logo
Aussie Ben O'Connor celebrates amazing Stage 18 victory in Tour de France: ‘Proud of myself'

Aussie Ben O'Connor celebrates amazing Stage 18 victory in Tour de France: ‘Proud of myself'

7NEWS7 days ago
Ben O'Connor, who has long considered the Tour de France a relentless and unforgiving challenge, roared back on Thursday with a stunning Stage 18 victory in the Alps to finally bury memories of all the crashes he has suffered in recent years.
'It's a pretty cruel race,' the 29-year-old said after crossing the line alone at the Col de la Loze.
'I've just found myself on the deck in the first two days a few times, but not really for my own fault. Stage one here, it wasn't my fault – I was just taken out,' the Jayco AlUla rider said.
'In Copenhagen (in 2022), same thing, sprint finish, crash in front of me, nowhere to go. And then you had the crash in 2021 (when a fan holding a cardboard sign caused a massive pile up). So yeah, the first couple days really haven't treated me well at all in this race before.'
O'Connor, who won a stage to Tignes and finished fourth overall in 2021, has battled to replicate those highs.
'Getting it done today means a lot to me,' he said.
'I'm very proud of myself and very proud of the team.'
The win came after a bold attack from the bottom of the valley before the final climb, a plan he hatched with his team's sports director Matthew Hayman.
'He told me you've got nothing to lose,' O'Connor said.
'If you're going to win, you have to go from the bottom of the valley ... and that's what happened. On the Col de la Loze, it was pretty straightforward – you either had it or you didn't.'
O'Connor switched from French squad AG2R Citroen to Australian outfit Jayco AlUla this season, a move he said brought a fresh sense of belonging.
'It's about time I finally got a big result on the board being an Aussie rider on an Aussie team,' he said.
Asked whether the stage victory mattered more than a top-10 finish in Paris, O'Connor was emphatic.
'Yes, definitely. Getting your hands up in the air is the most enjoyable thing,' he said.
'It's only when you complete a GC and you've done a perfect race yourself and you're proud of every single day that you've tapped it out and you've ticked the boxes, then that gives you a different kind of satisfaction.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

O'Callaghan matches Thorpe as Australia wins more relay gold over USA
O'Callaghan matches Thorpe as Australia wins more relay gold over USA

The Age

time21 minutes ago

  • The Age

O'Callaghan matches Thorpe as Australia wins more relay gold over USA

'I know my back-end is my strength, so I was just trying to keep calm and then have fun trying to mow someone down the last 50,' Castelluzzo said. O'Callaghan, fresh from victory in the individual 200m freestyle, held her nerve against Ledecky – the Olympic champion in this event in 2016 – to secure her 11th world title and draw level with Thorpe. 'Without the profanities, I was pretty much saying to Mollie on the blocks, 'Do you know who you are?'' Pallister said. 'Even in my mind, as soon as Mollie dives in, I know we'd won it. I have so much confidence in her. 'Brit swimming as fast as she did, and Jamie as well ... I think it shows the depth that we've got going into LA.' Typically humble, O'Callaghan tried to downplay the milestone, but acknowledged its significance after moving past Grant Hackett's tally of 10 golds. O'Callaghan, who is building a compelling case to be considered Australia's greatest ever swimmer, could win a 12th gold medal on Friday night in the 100m freestyle after cruising through her semi-final. 'It is very special. It would be wrong if I said it wasn't special. It is a huge accomplishment in a way,' O'Callaghan said of comparisons to Thorpe. 'It just shows the journey that I've had and us girls have had. I've got great girls to train alongside and they keep me on my toes.' Chalmers 'extremely proud' of bronze in freestyle final Meanwhile, Chalmers and Dekkers' bronze medals were unique in their own way. Chalmers, for a start, never comes third. This was his first individual bronze medal during a decade-long career. A year after his silver medal in Paris, Chalmers (47.17) just couldn't match it with Romania's David Popovici (46.51) and USA national record holder Jack Alexy (46.92). The ingredients were there for Chalmers to do something special given the sharp times he's been clocking but Cameron McEvoy's Australian record of 47.04 from 2016 remains intact. 'I was never going to swim 46.5 or around that mark unfortunately,' Chalmers said. 'I would have loved to see 46 next to my name, but I'm really proud of that performance and to come away with a medal in such a stacked final is something I'm extremely proud of.' Popovici's winning time was just 0.11 seconds outside Pan Zhanle's world record, set in Paris last year. Asked what was next, the 20-year-old said: 'To have a big holiday, go on the beach, lay on my back, celebrate accordingly, have some fun, get my motorcycle licence, learn to cook, drive my fast car and enjoy life a little because it's not all about swimming.' Dekkers' bronze, meanwhile, was a surprise given she finished third in the event at trials and Australia only take the top two. When Abbey Connor pulled out, Dekkers was given a second shot and didn't disappoint, backing up her silver medal from the world championships two years ago after minimal training in recent months. 'It was definitely tough. I was on break and getting ready to not race for six months or so,' Dekkers said. 'But at the end of the day, this wasn't an opportunity I was going to pass up. The world champs don't come around all that often, so I just got up and got ready and just put no expectations on it.' Canada's Summer McIntosh won the 200m butterfly and cursed at herself for not breaking the world record, while France's Leon Marchand took out the 200m individual medley in a time of 1:53.68, but it wasn't another world record. With his favoured 400m IM still to come, Marchand appears to be keeping something in reserve as he eyes a historic sub-four-minute swim. Loading As for the Americans? Four gold medals in five nights is a bad return by their high standards.

O'Callaghan matches Thorpe as Australia wins more relay gold over USA
O'Callaghan matches Thorpe as Australia wins more relay gold over USA

Sydney Morning Herald

time21 minutes ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

O'Callaghan matches Thorpe as Australia wins more relay gold over USA

'I know my back-end is my strength, so I was just trying to keep calm and then have fun trying to mow someone down the last 50,' Castelluzzo said. O'Callaghan, fresh from victory in the individual 200m freestyle, held her nerve against Ledecky – the Olympic champion in this event in 2016 – to secure her 11th world title and draw level with Thorpe. 'Without the profanities, I was pretty much saying to Mollie on the blocks, 'Do you know who you are?'' Pallister said. 'Even in my mind, as soon as Mollie dives in, I know we'd won it. I have so much confidence in her. 'Brit swimming as fast as she did, and Jamie as well ... I think it shows the depth that we've got going into LA.' Typically humble, O'Callaghan tried to downplay the milestone, but acknowledged its significance after moving past Grant Hackett's tally of 10 golds. O'Callaghan, who is building a compelling case to be considered Australia's greatest ever swimmer, could win a 12th gold medal on Friday night in the 100m freestyle after cruising through her semi-final. 'It is very special. It would be wrong if I said it wasn't special. It is a huge accomplishment in a way,' O'Callaghan said of comparisons to Thorpe. 'It just shows the journey that I've had and us girls have had. I've got great girls to train alongside and they keep me on my toes.' Chalmers 'extremely proud' of bronze in freestyle final Meanwhile, Chalmers and Dekkers' bronze medals were unique in their own way. Chalmers, for a start, never comes third. This was his first individual bronze medal during a decade-long career. A year after his silver medal in Paris, Chalmers (47.17) just couldn't match it with Romania's David Popovici (46.51) and USA national record holder Jack Alexy (46.92). The ingredients were there for Chalmers to do something special given the sharp times he's been clocking but Cameron McEvoy's Australian record of 47.04 from 2016 remains intact. 'I was never going to swim 46.5 or around that mark unfortunately,' Chalmers said. 'I would have loved to see 46 next to my name, but I'm really proud of that performance and to come away with a medal in such a stacked final is something I'm extremely proud of.' Popovici's winning time was just 0.11 seconds outside Pan Zhanle's world record, set in Paris last year. Asked what was next, the 20-year-old said: 'To have a big holiday, go on the beach, lay on my back, celebrate accordingly, have some fun, get my motorcycle licence, learn to cook, drive my fast car and enjoy life a little because it's not all about swimming.' Dekkers' bronze, meanwhile, was a surprise given she finished third in the event at trials and Australia only take the top two. When Abbey Connor pulled out, Dekkers was given a second shot and didn't disappoint, backing up her silver medal from the world championships two years ago after minimal training in recent months. 'It was definitely tough. I was on break and getting ready to not race for six months or so,' Dekkers said. 'But at the end of the day, this wasn't an opportunity I was going to pass up. The world champs don't come around all that often, so I just got up and got ready and just put no expectations on it.' Canada's Summer McIntosh won the 200m butterfly and cursed at herself for not breaking the world record, while France's Leon Marchand took out the 200m individual medley in a time of 1:53.68, but it wasn't another world record. With his favoured 400m IM still to come, Marchand appears to be keeping something in reserve as he eyes a historic sub-four-minute swim. Loading As for the Americans? Four gold medals in five nights is a bad return by their high standards.

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