The Japan Times - Philipsen wins windy Tour de France opener as Evenepoel trapped in split

EUR -
AED 4.27572
AFN 76.258602
ALL 96.584258
AMD 444.191892
ANG 2.084106
AOA 1067.619409
ARS 1698.063061
AUD 1.73921
AWG 2.097111
AZN 1.983532
BAM 1.956511
BBD 2.351034
BDT 142.64182
BGN 1.955212
BHD 0.438929
BIF 3455.081001
BMD 1.164253
BND 1.502213
BOB 8.06593
BRL 6.2546
BSD 1.167314
BTN 105.356514
BWP 15.60867
BYN 3.402907
BYR 22819.358015
BZD 2.347633
CAD 1.616705
CDF 2529.311591
CHF 0.93298
CLF 0.026296
CLP 1031.586206
CNY 8.124183
CNH 8.120991
COP 4292.146605
CRC 580.200813
CUC 1.164253
CUP 30.852703
CVE 110.305073
CZK 24.23899
DJF 207.863729
DKK 7.472269
DOP 74.375742
DZD 151.487984
EGP 54.91696
ERN 17.463794
ETB 181.402885
FJD 2.655778
FKP 0.866678
GBP 0.866524
GEL 3.126037
GGP 0.866678
GHS 12.519548
GIP 0.866678
GMD 85.586929
GNF 10217.4925
GTQ 8.950867
GYD 244.218722
HKD 9.079747
HNL 30.792393
HRK 7.534583
HTG 152.862251
HUF 386.088988
IDR 19650.028608
ILS 3.664428
IMP 0.866678
INR 105.029413
IQD 1529.155525
IRR 49044.156122
ISK 146.602524
JEP 0.866678
JMD 184.553876
JOD 0.82548
JPY 185.474227
KES 150.130194
KGS 101.8127
KHR 4695.605032
KMF 492.478769
KPW 1047.860987
KRW 1720.696403
KWD 0.358636
KYD 0.972753
KZT 594.48597
LAK 25236.951535
LBP 104529.576591
LKR 360.888007
LRD 209.524318
LSL 19.179003
LTL 3.437736
LVL 0.704245
LYD 6.339249
MAD 10.753307
MDL 19.908061
MGA 5401.89285
MKD 61.543042
MMK 2444.530193
MNT 4147.367884
MOP 9.380808
MRU 46.597128
MUR 54.463339
MVR 17.999154
MWK 2024.117954
MXN 20.74452
MYR 4.722207
MZN 74.393631
NAD 19.179003
NGN 1661.004678
NIO 42.954683
NOK 11.738435
NPR 168.556339
NZD 2.027628
OMR 0.447656
PAB 1.167324
PEN 3.922625
PGK 4.981703
PHP 69.17933
PKR 326.749898
PLN 4.210824
PYG 7724.739962
QAR 4.268151
RON 5.090694
RSD 117.326396
RUB 91.684196
RWF 1701.889041
SAR 4.366224
SBD 9.465628
SCR 16.027332
SDG 700.295748
SEK 10.72993
SGD 1.500105
SHP 0.873491
SLE 28.116685
SLL 24413.801591
SOS 665.930485
SRD 44.448269
STD 24097.685654
STN 24.508272
SVC 10.213711
SYP 12876.142807
SZL 19.174801
THB 36.646001
TJS 10.873157
TMT 4.074885
TND 3.415741
TOP 2.803241
TRY 50.263364
TTD 7.928812
TWD 36.795073
TZS 2913.387043
UAH 50.347942
UGX 4161.51183
USD 1.164253
UYU 45.336081
UZS 14123.130774
VES 384.155183
VND 30590.746523
VUV 140.804087
WST 3.234903
XAF 656.195388
XAG 0.012939
XAU 0.000252
XCD 3.146452
XCG 2.103764
XDR 0.816086
XOF 656.18975
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.55453
ZAR 19.068601
ZMK 10479.674236
ZMW 22.733063
ZWL 374.888978
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • AZN

    0.8800

    94.51

    +0.93%

  • BCC

    0.9100

    83.87

    +1.09%

  • NGG

    -1.6800

    78.08

    -2.15%

  • RELX

    -0.5800

    42.19

    -1.37%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    81.57

    0%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    17.49

    -0.06%

  • GSK

    -0.4900

    49.9

    -0.98%

  • CMSC

    0.0800

    23.39

    +0.34%

  • RIO

    0.7100

    83.59

    +0.85%

  • BCE

    -0.1200

    23.72

    -0.51%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    13.82

    +0.07%

  • CMSD

    0.0350

    23.9

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    -0.3700

    13.18

    -2.81%

  • BP

    0.9500

    35.36

    +2.69%

  • BTI

    0.9400

    56.62

    +1.66%

Philipsen wins windy Tour de France opener as Evenepoel trapped in split

Philipsen wins windy Tour de France opener as Evenepoel trapped in split

There were mixed fortunes for the thousands of Belgian fans who poured over the border for the opening stage of the Tour de France on Saturday as Jasper Philipsen won, but star rider Remco Evenepoel faltered in his long-range bid for the title itself.

Text size:

Philipsen took the yellow jersey in a frantic sprint finish at the northern city of Lille, his tenth Tour de France win crowned with a rare race lead for a rider usually chasing sprint points.

Title favourites Tadej Pogacar and Jonas Vingegaard both finished safely in the lead pack.

But Vingegaard was on red alert as the split started and his explosive acceleration helped stun the peloton and leave his Visma team delighted with the damage done by the day's work with a 40sec advantage over several important rivals.

"It was our plan to use the wind at 20km and it worked," said Vingegaard.

Known for his pounces in the mountains, Vingegaard has won the Tour in 2022 and 2023.

The 28-year-old grew up in a remote fishing community, racing into strong winds on the coastal roads in Denmark.

Defending champion Pogacar appeared flustered at the finish line.

"It was as frantic as we had expected, but when the split came fortunately I was near the front," said the 26-year-old Slovenian.

"I'm just happy day one is done. Nine days to go before the first rest day."

- Caught napping -

Billed as the third man here after finishing behind Pogacar and Vingegaard on his debut Tour in 2024, Evenepoel was in sombre mood at his team bus.

"We were asleep, we thought any danger was over," Evenepoel said of the split where both he and his team's sprinter Tim Merlier found themselves trapped just 20km from the finish.

Around 40 riders in the first group contested the sprint where one of the day's many falls happened.

Primoz Roglic and Florian Lipowitz of Red Bull, and Team UAE's Joao Almeida were also caught out in the blustery winds.

Another UAE man, Adam Yates, lost minutes, meaning Pogacar's two deputies are off the pace if something happens to the UAE star man.

Africa's sole rider Biniam Girmay, winner of three stages in 2024, was second on the day as Philipsen got ahead of him with 100m to go.

But Girmay, winner of the 2024 best sprinter's green jersey, ended the stage with the white jersey for the best 25-and-under rider.

Philipsen, however, was the man in yellow.

"It's a day I will never forget. This is why I have been getting up early and training hard each day," said Philipsen.

"What an experience! Those final kilometres, to be part of that," beamed the 27-year-old Belgian.

Fans packed the route in one of France's more modest regions passing First World War memorials, red-brick houses and slagheaps from long-closed coal mines along the Belgian border.

Under overcast skies with the temperature a manageable 22C, the peloton cut a fast pace despite the windy conditions.

Racing towards an intermediate sprint over cobbles, escapee Benjamin Thomas slid sideways and took out his sole rival Matteo Vercher in one spectacular fall and the pair were still bickering when the peloton shot past them.

Former time-trial world champion Filippo Ganna was one rider who will take no further part after a clumsy fall on a corner.

The Italian would have been a contender on the lengthy stage five individual time-trial, as well as key in the Ineos team's campaign to get veteran Geraint Thomas into the top 10 on his 14th and final Tour de France.

Philipsen, in yellow, will lead the peloton out for Sunday's second stage, a hilly 209km route to the beaches of Boulogne-sur-Mer.

M.Fujitav--JT