:00
9 STRONG Corbin NZL ISRAEL – PREMIER TECH 00:00
10 POGAČAR Tadej SLO UAE TEAM EMIRATES 00:00
11 LOUVEL Matis FRA TEAM ARKEA – SAMSIC 00:00
12 ARANBURU DEBA Alex ESP MOVISTAR TEAM 00:00
13 WRIGHT Fred GBR BAHRAIN VICTORIOUS 00:00
14 BOL Cees NED ASTANA QAZAQSTAN TEAM 00:00
15 BARDET Romain FRA TEAM DSM – FIRMENICH 00:00
16 SAGAN Peter SVK TOTALENERGIES 00:00
Gesamt:
1 VINGEGAARD Jonas DEN JUMBO-VISMA 34:09:38
2 POGAČAR Tadej SLO UAE TEAM EMIRATES 00:25
3 HINDLEY Jai AUS BORA – HANSGROHE 01:34
4 RODRIGUEZ CANO Carlos ESP INEOS GRENADIERS 03:30
5 YATES Adam GBR UAE TEAM EMIRATES 03:40
6 YATES Simon GBR TEAM JAYCO ALULA 04:01
7 GAUDU David FRA GROUPAMA – FDJ 04:03
8 BARDET Romain FRA TEAM DSM – FIRMENICH 04:43
9 PIDCOCK Thomas GBR INEOS GRENADIERS 04:43
10 KUSS Sepp USA JUMBO-VISMA 05:28
11 O’CONNOR Ben AUS AG2R CITROEN TEAM 06:10
12 BILBAO LOPEZ Pello ESP BAHRAIN VICTORIOUS 06:10
13 BUCHMANN Emanuel GER BORA – HANSGROHE 06:32
14 LANDA Mikel ESP BAHRAIN VICTORIOUS 06:36
15 MEINTJES Louis RSA INTERMARCHÉ – CIRCUS – WANTY 06:52
Jai Hindley weiter auf Rang drei der Gesamtwertung nach hektischem Finale auf der 8. Etappe der Tour de France
Am Papier war die 8. Etappe der Tour de France nicht die schwierigste, allerdings konnte auf einem sehr welligen Schlussteil ein hektisches Finale in Limoges erwartet werden. Drei Fahrer bildeten die Gruppe des Tages, doch auf den letzten 30 km drückte vor allem Jumbo-Visma im Feld auf das Tempo. Der letzte Ausreißer wurde etwa 8 km vor dem Ziel gestellt, während auch das Feld durch die zahlreichen Anstiege immer kleiner wurde. BORA – hansgrohe arbeitete hart, um Jai Hindley in guter Position und aus alles Schwierigkeiten herauszuhalten. Am Ende holte M. Pedersen den Tagessieg, während Jai Hindley das Ziel in der ersten Gruppe erreichte.
Von der Ziellinie
“Der Beginn der Etappe war extrem hart, denn viele Fahrer wollten in einer Fluchtgruppe ihre Chance suchen. Als die drei Fahrer dann weg waren, hat man schnell gemerkt, wer das Rennen kontrollieren will. Es war dann organisierter, aber im Finale dennoch sehr hart und hektisch. Die Jungs haben einen tollen Job gemacht, Jai immer vorne zu halten. Wir sind gut durchgekommen, das war heute unser Ziel. Wir können also zufrieden sein.” – Rolf Aldag, Sportlicher Leiter
Pedersen powers to second Tour de France victory
On the sad farewell day of Mark Cavendish who crashed out, Mads Pedersen powered to his second Tour de France victory in Limoges one year after he opened his account in Saint-Etienne. Jasper Philipsen and Wout van Aert settled down for second and third. Jonas Vingegaard retained the yellow jersey.
DECLERCQ, DELAPLACE AND TURGIS AT THE FRONT
The start proper of stage 8 was given at 12.43 to 172 riders. Lots of skirmishes took place in the first 20km but they were unsuccessful until Tim Declercq (Soudal-Quick Step) managed to go clear. He was joined at km 22 by Anthony Turgis (TotalEnergies) and Anthony Delaplace (Arkea-Samsic). A maximum time difference of 5’15’’ was record before the intermediate sprint at Tocane-Saint-Apre (km 79). Delaplace outsprinted Turgis and Philipsen proved once again to be the fastest as he fulfilled his green jersey ambitions by winning the sprint of the peloton for fourth place. His team-mate Mathieu van der Poel tried to surprise the field as he attacked right after the intermediate sprint. Philipsen, Mark Cavendish, Bryan Coquard and Biniam Girmay were among the fifteen riders who accompanied him. It forced Jumbo-Visma to chase hard as Wout van Aert had made no secret on his stage win ambitions in Limoges. It was back together after a couple of kilometres.
CAVENDISH OUT OF HIS LAST TOUR DE FRANCE
Lidl-Trek started to make the race harder at the head of the peloton with one and half hour remaining. Cavendish crashed out with 64km to go. Cofidis came in help to pace the peloton that was timed 2’30’’ adrift before the last hour of racing. Kasper Asgreen (Soudal-Quick Step) attacked from the pack with 36km remaining. He stayed in between for 14 kilometres. The deficit of the peloton was one minute at the 20-km to go mark. Turgis rode away solo in the côte de Masmont 16km before the end.
SKJELMOSE PUTS PEDERSEN INTO ORBIT
Declercq tried to make it back to the front but was swallowed by the pack 10km before the end. Turgis was reeled with 8km remaining. His team-mate Steff Cras crashed with 6km to go while Simon Yates and Mikel Landa also went down and reached the finish line with a 47’’ deficit. The Belgian, 13th overall, was forced to pull out. Mattias Skjelmose strongly seized the command of the peloton at the entrance of Limoges. The Danish champion put his team-mate and compatriot Mads Pedersen into orbit but the competition was fierce in the uphill stretch. The former world champion looked to have it when he passed Van Aert who was led out by Christophe Laporte but Van der Poel took Philipsen to the front and Pedersen had to jump to the finish line to fend off the green jersey holder. This is the 26th Danish stage win at the Tour de France, the second for Pedersen himself who already bagged a Giro d’Italia stage victory in Naples this year.