logo
O'Connor wins TDF stage 18 by conquering Alps

O'Connor wins TDF stage 18 by conquering Alps

RTHK4 days ago
O'Connor wins TDF stage 18 by conquering Alps
O'Connor finished over a minute ahead of reigning champion Tadej Pogacar in a gruelling Tour de France stage 18. Photo: Reuters
Ben O'Connor won stage 18 of the Tour de France with a world-class climb over three Alpine mountains as defending champion Tadej Pogacar tightened his grip on the yellow jersey.
Australian O'Connor, 29, took off alone 15km from the finish and navigated the mountain mist to win one minute, 45 seconds ahead of Pogacar atop the Col de la Loze.
Vingegaard crossed the line in third place, nine seconds behind the Slovenian.
"It was brutal, I've never lived anything so hard. The team did well and we had a good plan, but I couldn't take any time off Tadej," said Vingegaard.
Pogacar now holds a four-minute, 26-second lead over the Dane in the general classification with three days to go before the finish in Paris.
Starting the day with a deficit of four minutes and 15 seconds, Vingegaard had attacked a massive 71km out.
"Our tactics fell apart when they attacked so soon," said Pogacar explaining he simply tracked his rival on instinct.
Pogacar eventually dropped the Dane near the finish line to gain another 11 seconds on the Team Visma rider who won the 2022 and 2023 Tour de France.
O'Connor, from the Jayco-Alula team, said he was relieved to triumph again four years after his success in the Alps at Tignes.
"Putting your hands in the air is an extraordinary thing. It was about time for me being an Aussie rider in an Aussie team," said a beaming O'Connor, who joined Jayco in January. "I had to go from the bottom of the valley before the last climb. It was the only way to beat them."
Pogacar said O'Connor had put in a great ride.
"Congrats to Ben. How he rode today, that's his victory." (AFP)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

More gold for McIntosh at swimming worlds in Singapore
More gold for McIntosh at swimming worlds in Singapore

RTHK

timean hour ago

  • RTHK

More gold for McIntosh at swimming worlds in Singapore

More gold for McIntosh at swimming worlds in Singapore McIntosh's 10th career medal from the competition is the most by any Canadian in competitive swimming. Photo: Reuters Summer McIntosh bagged her second title at the swimming world championships as Gretchen Walsh defied illness to win gold and 12-year-old Yu Zidi narrowly missed out on a medal. The 18-year-old McIntosh romped home in the 400m freestyle on Sunday's opening night in Singapore and gave another demonstration of her huge talent a day later in the 200m individual medley. She came home in 2 minutes 6.69 seconds, with Alex Walsh of the United States second (2:08.58) and Canada's Mary-Sophie Harvey third (2:09.15). "Going into the race tonight my goal was to put my head on the wall first, so to get that done is good," said the Canadian phenomenon. "I'm not super-happy with the time, but honestly, at a world championship, my goal is just to go as fast as I can." McIntosh will also race in the 400m medley, 200m butterfly and 800m freestyle in Singapore. She is on track to join Michael Phelps as the only swimmer to win five individual titles at a single world championships. "Still happy with the gold and hoping to keep up my streak next time," she said. Yu was fourth in 2:09.21 in her first world championships final, having been fastest off the blocks and in third place before fading a little. The schoolgirl will also compete in Singapore in the 400m medley and 200m butterfly. "She's obviously phenomenally talented at such a young age and I think it will be interesting to see how she takes this meet," silver medallist Walsh said of the Chinese prodigy. A "fragile" Gretchen Walsh shook off a stomach bug to power to a dominant victory in the 100m butterfly. The world record holder took gold in 54.73 seconds – the second-fastest time in history – ahead of Belgium's Roos Vanotterdijk (55.84) and Alexandria Perkins of Australia (56.33). The United States team has been hit with a bout of acute gastroenteritis and Walsh said she had been laid low heading into the race. "The last couple of days my body has been fragile," said the 22-year-old. "I've needed to give myself grace and luckily I had the morning to recover and rest and I used that," she added. "That helped me enormously going into tonight." Walsh set the world record of 54.60 seconds in May. She said she had to "reevaluate my expectations" for the world championships after her battle with illness but surprised herself with her performance. "I'm over the moon," she said. "I'm really happy that when it mattered, I was able to do that and get my hands on the wall." (AFP)

More gold for McIntosh at swimming worlds in Singapore
More gold for McIntosh at swimming worlds in Singapore

RTHK

timean hour ago

  • RTHK

More gold for McIntosh at swimming worlds in Singapore

More gold for McIntosh at swimming worlds in Singapore McIntosh's 10th career medal from the competition is the most by any Canadian in competitive swimming. Photo: Reuters Summer McIntosh bagged her second title at the swimming world championships as Gretchen Walsh defied illness to win gold and 12-year-old Yu Zidi narrowly missed out on a medal. The 18-year-old McIntosh romped home in the 400m freestyle on Sunday's opening night in Singapore and gave another demonstration of her huge talent a day later in the 200m individual medley. She came home in 2 minutes 6.69 seconds, with Alex Walsh of the United States second (2:08.58) and Canada's Mary-Sophie Harvey third (2:09.15). "Going into the race tonight my goal was to put my head on the wall first, so to get that done is good," said the Canadian phenomenon. "I'm not super-happy with the time, but honestly, at a world championship, my goal is just to go as fast as I can." McIntosh will also race in the 400m medley, 200m butterfly and 800m freestyle in Singapore. She is on track to join Michael Phelps as the only swimmer to win five individual titles at a single world championships. "Still happy with the gold and hoping to keep up my streak next time," she said. Yu was fourth in 2:09.21 in her first world championships final, having been fastest off the blocks and in third place before fading a little. The schoolgirl will also compete in Singapore in the 400m medley and 200m butterfly. "She's obviously phenomenally talented at such a young age and I think it will be interesting to see how she takes this meet," silver medallist Walsh said of the Chinese prodigy. A "fragile" Gretchen Walsh shook off a stomach bug to power to a dominant victory in the 100m butterfly. The world record holder took gold in 54.73 seconds – the second-fastest time in history – ahead of Belgium's Roos Vanotterdijk (55.84) and Alexandria Perkins of Australia (56.33). The United States team has been hit with a bout of acute gastroenteritis and Walsh said she had been laid low heading into the race. "The last couple of days my body has been fragile," said the 22-year-old. "I've needed to give myself grace and luckily I had the morning to recover and rest and I used that," she added. "That helped me enormously going into tonight." Walsh set the world record of 54.60 seconds in May. She said she had to "reevaluate my expectations" for the world championships after her battle with illness but surprised herself with her performance. "I'm over the moon," she said. "I'm really happy that when it mattered, I was able to do that and get my hands on the wall." (AFP)

First WTA 500 win for Fernandez as de Minaur hangs on
First WTA 500 win for Fernandez as de Minaur hangs on

RTHK

time19 hours ago

  • RTHK

First WTA 500 win for Fernandez as de Minaur hangs on

First WTA 500 win for Fernandez as de Minaur hangs on Leylah Fernandez holds up her DC Open trophy after cruising to victory against Anna Kalinskaya. Photo: Reuters Canada's Leylah Fernandez produced a dominant performance to defeat Russia's Anna Kalinskaya in straight sets and win the WTA Tour's DC Open in Washington. The 22-year-old bagged the first WTA 500 victory of her career and her first title since 2023 to win 6-1, 6-2 in just over an hour on Sunday. The win completed a fairytale week for Fernandez, the 2021 US Open finalist who had beaten top seed Jessica Pegula and former Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina on her way to the fourth title of her career. Fernandez said she had grown in belief throughout her campaign. "In the beginning of the tournament [there] was still a lot of doubt, but as the tournament progressed, I was starting to play better," Fernandez said. "I have gone through so many different challenges this week. I think it has just made me stronger in a way, that if I can get through this week – through the cramps, through the long matches, through the heat and humidity – I can get through anything." In the men's final, Australia's Alex De Minaur saved three match points on his way to a battling 5-7, 6-1, 7-6 (7/3) victory over Spain's Alejandro Davidovich Fokina to clinch the ATP Tour DC Open crown. Seventh seed De Minaur looked to be heading for defeat against his 12th-seeded Spanish opponent after trailing 5-2 in the deciding set in Washington. But Davidovich Fokina – chasing the first ATP title of his career after losing in three previous final appearances – failed to capitalise on his hefty lead. The Spaniard appeared to tighten when serving for the match at 5-3 up to allow De Minaur to claw it back to 5-4. But Davidovich Fokina responded to that missed opportunity by then earning three match points on De Minaur's serve in the next game. Yet once again, the Spaniard was unable to take advantage and De Minaur survived to hold serve and level the match at 5-5. The next two games went on serve to set up the tie break and De Minaur was quickly in control, sealing victory on the first of three match points with an ace, to settle a 3hr 2mins slugfest. De Minaur said he had never doubted his ability to turn around the final. "I just kind of knew I could do it," De Minaur said. "I just backed myself to commit no matter what, and if I lost this match, it was going to be on my terms. (AFP)

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