logo
Tour de France Femmes: Ferrand-Prévot closes on home glory after dazzling win

Tour de France Femmes: Ferrand-Prévot closes on home glory after dazzling win

The Guardian4 days ago
Pauline Ferrand-Prévot, the Olympic mountain bike gold medallist at Paris 2024, took a commanding overall lead in the Tour de France Femmes after a spectacular lone victory at the summit of the Col de la Madeleine.
With one stage remaining in the nine-day race, the 33-year-old from Reims is on the verge of ending French cycling's 40 years wait by ending the long wait for a successor to Bernard Hinault's 1985 win in the men's Tour de France.
Ferrand-Prévot, unlike many of those watching at the roadside, held back the tears until after an embrace from the Tour director, Marion Rousse. 'I've realised a little girl's dream, it's a perfect day,' Ferrand-Prévot said after taking the yellow jersey. 'I have to thank the public and my family who were here at the roadside.'
Her solo success on the Tour's queen stage went beyond the host country's highest expectations and crushed the hopes of the defending champion, Kasia Niewiadoma-Phinney, as well as the 2023 champion, Demi Vollering, who were left behind on the long climb to the 2,000m Haute-Savoie mountain top.
'It was a big effort for over an hour, hour and a half of climbing, and I had to manage it,' Ferrand-Prévot said. 'But it's really been a team effort all week and it's as much for them as it is for me.' For a Visma-Lease a Bike team who were once again dominated by Tadej Pogacar in the men's Tour de France, it was a sweet success.
With just the final stage, from Praz-sur-Arly to Châtel, remaining, Ferrand-Prévot leads the Australian climber Sarah Gigante by more than two-and-a-half minutes and Vollering by three minutes and 18 seconds. Niewiadoma-Phinney is a further half-minute behind.
Ferrand-Prévot said: 'I've still got to finish the job, but one year after the Games in Paris, to win here, on this mythic climb, it's incredible.'
The sense the race had been unsettled before the summit finishes was emphasised by the stop-start racing on the approach to the beyond category summit finish on the Madeleine, where the fight for the yellow jersey finally began. The pivotal moment came 12km from the summit when Gigante pulled clear of the favourites, with Pauliena Rooijakkers and Ferrand-Prévot in pursuit.
Gigante, teammate to the overnight race leader, Kim Le Court, has struggled to keep pace on the descents, but her rapid climbing has compensated for that shortcoming. This time, though, Ferrand-Prévot was quick to respond to her sharp acceleration and the pair soon joined forces.
The French rider also benefited from her Visma-Lease a Bike team's tactics. Marion Bunol went in the early break, waiting ahead to pace her teammate up the climb. That gave her the respite she needed, before she dropped her final companion, Niamh Fisher-Black, five kilometres from the finish.
Le Court, Niewiadoma-Phinney and Vollering had little or no meaningful response so Ferrand-Prévot's climbing speed. It was a tough day for Le Court. The descending speed that had saved her overall lead on the previous stage to Chambéry let her down 24 hours later, when she raced too fast into a tight left-hand bend and somersaulted into a ditch.
Sign up to The Recap
The best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend's action
after newsletter promotion
None of her rivals waited for the race leader as she got to her feet and remounted. If anything the peloton of favourites pushed on even harder as Le Court dropped almost a minute behind.
However, in the valley road leading to the next climb, the Côte de Saint-Georges d'Hurtières, the peloton slowed and Le Court rejoined the main group. After that, she led the way at the foot of the Madeleine, hoping to set up Gigante.
Her efforts were not in vain, but she and Gigante had not factored in Ferrand-Prévot's extended climbing powers. 'Other teams don't know what's coming,' Le Court had said of Gigante's climbing skills. But they had reckoned without Ferrand-Prévot.
Now drawing huge crowds to the roadside and growing TV audiences, the fourth edition of the Tour Femmes, has built further on the success of the first three. 'I really felt something big was happening,' Rousse said. 'I had tears in my eyes. I was a little overwhelmed because women's cycling has come so far.'
Rousse also revealed that Christian Prudhomme, director of the men's Tour, had said to her: 'I no longer see any difference between the two Tours de France.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jake Paul faces competition for Anthony Joshua fight as new rival emerges
Jake Paul faces competition for Anthony Joshua fight as new rival emerges

Daily Mirror

time12 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Jake Paul faces competition for Anthony Joshua fight as new rival emerges

A showdown between Joshua and Paul could take place as early as next year - but a top heavyweight contender could ruing the YouTuber-turned-boxer's plans Tony Yoka is eager to derail Jake Paul 's plans to face Anthony Joshua by challenging the two-time heavyweight champion himself. ‌ Yoka - who claimed Olympic gold in Rio - appeared destined for greatness following his professional debut in 2017, but the previously unbeaten heavyweight endured three consecutive losses to Martin Bakole, Carlos Takam and Ryad Merhy. ‌ He has since clawed his way back into contention with victories over Amine Boucetta, Lamah Griggs and Arslan Yallyev. Following those three triumphs, the Frenchman secured a lucrative deal with Queensberry Promotions as he seeks to re-establish himself as a heavyweight threat. ‌ After the announcement, speculation regarding a potential clash between Yoka and Joshua began to swirl, reports All Out Fighting. The French heavyweight was quick to respond to those rumours, telling BoxNation: "I mean, I heard some rumours about it. I believe in my team. "I believe in Queensberry, my manager and my coach to do the best fights for me. I'm not in any talks with him so I don't know what's going on. What I know is that I'm getting ready for anybody and after this big win, if they ask or propose me to fight Joshua, of course. That would be a great, great fight for me to take." Joshua has remained inactive since his crushing loss to Daniel Dubois in September 2024 - but is eyeing a comeback before the end of the year. While Yoka reckons Joshua might have bigger fish to fry, the 33-year-old Frenchman would jump at the chance to square off against 'AJ' without hesitation. "There is a history behind it as two Olympic gold medalists. I think that's something that makes sense," he continued. "I saw him fight some guys that I didn't even know. I think it was just before Otto Wallin he fought a guy, I don't know the guy [Joshua beat Jermaine Franklin and Robert Helenius]. I understand that he lost against Dubois last year. They might want to do something like Joshua-Fury or whatever. You want a fight before that, I'm here. You don't have to look like too far from there." A potential clash between Joshua and Yoka could deal a massive setback to Paul. The YouTuber-turned-boxer and the British heavyweight have verbally committed to a bout. During a recent Sky Sports interview, Paul's promoter and business partner - Nakisa Bidarian - disclosed that he's in talks with Eddie Hearn and that the encounter could materialise much earlier than expected. ‌ "I think the fight can absolutely happen," he said. "I'm looking at it as Jake versus Joshua, which is quite biblical, and it's quite impactful in many ways. I think size wise, we can get comfortable with it, and I think experience wise, Jake is learning very fast and growing, and Joshua is a little long in the tooth. So it could be a very interesting matchup, and we're actively discussing it with Matchroom. "I think we're looking at it happening at the start of 2026. It's public that AJ was taking a little time away, I think he had a little surgery. So once he's ready, and once Jake is ready, we're going to squarely focus on that. It's a fight that Jake wants to do, and that's a discussion we've had at length, and he feels very confident about where he is in his career and his chances of upsetting Anthony Joshua." When is Jake Paul's next fight? After making a successful comeback to the ring in June, Paul is keen to keep the momentum going. The American is now able to compete for a world title, having been ranked in the WBC's cruiserweight listings after his victory over Chavez Jr. The manager of the 28-year-old fighter revealed that his client is keen to compete for a world title 'as soon as possible'. However, he concedes it's unlikely to be his next match, considering the current landscape at 200lbs. "Absolutely [he will fight again this year]. November or December," Bidarian informed Ariel Helwani when queried about Paul's forthcoming plans. "I'm meeting him tonight for dinner, and we'll discuss [his next opponent]. The only certainty right now is that Jake is eager to compete for a belt at the earliest opportunity. I need to have a chat with him, I reckon it's a tall order this year [to box for a world title]. Badou Jack is the one he's most interested in taking on, but he's obligated to a rematch with the bloke he just defeated [Noel Mikaelian] for the WBC. I'm not sure if a title bout is feasible this year, but we'll see."

'Together - they were Villa'
'Together - they were Villa'

BBC News

time16 hours ago

  • BBC News

'Together - they were Villa'

The two lads saw the microphone and wandered moved slowly, physically tired from their journey, but with their faces lit up by what was happening around them. They were trying to take it all were in a side street outside a bar which, rumour had it, was about to open specifically for Aston Villa supporters. I was with BBC Midlands colleagues and asking fans to sum up their feelings at being in Paris, hours before a Champions League emerged that, like quite a few we had met already, they had travelled without tickets and with no serious hope of getting any. Unlike most of the others, they said it was their first European trip, but they had heard the stories from friends and those who sit around them at home games and decided this time they would go. After a succession of long coach rides, they had I asked, had they gone to all that trouble - and expense - for a game that they knew they would not be able to see, and could have watched at home or in the pub?"I don't know. We just had to be here, didn't we?" said one."Yes," his friend replied. "It's the Villa, you know?"And I did Villa's return to Europe over the past two seasons, I have spoken to dozens of fans who might have said the same. Many of them had travelled knowing they were unlikely to get into the stadium. But it demonstrated that, for so many supporters, supporting a football club is about much more than 90 minutes, twice a of those following the team around Europe were from Birmingham, many from the wider Villa-supporting diaspora. They came from all classes and levels of society - some able to travel in style, others content to get there by any means available. They saw the sights and sampled the local food and what seemed to make it matter most - why those two lads felt they just had to be there - did not seem to be the city, the match, the quality of the opposition, or even the status of the competition. It was the sense of belonging to something, of being they were the conversation and tell your story about why you love Villa

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