logo
Healy gives Ireland rare yellow jersey as Simon Yates wins Tour de France 10th stage

Healy gives Ireland rare yellow jersey as Simon Yates wins Tour de France 10th stage

Reutersa day ago
MONT-DORE, France, July 14 (Reuters) - Ben Healy rode himself into the ground in a nail-biting finale to become the first Irishman in 38 years to wear the yellow jersey at the Tour de France, as Britain's Simon Yates claimed victory in stage 10 on Monday with a perfectly timed attack.
Giro d'Italia champion Yates emerged from the day's breakaway to secure his third career Tour stage win, pulling away on the final climb to beat Thymen Arensman of the Netherlands and Healy, who finished second and third, respectively.
Heading into the first rest day, Healy leads defending champion Tadej Pogacar by 29 seconds in the general classification, after the Slovenian eased off on the final ascent.
"It was insanely tough, it was a battle against myself really. I just had to dig deep. My teammates put in so much work today, Harry (Sweeny) and Alex (Baudin), I really, really wanted to pay them back and I'm happy I could do that in the end," Healy, who won stage six last week, told reporters.
"I kind of gambled a bit. I had the stage win in the bank and how often do you get the opportunity to put yourself into yellow so I felt I had to take that and really go for it."
Belgian Remco Evenepoel sits third, one minute further back, after losing six seconds in the closing kilometres when Pogacar briefly surged in an attempt to test Jonas Vingegaard, widely seen as his main rival for the overall title.
Vingegaard stayed locked onto Pogacar's wheel and remains 1:17 behind the UAE Team Emirates leader.
As Pogacar approached the finish, Healy smiled while watching the Slovenian on the giant screen.
With Pogacar visibly backing off, the EF Education–EasyPost rider crossed the line to become the first Irishman to lead the Tour since Stephen Roche won the race in 1987.
Healy had looked one of the strongest riders in the breakaway on the 165.3-km hilly route from Ennezat, but Yates timed his move to perfection, attacking solo on the final climb to seal a tactical victory.
While Yates rode cleverly to win the stage, the Visma-Lease a Bike team strategy was somehow puzzling as the Briton is expected to ride in support of his leader, Vingegaard.
"The plan was to be in a breakaway in case someone (from the team) would attack from behind, but the gap became too big," Yates explained, six years after winning his last Tour stage.
"It's been a long time, I did not expect it. We're here for Jonas."
After Tuesday's rest, and Wednesday's flat stage around Toulouse, the peloton will head into the Pyrenees, where the GC battle will heat up.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Britain's Moore handed four-year ban after CAS upholds ITIA appeal
Britain's Moore handed four-year ban after CAS upholds ITIA appeal

Reuters

time20 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Britain's Moore handed four-year ban after CAS upholds ITIA appeal

July 15 (Reuters) - Britain's Tara Moore, who was previously cleared of an anti-doping rule violation, was handed a four-year ban on Tuesday after the Court of Arbitration for Sport upheld an appeal filed by the International Tennis Integrity Agency. Moore, Britain's former number one-ranked doubles player, was provisionally suspended in June 2022 due to the presence of prohibited anabolic steroids Nandrolone and boldenone. Moore said she had never knowingly taken a banned substance in her career and an independent tribunal determined that contaminated meat consumed by her in the days before sample collection was the source of the prohibited substance. Moore lost 19 months in the process before she was cleared of the ADRV but CAS upheld the ITIA's appeal against the first instance "No Fault or Negligence" ruling with respect to nandrolone. "After reviewing the scientific and legal evidence, the majority of the CAS Panel considered that the player did not succeed in proving that the concentration of nandrolone in her sample was consistent with the ingestion of contaminated meat," CAS said in a statement. "The panel concluded that Ms Moore failed to establish that the ADRV was not intentional. The appeal by the ITIA is therefore upheld and the decision rendered by the Independent Tribunal is set aside." Moore had previously said how she saw her reputation, ranking and livelihood "slowly trickling away" for 19 months during her initial suspension. The 32-year-old had also filed a cross-appeal at CAS "seeking to dismiss the ITIA appeal, dismiss the nandrolone result in the ADRV or alternatively confirm that she bears no fault or negligence". However, CAS said the cross-appeal was declared inadmissible and her four-year period of ineligibility would start from July 15, with credit for any provisional suspension that has already been served. "Our bar for appealing a first instance decision is high, and the decision is not taken lightly," ITIA CEO Karen Moorhouse said in a statement. "In this case, our independent scientific advice was that the player did not adequately explain the high level of nandrolone present in their sample. Today's ruling is consistent with this position."

Palace fans protest over Conference League demotion
Palace fans protest over Conference League demotion

BBC News

time39 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Palace fans protest over Conference League demotion

Crystal Palace supporters have staged a protest against Uefa's decision to demote the club to the Conference Tuesday hundreds of fans marched to Palace's Selhurst Park ground carrying banners and chanting against European football's governing Eagles, who qualified for the Europa League by winning the FA Cup in May - their first major trophy - were demoted to the lower tier of Uefa competition after breaching multi-club ownership businessman John Textor owns a stake in Crystal Palace and is the majority owner of French club Lyon, who have also qualified for the Europa rules of European football's governing body state clubs owned, to a certain threshold of influence, by the same person or entity cannot compete in the same European rules set a deadline of 1 March 2025 to show proof of multi-club ownership restructuring - a deadline which Palace is currently in the process of selling his stake in Crystal Palace to New York Jets owner Woody Forest, who finished seventh in the Premier League last season, are set to replace Palace in the Europa are expected to take their case to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (Cas)."At the end of the day it's an injustice, just by a couple of admin errors. We qualified for it," Nick Philpot from the Red and Blue Review podcast said at the march."We won the cup - it should be we go into it without any question about it. "You're penalising the entire club and the fanbase. Why would you do that?"Last week Crystal Palace chairman Steve Parish called the decision "a bad day for football" and "a terrible injustice". "We've been locked out of a European competition on the most ridiculous technicality," he said. "Supporters of all clubs should be devastated for us."Uefa has been approached for comment.

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