
Pogacar beats Vingegaard in thrilling Dauphine opener
Tadej Pogacar has beaten Jonas Vingegaard for a statement win in a duel of Tour de France champions in the opening stage of the Criterium du Dauphine.
Pogacar and Vigegaard were part of a super-elite five-strong breakaway on Sunday, which also included Olympic champion Remco Evenepoel and former world champ Mathieu van der Poel, shortly before the end of the 196km run from Domerat to Montlucon.
Van der Poel got the first strike for home and looked set for victory but Slovenian great Pogacar prevailed in a sprint finish, with Danish rival Vingegaard coming home second and the Dutchman third.
"I prepared myself for a sprint two kilometres from the finish and it worked out," Pogacar said.
Adding bonus seconds, Pogacar now takes a four-second lead over Vingegaard into Monday's second stage over 205km from Premilhat to Issoire.
The week-long Dauphine is an important tune-up for the Tour which starts on July 5 in Lille.
Pogacar won the Tour in 2020, 2021 and 2024, and Vingegaard in 2022 and 2023.
Tadej Pogacar has beaten Jonas Vingegaard for a statement win in a duel of Tour de France champions in the opening stage of the Criterium du Dauphine.
Pogacar and Vigegaard were part of a super-elite five-strong breakaway on Sunday, which also included Olympic champion Remco Evenepoel and former world champ Mathieu van der Poel, shortly before the end of the 196km run from Domerat to Montlucon.
Van der Poel got the first strike for home and looked set for victory but Slovenian great Pogacar prevailed in a sprint finish, with Danish rival Vingegaard coming home second and the Dutchman third.
"I prepared myself for a sprint two kilometres from the finish and it worked out," Pogacar said.
Adding bonus seconds, Pogacar now takes a four-second lead over Vingegaard into Monday's second stage over 205km from Premilhat to Issoire.
The week-long Dauphine is an important tune-up for the Tour which starts on July 5 in Lille.
Pogacar won the Tour in 2020, 2021 and 2024, and Vingegaard in 2022 and 2023.
Tadej Pogacar has beaten Jonas Vingegaard for a statement win in a duel of Tour de France champions in the opening stage of the Criterium du Dauphine.
Pogacar and Vigegaard were part of a super-elite five-strong breakaway on Sunday, which also included Olympic champion Remco Evenepoel and former world champ Mathieu van der Poel, shortly before the end of the 196km run from Domerat to Montlucon.
Van der Poel got the first strike for home and looked set for victory but Slovenian great Pogacar prevailed in a sprint finish, with Danish rival Vingegaard coming home second and the Dutchman third.
"I prepared myself for a sprint two kilometres from the finish and it worked out," Pogacar said.
Adding bonus seconds, Pogacar now takes a four-second lead over Vingegaard into Monday's second stage over 205km from Premilhat to Issoire.
The week-long Dauphine is an important tune-up for the Tour which starts on July 5 in Lille.
Pogacar won the Tour in 2020, 2021 and 2024, and Vingegaard in 2022 and 2023.
Tadej Pogacar has beaten Jonas Vingegaard for a statement win in a duel of Tour de France champions in the opening stage of the Criterium du Dauphine.
Pogacar and Vigegaard were part of a super-elite five-strong breakaway on Sunday, which also included Olympic champion Remco Evenepoel and former world champ Mathieu van der Poel, shortly before the end of the 196km run from Domerat to Montlucon.
Van der Poel got the first strike for home and looked set for victory but Slovenian great Pogacar prevailed in a sprint finish, with Danish rival Vingegaard coming home second and the Dutchman third.
"I prepared myself for a sprint two kilometres from the finish and it worked out," Pogacar said.
Adding bonus seconds, Pogacar now takes a four-second lead over Vingegaard into Monday's second stage over 205km from Premilhat to Issoire.
The week-long Dauphine is an important tune-up for the Tour which starts on July 5 in Lille.
Pogacar won the Tour in 2020, 2021 and 2024, and Vingegaard in 2022 and 2023.

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"There's certain people that are going to need to be at their best here to get on to the team," Taylor said. "There will be some that need to swim their best here, and there will be some that will be waiting for worlds, so it will be a bit of a mixed bag. "My expectation is that whatever they do here at trials, they go either faster or the same time at worlds. "That is what I'm looking for, I just want to see consistency and repeatability in performances. "This is year one on the way to LA (2028 Los Angeles Olympics). We're hoping that we're at our best in LA - that's our plan." Australian swimming is on the cusp of a changing of the guard as emerging talents surface to replace absent icons at the world championship selection meet. And the prospect excites the Dolphins' head coach Rohan Taylor, who expects a batch of young swimmers to shine at the selection trials starting on Monday in Adelaide. Taylor expects the meet to produce an Australian team of about 44 swimmers for the July 27-August 3 world titles in Singapore. "In some events there will be a changing of the guard," Taylor said. "The inevitability is that some people vacated an event and we're looking for the young ones to jump up ... it's going to be exciting to see. "You will see some shifts in, some newness, and that's usually the case year one after the Olympic Games." After last year's Paris Games, Australia's most successful Olympian Emma McKeon retired with a collection of 14 Olympic medals featuring six gold. Other Dolphins stalwarts including Mitch Larkin, Bronte Campbell, Madi Wilson, Brianna Throssell and Jenna Strauch have also quit. Four-time Olympic gold medallist Ariarne Titmus - who on Sunday lost her women's 400m freestyle world record to Canadian ace Summer McIntosh - will also skip this year's worlds while on an extended post-Olympic break. "Tokyo (Olympics) to Paris was a bit different because everybody was 'well, it's only three years, so we'll stay in'," Taylor said of the three-year gap between the 2021 Games in Japan to last year's sporting showpiece in France. "Now we have had obviously some senior athletes retire with glittering careers and well deserved - but the next opportunity pops up." While some have gone, many established stars remain, including Kyle Chalmers, Mollie O'Callaghan, Cameron McEvoy and Kaylee McKeown, who opens her campaign at the trials on Monday in the 50m backstroke. "There's certain people that are going to need to be at their best here to get on to the team," Taylor said. "There will be some that need to swim their best here, and there will be some that will be waiting for worlds, so it will be a bit of a mixed bag. "My expectation is that whatever they do here at trials, they go either faster or the same time at worlds. 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After last year's Paris Games, Australia's most successful Olympian Emma McKeon retired with a collection of 14 Olympic medals featuring six gold. Other Dolphins stalwarts including Mitch Larkin, Bronte Campbell, Madi Wilson, Brianna Throssell and Jenna Strauch have also quit. Four-time Olympic gold medallist Ariarne Titmus - who on Sunday lost her women's 400m freestyle world record to Canadian ace Summer McIntosh - will also skip this year's worlds while on an extended post-Olympic break. "Tokyo (Olympics) to Paris was a bit different because everybody was 'well, it's only three years, so we'll stay in'," Taylor said of the three-year gap between the 2021 Games in Japan to last year's sporting showpiece in France. "Now we have had obviously some senior athletes retire with glittering careers and well deserved - but the next opportunity pops up." While some have gone, many established stars remain, including Kyle Chalmers, Mollie O'Callaghan, Cameron McEvoy and Kaylee McKeown, who opens her campaign at the trials on Monday in the 50m backstroke. "There's certain people that are going to need to be at their best here to get on to the team," Taylor said. "There will be some that need to swim their best here, and there will be some that will be waiting for worlds, so it will be a bit of a mixed bag. "My expectation is that whatever they do here at trials, they go either faster or the same time at worlds. "That is what I'm looking for, I just want to see consistency and repeatability in performances. "This is year one on the way to LA (2028 Los Angeles Olympics). We're hoping that we're at our best in LA - that's our plan."


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