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Jake Stewart sprints to Dauphiné win on stage five as Evenepoel holds lead despite fall
Jake Stewart sprints to Dauphiné win on stage five as Evenepoel holds lead despite fall

The Guardian

timea day ago

  • Sport
  • The Guardian

Jake Stewart sprints to Dauphiné win on stage five as Evenepoel holds lead despite fall

The British rider Jake Stewart won a sprint finish to triumph in the fifth stage of the Critérium du Dauphiné on Thursday as Remco Evenepoel held on to the race lead. Stewart claimed his first career victory in a World Tour race, edging the bunched finale ahead of Axel Laurance and Søren Waerenskjold after the hilly 183km run from Saint-Priest to Macon. 'That one feels good,' said the 25-year-old who finished fifth in Sunday's opening stage in Montlucon. 'The boys backed me … and the team backed me, they did an awesome job, so I'm just so happy that I could finish it off for them.' The Israel Premier Tech team managed to win despite the race retirement of their German sprinter Pascal Ackermann, who fell during the stage. 'It's such a shame with Ackermann, he crashed again today, and it was handed over to me there for the final, but it was also a really good day for him, so I'm gutted that he didn't get to contest the finish,' added Stewart. Evenepoel, who took the yellow jersey in Wednesday's time-trial, crashed in the final kilometre but was able to resume without difficulty and lost no time in the overall standings. 'There are no major injuries, just small scratches,' said the Belgian. 'I was coming out of the roundabout, I wanted to accelerate, and I slipped. My hands were slippery from the wet weather, so maybe I slipped off the handlebars or started pedalling too early.' Evenepoel is expected to battle with Jonas Vingegaard and Tadej Pogacar for the overall victory in the Alps. Jonathan Milan, winner of the second stage in Issoire on Monday, was the favourite in the event of a bunch sprint. On the Côte des Quatre Vents – the final climb of the stage over 5.4km at a 4.6% gradient – the towering Italian resisted the acceleration of Mathieu van der Poel's Alpecin-Deceuninck teammates. But he paid for his efforts afterwards, only finishing fifth in the sprint, despite having been ideally placed by his Lidl-Trek team. 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 Friday's sixth stage is a hilly 126.7km run from Valserhône to Combloux near the border with Switzerland.

Ivan Romeo won the third stage of the Critérium du Dauphiné despite it being 'one of the toughest days' of his life
Ivan Romeo won the third stage of the Critérium du Dauphiné despite it being 'one of the toughest days' of his life

Independent Singapore

time2 days ago

  • Sport
  • Independent Singapore

Ivan Romeo won the third stage of the Critérium du Dauphiné despite it being 'one of the toughest days' of his life

Ivan Romeo, racing for Movistar, has won stage three of the Critérium du Dauphiné after he rode alone to the finish line. The athlete has pulled ahead of a group of riders with about 6km left in the race at the 202.8km stage from Briode. Some riders, led by Mathieu van der Poel who led the group, had tried to catch him, but they were too late. In the end, Romeo finished the race 14 seconds in the town of Charantonnay ahead of Harold Tejada, Louis Barre, and Florian Lipowitz. This marks the Spaniard's second professional win and is now the overall lead, taking the yellow jersey from stage two's winner, Lidl-Trek's Jonathan Milan. 'I don't believe it… It was one of the toughest days of my life so far,' Romeo shared. He added, 'The breakaway, it was so hard to get into it, and I wasn't feeling really good, so I waited to the last moment. I know in this kind of flat finish in a small break, I have good instinct, and that if they give me some seconds, I can make it.' 'I've been thinking about this stage for a month now. I can hardly believe it. It was one of the hardest days of my life, I wasn't feeling well… But I followed my instincts in the final. It's the best day of the year for me. Hard work pays off.' Highlights of the race Romeo finished the race with a final time of 4 hours, 34 minutes, and 10 seconds. Harold Tejada, who is riding for Astana, placed second, 14 seconds behind. Frenchman Louis Barre, who was riding for Intermarché, placed third. Moreover, the other group of riders, which included some of the race's favourites, arrived at the finish line over a minute later. During the race, a breakaway group of 13 riders were formed as the race heated up on the Côte du Château Jaune, a steep climb with a 9% average gradient, located 19km from the finish. After this climb, 10 riders remained to lead the group. Van der Poel was likely to win due to his speed, but Romeo attacked with 9 km to go, then made a move that resulted in a large gap, securing his solo victory. In a social media post, Romeo shared his win with the caption: 'This is what we live for 💭🤝🏼 Still sinking in, yellow jersey, just thanks for always believing' Netizens showed their support in the comments and said: 'Sooo niceeee!!! 👏🙌', 'It's not the outcome, it's how you did it.. 🙌👏💪', and 'Legend, congrats mate👌🏻' Here is the list of the stage three winners: Ivan Romeo (Spa/Movistar) 4hrs 34mins 10secs Harold Tejada (Col/XDS Astana) +14secs Louis Barre (Fra/Intermarche-Wanty) Same time Florian Lipowitz (Ger/Red Bull-Bora-hansgrohe) Mathieu van der Poel (Ned/Alpecin-Deceuninck) +27secs Axel Laurance (Fra/Ineos Grenadiers) Same time Brieuc Rolland (Fra/Groupama-FDJ) Julien Bernard (Fra/Lidl-Trek) Andreas Leknessund (Nor/Uno-X Mobility) Eddie Dunbar (Irl/Jayco-AlUla) After the results of stage three, here are the rankings forthe general classification: Ivan Romeo (Spa/Movistar) 14hrs 9mins 1sec Louis Barre (Fra/Intermarche-Wanty) +17secs Harold Tejada (Col/XDS Astana) +18secs Florian Lipowitz (Ger/Red Bull-Bora-hansgrohe) +24secs Mathieu van der Poel (Ned/Alpecin-Deceuninck) +29secs Eddie Dunbar (Irl/Jayco-AlUla) +37secs Brieuc Rolland (Fra/Groupama-FDJ) Same time Andreas Leknessund (Nor/Uno-X Mobility) Tadej Pogacar (Slo/UAE Team Emirates-XRG) +1min 6secs Fred Wright (GB/Bahrain Victorious) +1min 12secs

Evenepoel blows away field on stage four of Criterium du Dauphiné to take overall lead
Evenepoel blows away field on stage four of Criterium du Dauphiné to take overall lead

The Guardian

time2 days ago

  • Sport
  • The Guardian

Evenepoel blows away field on stage four of Criterium du Dauphiné to take overall lead

Time-trial maestro Remco Evenepoel laid down a marker in the fourth stage of the Critérium du Dauphiné, winning the 17.4km race against the clock in style to move top of the overall classification. The 25-year-old Belgian tasted Olympic gold in the discipline last year and is also the double time-trial world champion, and showed his pedigree by blowing away a field containing Jonas Vingegaard and Tadej Pogacar. Evenpoel raced home 21 seconds ahead of second-placed Dane Vingegaard, with USA's Matteo Jorgenson a further 17 seconds back in third. Pogacar just missed the podium at 49 seconds behind Evenepoel, with German Florian Lipowitz fifth and Dutchman Mathieu van der Poel sixth. 'I'm surprised with the gaps,' Evenepoel said. 'It's quite big on quite a short TT so I'm very happy to have put over a second per kilometre on everybody, and even two seconds per kilometre on some. I'm feeling good and it's always nice to bring home a World Tour victory.' Evenepoel now slips on the leader's yellow jersey for the 77th edition of the Dauphiné, which will be decided in the last three stages in the Alps from Friday. His win was the 1,000th victory in the history of his Soudal Quick-Step team, following its creation in 2003 by Patrick Lefevere under the name Quick Step-Davitamon. 'I'm very happy with this victory, it's the 1,000th of the team,' Evenepoel added. 'It's a special day, I'm very proud to have done it.' Of the three frontrunners for the overall win, Pogacar now finds himself the least well-placed. Although the overall classification is far from set, the Slovenian is now in eighth place, 38 seconds behind Evenepoel, while Vingegaard is 16 seconds back in fifth. Thursday's stage five is a hilly 183km run from Saint-Priest to Macon.

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