Chaotic third stage of Tour de France sees Jasper Philipsen crash out
Green-jersey wearer Jasper Philipsen was forced to abandon the third stage of the Tour de France after a spectacular crash left him needing medical help on the side of the road.
The Belgian, who won the opening stage of the race on Saturday, fell just before an intermediate sprint around 60km from the end of the 178.3km route from Valenciennes to Dunkirk.
Advertisement
Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck) was on a grass verge, his green-points jersey badly torn, after Frenchman Bryan Coquard (Cofidis) bounced off another rider, Laurenz Rex (Intermarché-Wanty) and into Philipsen, who fell heavily on his shoulder. He was attended to by team staff and Tour doctors, who eventually applied a sling.
Geraint Thomas, riding in his final Tour de France, also experienced a crash alongside Remco Evenepoel, one of the big pre-race favourites.
Both came down towards the end of a chaotic crash-marred third stage but were able to continue to the finish line although Evenepoel did appear to be clutching his ribs.
Remco Evenepoel crossed the line clutching his ribs - Reuters/Sarah Meyssonnier
This year's Tour de France is only three days old but already the body count is racking up. Filippo Ganna (Ineos Grenadiers), one of the strongest time-trial riders in the world and one of the favourites for Wednesday's time trial in Caen, was forced to abandon on the opening stage. And there would have been a sharp collective intake of breath when huge names Evenepoel and Thomas were among the riders to go down in one of three separate incidents in the final 5km.
Advertisement
Evenepoel, who finished third last year, crossed the line smiling, but was holding his ribs gingerly. 'He should be OK,' the Belgian's team said later.
There was no immediate news from Ineos on Thomas's health. The 2018 Tour de France winner, 39, is planning to retire later this year.
Philipsen would certainly have expected to contest the stage which was eventually won by Tim Merlier (Soudal Quick-Step) who pipped Jonathan Milan (Lidl-Trek) on the line in a photo finish.
The crash prompted a few harsh words. One of Philipsen's Alpecin team-mates could be seen remonstrating with Coquard in a slow-motion replay. Coquard was tearful afterwards.
Advertisement
'I really want to apologise to Jasper Philipsen and the Alpecin-Deceuninck team – even though it wasn't deliberate. I'm not... I'm not a reckless rider, but still, it's never pleasant,' the Frenchman said.
'Bad things happen'
However, Alpecin general manager Philip Roodhooft refused to criticise Coquard.
'Jasper is the victim of something where he's totally not involved in, that's clear,' Roodhooft said. 'To be honest, the two others, they collide and they crash but I think it's not about blaming – it's just a stupid crash. These things can happen and the consequences for us as a team and, above all for Jasper, are very bad, but what can you say? I think bad things happen sometimes.'
Advertisement
The Alpecin team retained the yellow jersey with Mathieu Van der Poel leading race favourite Tadej Pogacar by four seconds and Jonas Vingegaard by six seconds. All three finished safely in the main pack.
Meanwhile, Britain's Anna Henderson, who took silver in the time trial in Paris last summer, won the second stage of the Women's Giro d'Italia to claim the pink leader's jersey. Henderson won an uphill sprint finish after she and French rider Dilyxine Miermont broke away from the main peloton with 41.4km to go of the 92km stage through the Alps.
'As a team, we made the plan to be aggressive because we knew it would be a hard final and we have a really good team for attacking,' said Henderson. 'We're here for stages, this is what we came to do, and I'm so thankful for my team-mates for supporting me. 'I'm just beyond grateful and happy, I can't believe it. It's my first World Tour victory, my first individual Grand Tour victory. I'm in shock.'
Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
19 minutes ago
- Yahoo
☕️🥐FC Breakfast: FC 26 cover leaked, big payday for PSG and Chelsea
EA FC 26: the cover has leaked 🎮 The cover of the Standard Edition of EA FC 26 has leaked. The reliable insider "EA FC 26 Leaks" spilled the beans on social media Tuesday night. Note that EA has nonetheless unveiled the cover of the game's Ultimate Edition featuring... Zlatan Ibrahimovic. Club World Cup: the revenue ranking 📊 Focus on the earnings of the participants in the Club World Cup. PSG and Chelsea are logically rewarded for their journey to the final (source: L'Équipe). The Club World Cup XI, according to DAZN 🏅 DAZN, the broadcaster of the Club World Cup, has named its team of the competition the day after the Chelsea-PSG final. Five teams are represented in this dream team. Gonzalo Garcia, the highlights 🎬 Before shining at the Club World Cup, Gonzalo Garcia had been quietly scoring goals throughout the 2024-25 season! Here's proof... Yesterday's must-reads 🔍 - The top 10 Premier League transfers of summer 2025 Advertisement - The shortest managerial tenures in history - Real Madrid: Modric's new club is known, it's official! This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇫🇷 here.

Yahoo
36 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Jahmyl Telfort drills the trey
Simmons: In cycling, you only remember the winners American cyclist Quinn Simmons speaks after winning an intense battle for second place to earn his best-ever Tour de France stage finish, saying that "of course you race for the team, but you also race for your country." 3:45 Now Playing Paused Ad Playing
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Decision Time For Donnarumma
At 26 years of age, Gianluigi Donnarumma has racked up plenty of impressive feats on his resume. He was the second-youngest goalkeeper to debut in Serie A when he made his maiden appearance for AC Milan in 2015. One year later, he became the youngest goalkeeper to debut for the Italy national team. And in 2021, he became the first goalkeeper to win the official Player of the Tournament award at the UEFA European Championship after guiding the Azzurri to a penalty shootout victory against tournament hosts England. That same summer, Donnarumma departed his boyhood club for Paris Saint-Germain on a free transfer, where he has continued to stake a claim as one of the best goalkeepers in world football. Read the full article by subscribing to Ensemble PSG on Substack Advertisement 'There's a lot of older goalkeepers like Thibaut Courtois, Yann Sommer, and Manuel Neuer who are still anchoring their clubs,' stated retired French-American goalkeeper Quentin Westberg, who played at Paris Saint-Germain's academy between 1996 and 1998. 'Then you have Donnarumma who was a prodigy and started playing at 16, but after he won the Euros and signed with Paris, people would ask, 'Is he consistent?' This year, he's had a fantastic run in the Champions League and on top of being a good goalkeeper and making game-changing saves here and there, he's more consistent like Alisson. I don't see another young goalkeeper who meets all of that criteria like him…he's going to be extremely consistent just like Courtois, Sommer, and Neuer.' Since joining Paris Saint-Germain, Donnarumma has continued to enhance his legacy and confirm his status as one of the finest goalkeepers in the game. He won his first-ever league title in 2022 as PSG reclaimed the Ligue 1 championship from Lille's grasp, whilst the 2022-23 season would see him claim another Ligue 1 title and the Trophée des Champions. And in the 2023-24 season under Luis Enrique, PSG would claim a domestic treble with the Trophée des Champions, the Ligue 1 trophy, and the Coupe de France, while exiting the UEFA Champions League semi-finals after losing to Borussia Despite losing all-time leading scorer Kylian Mbappé to Real Madrid on a free transfer, PSG have managed to go up another level and enjoy one of the greatest seasons in modern football history, and it's thanks in large part to their Italian shot-stopper. In their first match of 2025, Donnarumma kept AS Monaco's attack at bay by making five saves (four from inside the box) and showcasing a newfound accuracy in possession by completing 29 out of 32 passes as well as four out of seven long balls, as Ousmane Dembélé's injury-time goal saw them win 1-0 in the Trophée des Champions. Two months later, Donnarumma proved essential by saving Darwin Núñez and Curtis Jones' penalty efforts, leading PSG past Liverpool and into the Champions League quarter-finals. Continue reading by subscribing to Ensemble PSG on Substack