Falls mar Tour de France stage finale as Philipsen wins again

Soudal Quick-Step's Dutch rider Fabio Jakobsen (R) and Lotto Dstny's Italian rider Jacopo Guarnieri recover after crashing in the final sprint near the finish line of the 4th stage of the 110t Tour de France cycling race on Tuesday. (AFP)
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Updated 05 July 2023
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Falls mar Tour de France stage finale as Philipsen wins again

  • In the shockingly accident-filled finish, the peloton sped around a motorbike racetrack where there was a string of crashes on the rounded chicanes
  • British veteran Mark Cavendish came fifth as he continued to face frustration in his quest for a 35th Tour de France win

NOGARO, FRANCE: Jasper Philipsen won a second consecutive stage of the Tour de France on Tuesday as a series of high-speed falls at the Nogaro motorbike racetrack stole the headlines.

The Alpecin rider Philipsen finished at a speed over 67kph and took the overall lead in the sprint points battle after pipping Caleb Ewan and Phil Bauhaus.

Belgian Philipsen expressed shock at the falls.

“I’ve never experienced a finish like that before, those curves are tight and I’m so happy not to have fallen,” said the 25-year-old.

His teammate and lead-out man Mathieu van der Poel also spoke out about the choice of placing the finale on a racetrack.

“A circuit is not safer than a road. I’m just happy I managed to stay upright and managed to find a gap for Jasper,” he said.

Philipsen agreed.

“Maybe because it was so boring and slow today the riders were more nervous. The corners were also much more technical than I had expected.

“Sadly, it’s a dangerous sport and it’s not always possible to maintain safety.”

Fabio Jakobsen was alongside Philipsen when he hit the tarmac.

“It’s not my aim to make anyone fall,” Philipsen said. “My take is that he tried to get into a space that was too small.”

British veteran Mark Cavendish came fifth as he continued to face frustration in his quest for a 35th Tour de France win to break the all-time record he shares with Eddy Merckx.

The 38-year-old, who finished sixth in Monday’s sprint, said he picked the wrong wheel to follow.

In the shockingly accident-filled finish, the peloton sped around a motorbike racetrack where there was a string of crashes on the rounded chicanes.

Tour medics have confirmed two riders broke collarbones.

Philipsen attracted ridicule at the Tour last year for celebrating what he believed to be a stage win when in fact Wout Van Aert had already crossed the line on a solo escape.

A Netflix series about the 2022 Tour then nicknamed him ‘Jasper the disaster’.

But this is his fourth consecutive triumph on a Tour de France stage that culminated with a mass bunch sprint.

He is the first rider since Cavendish in 2008 to win successive sprint stages in the race.

Adam Yates retained the overall leader’s yellow jersey. He is six seconds ahead of his teammate Tadej Pogacar and seven ahead of his brother Simon Yates.

“Today went well, nobody wanted to break away and the sprinters were delighted,” Yates said of the slow pace set by the peloton on a flat stage.

Looking ahead to the Tour’s first big mountain stage on Wednesday, with around 30km of climbing at an average gradient of over 7 percent, Yates predicted more action.

“It’s a big opportunity for the breakaway, there will be some serious competition to get in there and get away. It’ll be interesting.”

The man who wore the polka dot climb jersey on the July 4 holiday was American Neilson Powless, and he will likely bid to keep it Wednesday.

First up on Wednesday is the beyond category 15km-ascent of the Col de Soudet at 7.2 percent average gradient. The next hill is the Col d’Ichere with 4km at 7 percent before an 8km slog up the Col de Marie Blanc at 8.6 percent gradient.


Ferhat stars as Mouloudia get CAF Champions League boost

Updated 8 sec ago
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Ferhat stars as Mouloudia get CAF Champions League boost

  • Muslim Anatouf scored after 15 minutes and a Ferhat thunderbolt on 44 minutes gave Mouloudia a two-goal half-time advantage
  • It would have been an injustice if the Sudanese club had snatched a draw

JOHANNESBURG: Zinedine Ferhat created the first goal and scored the second for Mouloudia Alger of Algeria in a 2-1 win over Al Hilal of Sudan 2-1 on Friday that threw CAF Champions League Group C wide open.
Muslim Anatouf scored after 15 minutes and a Ferhat thunderbolt on 44 minutes gave Mouloudia a two-goal half-time advantage before a near-capacity crowd in the 45,000-seat Algiers stadium.
Hilal rarely threatened to reduce the deficit in a cauldron of cheering, singing and flag waving until Mauritanian Ahmed Salem M’Bareck netted with 13 minutes remaining.
Ghanaian substitute Kamaradini Mamudu had a late chance to bring Hilal level, but his header from a corner flew wide.
It would have been an injustice if the Sudanese club had snatched a draw, however, as they were outplayed by quicker, slicker Mouloudia for long periods of an often scrappy, foul-ridden match.
Despite losing for the first time in the group after two victories and two draws, Hilal retained first place with eight points.
Topping the table in the most competitive of the four groups is a remarkable achievement by Hilal given they have to stage home matches in Rwanda because of the ongoing Sudanese civil war.
Mouloudia had just one point after matchday three, but back-to-back home wins over Saint-Eloi Lupopo from the Democratic Republic of Congo and Hilal have lifted them to second with seven points.
Mamelodi Sundowns of South Africa have five points, one more than Lupopo, ahead of their clash in Lubumbashi on Sunday.
A win for Lupopo would leave Sundowns in danger of missing the knockout stage of the premier African club competition for only the second time since winning the 2016 final against Zamalek of Egypt.
In the final round on February 14, Hilal host Lupopo and Sundowns will have home advantage over Mouloudia, whose South African coach, Rhulani Mokwena, was formerly in charge of the Pretoria club.