logo
Dutch powerhouse Van der Poel takes Tour de France lead

Dutch powerhouse Van der Poel takes Tour de France lead

Khaleej Times8 hours ago
Alpecin's Mathieu van der Poel edged Tadej Pogacar to win the second stage of the Tour de France in a tense hilltop finale at Boulogne-sur-Mer on Sunday.
The victory saw the Dutch rider take the lead in the overall standings after depriving Pogacar of his 100th career win as around 30 riders broke away in the final 2km.
It was a second Tour de France stage win for Van der Poel, who took the yellow jersey from his teammate Jasper Philipsen — the winner of Saturday's opening stage.
Denmark's Jonas Vingegaard seemed at ease as he crossed the line in third with Frenchman Romain Gregoire fourth and his compatriot Julian Alaphilippe fifth.
Van der Poel also won stage two on the 2021 Tour de France and then dug deep to retain the yellow jersey for six gruelling days.
"Winning again four years after the last time, that's just great. In recent years I tried to get here on top form but never quite did," Van der Poel said.
The Dutch rider is the grandson of French cycling legend Raymond Poulidor, who came second in the Tour de France seven times, but never won and also never got to wear the yellow jersey.
"I had a feeling I could win the stage today but taking the yellow jersey is a nice bonus," Van der Poel said.
His teammate Philipsen may have lost the yellow jersey, but he will set off Monday wearing the green one assigned to the peloton's best sprinter.
Defending champion Pogacar was also invited onto the podium due to the points he won atop the four hills of the day's stage that saw him earn the right to don the polka-dot king of the mountains tunic.
Team UAE's Slovenian rider is second in the overall standings, with Visma's Vingegaard just two seconds behind him in third.
Stolen bikes and heavy rain
The race got going as Pogacar and Vingegaard tested each other over the final 20km with three short, sharp climbs on narrow roads.
That struggle blew up a peloton that had been largely sedate until then.
Heavy rain left giant puddles at the tiny start town of Lauwin Planque as the 182 riders set off on the 209km run towards the coastal port.
Regional police estimated that one million spectators had lined the roadsides on the opening day of action, but the rain dissuaded that kind of turnout on Sunday.
Monday's third stage is a 178km flat run to Dunkirk, where a mass bunch sprint is expected unless the peloton gets splintered by winds as it did on stage one.
French team Cofidis had to scramble Sunday morning as they had 11 bikes stolen from a team truck during the night.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tour de France 2025: Tadej Pogacar edged out of 100th career win by Mathieu van der Poel
Tour de France 2025: Tadej Pogacar edged out of 100th career win by Mathieu van der Poel

The National

time7 hours ago

  • The National

Tour de France 2025: Tadej Pogacar edged out of 100th career win by Mathieu van der Poel

Alpecin's Mathieu van der Poel edged Tadej Pogacar to win Stage 2 of the Tour de France in a tense hilltop finale at Boulogne-sur-Mer on Sunday. The victory saw the Dutch rider take the lead in the overall standings after depriving UAE Team Emirates-XRG rider Pogacar of his 100th career win as around 30 riders broke away in the final 2km. It was a second Tour de France stage win for Van der Poel, who took the yellow jersey from his teammate Jasper Philipsen – the winner of Saturday's opening stage. Denmark's Jonas Vingegaard seemed at ease as he crossed the line in third with Frenchman Romain Gregoire fourth and his compatriot Julian Alaphilippe fifth. Van der Poel also won Stage 2 on the 2021 Tour de France and then dug deep to retain the yellow jersey for six gruelling days. 'Winning again four years after the last time, that's just great. In recent years I tried to get here on top form but never quite did,' said Van der Poel, adding that racing the recent Criterium du Dauphine had done the trick. 'I also watched a video of the final kilometre three times this morning and knew exactly how to take it.' The Dutch rider is the grandson of French cycling legend Raymond Poulidor, who came second in the Tour de France seven times, but never won and also never got to wear the yellow jersey. 'It was more emotional last time because he [Poulidor] had just died. I had so wanted to win it while he was still alive,' said Van der Poel. Poulidor's grandson had punched the ground and screamed wildly on realising he had taken the jersey on his previous Tour de France stage win at the Mur de Bretagne. There were no such scenes this time. 'I had a feeling I could win the stage today but taking the yellow jersey is a nice bonus,' said Van der Poel, normally better suited to the ultra-long Monument races, of which he won Milan-San Remo and Paris-Roubaix this season. His teammate Philipsen may have lost the yellow jersey, but he will set off Monday wearing the green one assigned to the peloton's best sprinter. Defending champion Pogacar was also invited on to the podium due to the points he won on top of the four hills of the day's stage that saw him earn the right to don the polka-dot king of the mountains tunic. The Slovenian rider is second in the overall standings, with Visma's Vingegaard just two seconds behind him in third. The race got going as Pogacar and Vingegaard tested each other over the final 20km with three short, sharp climbs on narrow roads. That struggle blew up a peloton that had been largely sedate until then. Heavy rain left giant puddles at the tiny start town of Lauwin Planque as the 182 riders set off on the 209km run towards the coastal port. Regional police estimated that one million spectators had lined the roadsides on the opening day of action, but the rain dissuaded that kind of turnout on Sunday. French team Cofidis had to scramble Sunday morning as they had 11 bikes stolen from a team lorry during the night. Monday's stage 3 is a 178km flat run to Dunkirk, where a mass bunch sprint is expected unless the peloton gets splintered by winds as it did on stage one. The first section of the Tour is raced through the north and west of France. The volcanic landscape of the Puy de Dome present the first mountains as late as stage 10, with two more colossal climb days in the Pyrenees before the blockbuster final week in the Alps.

Dutch powerhouse Van der Poel takes Tour de France lead
Dutch powerhouse Van der Poel takes Tour de France lead

Khaleej Times

time8 hours ago

  • Khaleej Times

Dutch powerhouse Van der Poel takes Tour de France lead

Alpecin's Mathieu van der Poel edged Tadej Pogacar to win the second stage of the Tour de France in a tense hilltop finale at Boulogne-sur-Mer on Sunday. The victory saw the Dutch rider take the lead in the overall standings after depriving Pogacar of his 100th career win as around 30 riders broke away in the final 2km. It was a second Tour de France stage win for Van der Poel, who took the yellow jersey from his teammate Jasper Philipsen — the winner of Saturday's opening stage. Denmark's Jonas Vingegaard seemed at ease as he crossed the line in third with Frenchman Romain Gregoire fourth and his compatriot Julian Alaphilippe fifth. Van der Poel also won stage two on the 2021 Tour de France and then dug deep to retain the yellow jersey for six gruelling days. "Winning again four years after the last time, that's just great. In recent years I tried to get here on top form but never quite did," Van der Poel said. The Dutch rider is the grandson of French cycling legend Raymond Poulidor, who came second in the Tour de France seven times, but never won and also never got to wear the yellow jersey. "I had a feeling I could win the stage today but taking the yellow jersey is a nice bonus," Van der Poel said. His teammate Philipsen may have lost the yellow jersey, but he will set off Monday wearing the green one assigned to the peloton's best sprinter. Defending champion Pogacar was also invited onto the podium due to the points he won atop the four hills of the day's stage that saw him earn the right to don the polka-dot king of the mountains tunic. Team UAE's Slovenian rider is second in the overall standings, with Visma's Vingegaard just two seconds behind him in third. Stolen bikes and heavy rain The race got going as Pogacar and Vingegaard tested each other over the final 20km with three short, sharp climbs on narrow roads. That struggle blew up a peloton that had been largely sedate until then. Heavy rain left giant puddles at the tiny start town of Lauwin Planque as the 182 riders set off on the 209km run towards the coastal port. Regional police estimated that one million spectators had lined the roadsides on the opening day of action, but the rain dissuaded that kind of turnout on Sunday. Monday's third stage is a 178km flat run to Dunkirk, where a mass bunch sprint is expected unless the peloton gets splintered by winds as it did on stage one. French team Cofidis had to scramble Sunday morning as they had 11 bikes stolen from a team truck during the night.

Real Madrid ready for 'really big challenge' against PSG at Club World Cup
Real Madrid ready for 'really big challenge' against PSG at Club World Cup

Khaleej Times

time14 hours ago

  • Khaleej Times

Real Madrid ready for 'really big challenge' against PSG at Club World Cup

Real Madrid coach Xabi Alonso said on Saturday he was looking forward to seeing how his new team measures up to European champions Paris Saint-Germain after the sides set up a semi-final showdown at the Club World Cup. Real beat Borussia Dortmund 3-2 in their last-eight tie at the MetLife Stadium, a few hours after PSG defeated Bayern Munich 2-0 in Atlanta. The Spanish giants and the French side will now clash at the MetLife Stadium in the semi-finals on Wednesday, and whoever emerges victorious will be seen as favourites to go on and win the competition. "Today we played against a team who went far in the Champions League and now we face the winners, so this is going to be another little step up for us in this new project we are beginning," said Alonso, who replaced Carlo Ancelotti as Real coach just ahead of the tournament. PSG, coached by Luis Enrique, succeeded Madrid as European champions after hammering Inter Milan 5-0 in the Champions League final in Munich in late May. "They have been playing at a really high level since the last 16 of the Champions League and it will be a really big challenge for us." Real appeared to be cruising to a comfortable victory against Dortmund after goals in the first 20 minutes by young striker Gonzalo Garcia and left-back Fran Garcia. But Maximilian Beier pulled one back for Dortmund in stoppage time, sparking a remarkable late flurry which saw Kylian Mbappe net an overhead kick and then Serhou Guirassy score a penalty for the Germans after Dean Huijsen was sent off. "We can do better but overall it ws a very serious performance and now we need to take the positives from this," said Alonso, who will have to do without centre-back Huijsen against PSG due to suspension. "The game has just ended so I am not yet thinking about the semis. I will have a couple of hours of peace but obviously it is not good news to have lost Huijsen." Mbappe pushing to start Alonso may now have a selection headache of another sort in attack, with Mbappe — used as a substitute on Saturday — pushing for a first start of the tournament against his old club after overcoming illness. "He is still not perfect, not at 100 per cent, but he is improving every day," Alonso said of the France superstar after he scored his 44th goal for the club since signing from PSG a year ago. Gonzalo Garcia, meanwhile, has had a fine Club World Cup with the 21-year-old striker notching four goals in five appearances off the back of a prolific campaign with the Madrid second team, Castilla. "Yesterday (Friday) I said that Gonzalo was making the most of his opportunity and he did it again today," Alonso said. "He has the characteristics of a goal-scorer, he had a great season with Castilla, scoring 25 goals, and he is in the right place here." Meanwhile Dortmund coach Niko Kovac insisted he was satisfied with his team's performance at the tournament despite their defeat, as they now get to take a holiday before preparing for the start of the next German Bundesliga season. "I want to congratulate Real Madrid for going through. It is a well-deserved victory. We were too slow, the conditions were not perfect, and we were not good enough even if in the second half we were a lot better," he said. "Overall my team had a good tournament. We showed our qualities and it is not a failure if you go home after a defeat against Real Madrid," he added.

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