Tour de France: Arensman wins 14th stage, Pogacar retains yellow jersey with second
Photo:
MARCO BERTORELLO
Dutch rider Thymen Arensman gave his Ineos-Grenadiers team something to cheer about as he won the 14th stage of the Tour de France after a superb solo ride in the 182.6km mountain trek between Pau and Superbagneres on Saturday (France time).
Slovenian Tadej Pogacar retained the overall leader's yellow jersey as he took second place by beating chief rival Jonas Vingegaard in a two-man sprint finish, one minute 12 seconds behind Arensman, the first rider from the British outfit to win on the Tour in two years.
Ineos Grenadiers have been facing questions about one of their team carers, who is at the centre of allegations involving alleged message exchanges in 2012 with a doctor connected to the notorious Operation Aderlass doping scandal, which rocked the sporting world in 2019.
Bradley Wiggins won the Tour in 2012 with the team, which was then known as Team Sky before Chris Froome went on to win another four for the squad.
Although no formal charges have been brought, the development has cast a shadow over the team's Tour campaign, with the carer nowhere to be seen in recent days.
"Ineos Grenadiers Cycling Team is aware of recent media allegations relating to the 2012 season and a member of its staff. These allegations have not to date been presented to the team by any appropriate authority," the team said in a statement.
The team added that it had formally requested information from the International Testing Agency (ITA) and reaffirmed its zero-tolerance policy regarding doping violations.
Pogacar of UAE Team Emirates - XRG on the podium with the yellow jersey during stage 13 of this year's Tour de France.
Photo:
Vincent Kalut
The ITA told Reuters it would not further comment on the matter.
Operation Aderlass, which began with a raid during the 2019 Nordic World Ski Championships in Austria, implicated athletes and medical personnel across several sports, including cycling.
The doctor at the centre of the case, Mark Schmidt, was later convicted and sentenced to prison for administering illegal blood transfusions.
On the Tour, defending champion Pogacar extended his lead over Dane Vingegaard in the general classification by six seconds to 4:13 at the end of the Pyrenean stage, but the day belonged to Arensman, however, as the Dutchman went solo from the day's breakaway in the penultimate climb to the Col de Peyresourde (7.1 km at 7.8 percent) before his team car hit and knocked down a spectator amid the usual roadside chaos on the Tour.
Arensman never looked back and held firm on his way up to Superbagneres (12.4 km at 7.3 percent) as Vingegaard attacked several times in an attempt to drop Pogacar.
But the world champion did not flinch and easily beat his rival in the final metres to further cement his dominance.
"I can't really believe it. I got sick after the Giro, but I had a good preparation going into my first Tour. I had to be patient and wait for the mountains to try my luck. This is unbelievable, the way I did it today," Arensman said.
"I had amazing legs and I'm in the shape of my life. I thought with Tadej and Jonas in the favourites group three minutes behind, I was not sure I had enough, but I held them off."
New Zealand rider Lawrence Pithie finished 77th in the stage, and is 95th in the general classification standings.
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Reuters
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RNZ News
3 days ago
- RNZ News
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- NZ Herald
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Otago Daily Times
5 days ago
- Otago Daily Times
So far, so good for Razor's men
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Six new All Blacks have joined the club, and all contributed in some way. More on that below. Glass half empty 1 Injuries. By my count, no fewer than 10 of the original squad for the series missed some or all of the action with various knocks. Codie Taylor runs at the French defence during the first test. Photo: Peter McIntosh Aerial skills lacking. The French regularly peppered the All Blacks with high up-and-unders, and the All Blacks did not always deal with them well. Big improvements needed. 3 Glimpses, yes, but there were no real earth-shattering developments around how the All Blacks played. The season is about to get a lot harder, and can we really say they are that much advanced from this point last season? 4 Wing crisis. Will Jordan is a world-class winger but now clearly established as Scott Robertson's favourite fullback. Nobody really knows who out of Sevu Reece, Caleb Clarke, Emoni Narawa and no-longer-a-midfielder Rieko Ioane should be starting on the left and right. 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Ethan de Groot had a very good series, Codie Taylor continues to set a high standard, and the other big boppers all did well. 1 Rieko Ioane — appears his centre days are done, but is he still good enough as a starting winger? 2 Damian McKenzie — still has that spark, but is his future exclusively as an impact player? 3 Samipeni Finau — give him a few more tests to keep progressing or stick with Tupou Vaa'i? Rookie watch A+ Fabian Holland took to test rugby like a Dutch to water, as we suspected he would. Played every minute. Not sure how he misses out on a place in the strongest All Blacks XV now. B Du'Plessis Kirifi is just a ball of energy. Clearly now the leading back-up to Savea on the side of the scrum. Tupou Vaa'i seeks to offload during the first test. Photo: Peter McIntosh Christian Lio-Willie came from nowhere to start the first two tests and did a solid job. Will battle for time when Wallace Sititi becomes available. C Timoci Tavatavanawai got 28min in the second test and just 11min in the third. Offers something completely different and we need to see more of him. C- Ollie Norris had a couple of solid shifts off the bench in the first two tests. D Brodie McAlister was running at an F after his lineout throwing fell apart on debut. Then he scored a cracking try. Unlikely to play again much this year, you would think. The questions 1 If that was France B, how good would France A have been? Would the All Blacks have swept them? 2 Is World Rugby actually going to do anything about the farcical situation of a major nation devaluing a test series by leaving their best players behind? 3 When Scott Barrett returns, um, is there actually a place for him in the starting XV? 4 If so, is Jordan, Reece, Lienert-Brown, J Barrett, Fainga'anuku, B Barrett, Roigard, Sititi, Savea, Vaa'i, Holland, S Barrett, Lomax, Taylor and Williams that XV? With Taukei'aho, de Groot, Newell, Finau, Kirifi, Hotham, Tavatavanawai and McKenzie on the bench? Christian Lio-Willie (left) and Du'Plessis Kirifi pose for a post-match photo after the first test. ABs v France The facts How much better do the All Blacks need to get to beat Argentina away (twice) and South Africa at home (twice)? • Played 3, won 3. • First test: All Blacks 31, France 27 (Dunedin). • Second test: All Blacks 43, France 17 (Wellington). • Third test: All Blacks 29, France 19 (Hamilton). • All Blacks fullback/winger Will Jordan scored four tries in the series. Tupou Vaa'i scored two, and eight other All Blacks scored one.