Current:Home > InvestBardet wins hot and hilly opening Tour de France stage in Italy while Cavendish struggles -Wealth Harmony Labs
Bardet wins hot and hilly opening Tour de France stage in Italy while Cavendish struggles
View
Date:2025-04-15 21:55:31
RIMINI, Italy (AP) — Two-time podium finisher Romain Bardet won the opening stage of the Tour de France and claimed the yellow jersey for the first time on Saturday.
Combined with severe heat, one of the most challenging opening legs in recent memory created problems for Mark Cavendish and many other riders as cycling’s biggest race began in Italy for the first time.
Tadej Pogacar, who is aiming to follow up his Giro d’Italia title with a third Tour trophy, and two-time defending champion Jonas Vingegaard both finished safely in the main pack, though.
Vingegaard’s performance was especially encouraging, considering he was hospitalized for nearly two weeks in April following a high-speed crash in the Tour of the Basque Country. He sustained a broken collarbone and ribs and a collapsed lung and had not raced since.
Bardet, the Frenchman who finished second in 2016 and third in 2017 and is racing his last Tour, attacked with slightly more than 50 kilometers (30 miles) to go. He caught up with his DSM-Firmenich PostNL teammate Frank van den Broek, who was in an early breakaway, and the pair just barely held off the onrushing peloton in the flat finish.
Bardet surged ahead of his teammate at the line and pointed to him to say, “Thank you.”
“It’s crazy. I didn’t know the course particularly well but Frank was really, really strong out in front and then I felt that I had nothing to lose,” Bardet said of his rookie teammate, who was riding his first ever Tour stage. “He really deserves this win just as much as me, because he did all of the work.”
It was Bardet’s fourth career stage win in the Tour, and first since 2017. He had never worn the yellow jersey before.
“The yellow jersey was the last goal of my career. But, to be honest, I had come to terms with it,” said Bardet, who had announced he will retire this year. “I’ve been really close before. I’ve been within touching distance. I’ve just never been able to do it. Today, I wasn’t sure it was going to happen but I had a great teammate with me.”
The 206-kilometer (128-mile) route from Florence to the Adriatic coastal resort of Rimini featured seven categorized climbs and more than 3,600 meters (11,800 feet) of ascending. The temperature soared to 36 degrees (97 F).
Cavendish vomited twice and dropped far behind on the very first climb, putting at risk his pursuit of breaking a tie with Eddy Merckx for the most career stage wins in the Tour. But he just finished within the time limit. Cavendish and Merckx have 34 wins each.
World champion Mathieu Van der Poel was dropped midway through the stage when Pogacar’s UAE Team Emirates squad started accelerating at the front of the peloton up the fourth climb of the day.
The opening four stages are in Italy, marking the first time in the 121-year history of the Tour that the race has begun in France’s southern neighbor.
Bardet and Van den Broek finished with the same time of slightly more than five hours.
Wout van Aert won a sprint for third, crossing five seconds behind, and Pogacar crossed fourth with the same time.
“It was incredibly hot, and then we had the wind in our faces, so it was a really extraordinary scenario that we were taking on,” Bardet said.
In the overall standings, Bardet leads Van den Broek by four seconds with Van Aert 11 seconds back in third. Pogacar stands fourth, 15 seconds back — the same gap as Vingegaard.
There was an early mishap for Czech rider Jan Hirt, who broke three teeth when he collided with a spectator’s backpack in the neutral zone before the actual start of the stage. A key support rider for Remco Evenepoel at Soudal-Quick Step, Hirt still managed to complete the stage.
Stage 2 on Sunday is also hilly, following a 199-kilometer (124-mile) route from Cesenatico to Bologna. The stage is dedicated to 1998 Tour champion Marco Pantani, who was from Cesenatico, and will pass by a museum dedicated to the Italian rider, who died in 2004.
Because of a clash with the Olympics, the Tour will finish in Nice on July 21, five days before the Paris Games open.
___
AP cycling: https://apnews.com/hub/cycling
veryGood! (746)
Related
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- Vanderpump Rules' Lala Kent’s Affordable Amazon Haul is So Chic You’d Never “Send it to Darrell
- Inside the RHONJ Reunion Fight Between Teresa Giudice, Melissa Gorga That Nearly Broke Andy Cohen
- This Is the Only Lip Product You Need in Your Bag This Summer
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Vanderpump Rules: Raquel Leviss Wanted to Be in a Throuple With Tom Sandoval and Ariana Madix
- AEP Cancels Nation’s Largest Wind Farm: 3 Challenges Wind Catcher Faced
- Utilities Are Promising Net Zero Carbon Emissions, But Don’t Expect Big Changes Soon
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Shop the Top-Rated Under $100 Air Purifiers That Are a Breath of Fresh Air
Ranking
- Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
- The Warming Climates of the Arctic and the Tropics Squeeze the Mid-latitudes, Where Most People Live
- Dismissing Trump’s EPA Science Advisors, Regan Says the Agency Will Return to a ‘Fair and Transparent Process’
- At Flint Debate, Clinton and Sanders Avoid Talk of Environmental Racism
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Exxon’s Climate Fraud Trial Opens to a Packed New York Courtroom
- Climate Activists Converge on Washington With a Gift and a Warning for Biden and World Leaders
- The Trump Administration Moves to Open Alaska’s Tongass National Forest to Logging
Recommendation
Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
Vanderpump Rules: Raquel Leviss Wanted to Be in a Throuple With Tom Sandoval and Ariana Madix
Senate 2020: In Alaska, a Controversy Over an Embattled Mine Has Tightened the Race
Supreme Court takes up case over gun ban for those under domestic violence restraining orders
Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
Droughts That Start Over the Ocean? They’re Often Worse Than Those That Form Over Land
Solar’s Hitting a Cap in South Carolina, and Jobs Are at Stake by the Thousands
The Petroleum Industry May Want a Carbon Tax, but Biden and Congressional Republicans are Not Necessarily Fans