01:34 PM
70km to go
As expected, Ide Schelling added to his tally in the mountains classification, the Dutchman taking the only point up for grabs on the summit of the category four côte de Stang ar Garront.
Not only has Schelling climbed the côte de Stang ar Garront, but also up to second in the virtual mountains and the way he is riding is on course to taking the first polka dot jersey in this year’s Tour. As it stands Schelling leads the stage by 2min 23sec, the peloton another 20sec or so back.
01:19 PM
Attaquer! Schelling his breakaway companions
Ide Schelling clipped off the front of the breakaway a few minutes ago, at the precise time Aurélien Paret-Peintre and Casper Pedersen crashed, the flying Dutchman presumably eyeing the point available atop the next climb, the category four Côte de Stang ar Garront.
01:17 PM
Crash in the bunch!
Aurélien Paret-Peintre (Ag2r-Citroën) and Casper Pedersen (DSM) hit the dack after what looked like a slight touching of wheels in the bunch. Paret-Peintre, an outsider for the stage win today, looked a little sore as was in no rush to get back to his feet. In stark contrast to Paret-Peintre, Pedersen wasted little time in bouncing back up.
01:13 PM
85km to go
But Julian Alaphilippe and Mathieu van der Poel are not the only ones who could be celebrating later on this afternoon. The aforementioned Wout van Aert, Sonny Colbrelli, Peter Sagan, Caleb Ewan, Arnaud Démare could also challenge if a big group goes to the line. But there are another two riders I’ve not mentioned for the stage win: Tadej Pogacar or Primoz Roglic could also do well, but do they want the added pressure of wearing yellow from day one?
01:09 PM
90km to go
No change on the front of the peloton, with the diesel that is Tim Declercq sat on the front – as is the big Belgian’s wont – ahead of Petr Vakoc towing the group along. The very fact that this pair are doing so much work would suggest they are expecting, or hoping at least, to set up Julian Alaphilippe and Mathieu van der Poel here today. Both are perfectly suited to this stage, and both will be desperate to take to first maillot jaune up for grabs today.
12:53 PM
100km to go
And the breakaway leads by a shade below two minutes.
12:52 PM
You’ve been framed . . .
Some great pictures have been dropping from Brittany.
12:30 PM
Perez become early leader in the ‘mountains’
The first three climbs of the day, the côte de Trébéolin, côte de Rosnoën and côte de Locronan, have all been crested. Victor Campenaerts, the popular Belgian in the recently renamed Qhubeka-NextHash team, clipped off the front of the bunch earlier in the stage to open his tally with a single point atop the côte de Trébéolin before Danny van Poppel took a point on the Rosnoën. However, Anthony Perez is the virtual leader in the mountains classification after he crested the category three côte de Locronan ahead of Ide Schelling where there were two points available.
12:15 PM
Early warning
Julien Bernard (Trek-Segafredo), the Frenchman who was cursed from the offset after being selected in my fantasy Tour de France team, hit the deck a few moments ago, but thankfully he didn’t waste too much time at getting back up and into the saddle. On what is a tricky and testing day that will come as a big reminder for the rest of the peloton. Pay attention lads, nobody wants to crash out of the Tour de France before the first stage is done.
12:00 PM
As it stands . . .
Well the Tour de France is underway and, under some slight cloud cover, a six-man breakaway comprising Franck Bonnamour (B&B Hotels p/b KTM), Danny van Poppel (Intermarché-Wanty-Gobert Matériaux), Anthony Perez (Cofidis), Cristián Rodríguez (TotalÉnergies), Ide Schelling (Bora-Hansgrohe) and Connor Swift (Arkéa-Samsic) lead the way, holding an advantage of 2min 30sec.
Not too much to report, but it looks like Alpecin-Fenix and Deceuninck-Quick Step – Petr Vakoc and Tim Declercq respectively – are looking to control the stage, each has a rider sat on the front of the peloton, while that ridiculously strong-looking team is sat behind protecting their leader, or team leaders.
11:40 AM
Vollering strikes to land La Course
Earlier this morning, Demi Vollering took victory in La Course by Le Tour de France as she rounded former world champion Marianne Vos on the line in Landerneau.
Vollering’s SD Worx team played their cards well as Anna van der Breggen set up the win for her team-mate in a repeat of Liège-Bastogne-Liège, leading a select group to the top of the finishing climb.
Though Vos was the first to come off her fellow Dutchwoman’s wheel, Vollering had the power to come past, as did Cecilie Uttrup Ludwig as she snatched second place at the end of the 107-kilometre race from Brest.
Lizzie Deignan, who began the day as the defending champion, had to settle for ninth place after being distanced on the last of four ascents of the côte de la Fosse aux Loups, coming home in a group four seconds behind the leaders.
But the champagne went to SD Worx, with Vollering owing Van der Breggen a big debt of gratitude for the way she set it up.
The world champion, 31, plans to retire at the end of the season and become a sports director but was effectively already doing the job for her 24-year-old team-mate in the finale, rolling home in fourth with a big grin on her face.
“I was not expecting that from today,” Vollering said. “It was an awesome race. “She [Van der Breggen] did it again. It almost went wrong because Vos was going all the way to the right and I was a little bit stuck but Anna made the speed to force Marianne to go and I could go into Marianne’s slipstream and come over her which was really cool.
“It gives me much confidence for the future.”
What stands to be the final edition of La Course, set to be replaced by an eight-day Tour de France Femmes from next summer, took the peloton the short distance from Brest to Landerneau.
There they tackled four laps of a circuit characterised by the finishing climb, three kilometres at a gradient 5.7 per cent but including ramps reaching 14 per cent.
Deignan had stuck to Van der Breggen’s wheel for much of the race but could not hang with the leaders the last time up the climb as Tiffany Cromwell began the attacks.
“Today was just a bad day from the start to the finish,” Deignan said. “I felt terrible so I knew I didn’t have the finish like the girls in front. I knew the form was there but today was just such a bad day I couldn’t suffer enough to be there, it was frustrating.”
With three Dutchwomen in the top four despite the absence of WorldTour leader Annemiek van Vleuten, it was also an ominous sign for Deignan and anybody else heading into the Olympic road race next month. PA
07:40 AM
So, what’s on today’s menu?
With its sawtooth profile today’s 197.8km jaunt through Brittany, the heartland of French cycling, is a brutish way to get the race under way. Although it’s a cliché, I may as well get it out of the way now rather than hold it back for later in the race – who knows, maybe I can recycle it?: the Tour cannot be won today, but it may be lost.
Featuring six categoriesd climbs – the côte de Trébéolin, côte de Rosnoën, côte de Locronan, côte de Stang ar Garront, côte de Saint-Rivoal and côte de la Fosse aux Loups – and around 3,000 metres of vertical elevation, today is perfect terrain for the puncheurs.
However, with a handful of points up for grabs in the mountains classification, a few will fancy their chances of getting into a breakaway knowing that there is a polka dot jersey up for grabs.
With the constant ups and downs, twists and turns and potential for wind and rain blowing in from the Atlantic, today will be as much of a test of nerves as the legs. The opening week of the Tour is often a nervy affair, and this year will be no different. Positioning, too, will be absolutely key – for both those eyeing the stage win and the general classification contenders. With the three kilometre rule not being in place today, any riders that are caught up behind any crashes could lose vital seconds that could make all the difference one the race rolls down the Champs-Élysées in Paris in three weeks.
The finale will be a particularly stressful point in the race, particularly given that it may suit a varied type of rider, though generally one that can pack a punch on a short climb.
The favourite is Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Fenix) who, as mentioned earlier, is making his Tour debut today and if he wins the stage will do what his late grandfather Raymond Poulidor never managed: wear the leader’s yellow jersey at the Tour. Anybody that does not in some way want this to happen must have a heart of stone. It was a nice touch from Alpecin-Fenix at the team presentation on Thursday when they paid homage to ‘Pou-Pou’ with a change of kit to match the Mercier jersey worn by Poulidor in the 1960s and 70s.
And where there’s a stage suited for Van der Poel,you can bet your last penny that the Dutchman’s long-standing rival Wout van Aert (Jumbo-Visma) will not be far behind. Another rider that will fancy his chances – both today and on Sunday’s harder finale – is world champion Julian Alaphilippe (Deceuninck-Quick Step).
Beside the most natural puncheurs, there are also a group of sprinters that can climb, and so the recently crowned Italian nation champion Sonny Colbrelli (Bahrain Victorious) may be getting involved in the action, while Peter Sagan (Bora-Hansgrohe), Caleb Ewan (Lotto-Soudal) and Arnaud Démare (Groupama-FDJ) could, possibly, get in the mix. There are a handful of others that could, depending on how the stage plays out, challenges for the first yellow jersey at this year’s race but more on them upon my return – at 1pm.
04:15 AM
Bonjour!
Hello and welcome to our live rolling blog from stage one at the Tour de France, the 197.8-kilometre run from Brest to Landerneau.
So here we are, just hours away from the opening stage of the 108th edition of the world’s biggest bike race which is, thankfully, back in its usual summertime slot – give or take a week thanks to the rescheduled Olympics – after last year’s slight shuffling of the bicycle racing pack. And what a pack of riders we have at this year’s race.
From general classification riders through to sprinters, rouleurs and baroudeurs, the 184-man peloton that will pass though KMO – the official point at which racing starts after riding the neutralised section out from the centre of Brest – at 11.30am (BST) comprises, in theory, the best riders there are in the world right now.
While Egan Bernal, the Ineos Grenadiers rider who is currently back home in Colombia after winning last month’s Giro d’Italia, may not be at the Tour, the starting list features more than enough talent to make this year’s big loop – la grande boucle – entertaining. Indeed, with so many unknowns going into the three-week race it could, fingers crossed, turn into a modern-day classic. Let’s hope so.
Defending champion Tadej Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates) is one of 10 former grand tour winners at this year’s race, the Slovenian returning with a slightly stronger team than last year.
Like compatriot Primoz Roglic (Jumbo-Visma), Pogacar’s build-up to the Tour has not been one that follows a traditional programme. Indeed, after winning his first monument at Liège-Bastogne-Liège on April 25, Pogacar did not race again until June 9 when he opened his successful assault on the Tour of Slovenia, followed by two more race days at his national championships. Prior to his break, however, the 22-year-old showed enough form across all terrain to prove why he is one of the strongest general classification riders in the world right now. Stage wins and the general classification at the UAE Tour and Tirreno-Adriatico, followed by another stage win at Itzulia Basque Country, and the aforementioned monument – when he became the first reigning Tour champion to win Liège-Bastogne-Liège since Bernard Hinault in 1980 – may give some indication as to why Pogacar is many people’s favourite to win again in Paris.
If Pogacar’s preparation for the Tour was considered a little unconventional, then Roglic may be one of modern-day cycling’s true mavericks. Having started his season late – at Paris-Nice back in March – and cutting it short after Liège-Bastogne-Liège, Roglic has raced only 17 days in 2021, putting just 2,639 of racing kilometres into his legs. By way of some comparison, of the riders at this year’s Tour only team-mates Mike Teunissen (2,005) and Tony Martin (2,574) have raced fewer kilometres, while Bauke Mollema (Trek-Segafredo) has done more than any other, arriving with 7,389 in his legs over 46 days. One suspects Mollema, who finished 28th at the Giro, will not be threatening the general classification in Paris.
While Roglic’s form is unknown, we do know the 31-year-old has a history of returning from altitude camps in flying form and so he cannot – must not – be underestimated. Prior to his going into hiding, Roglic chalked up three stage wins at Paris-Nice, and the individual time trial and overall at Itzulia Basque Country. Despite a final-day unravelling at Paris-Nice when he lost the leader’s yellow jersey – a recurring theme for Roglic while racing on French roads – the displays of explosivity he produced in March and through to the Ardennes classics in late April, where he finished second to Julian Alaphilippe at La Flèche Wallonne, were a sight to behold.
There are question marks, however, over the strength and form of Roglic’s team-mates. While last year Jumbo-Visma arrived with undoubtedly the strongest all-round team, there is no Tom Dumoulin this time round while Sepp Kuss, the once imperious-looking young American, has at times this season looked human. Jonas Vingegaard, the impressive young Dane, meanwhile, makes his grand tour debut alongside a trio of experienced Dutchmen – Robert Gesink, Steven Kruijswijk and Mike Teunissen – while Tony Martin, who last week won a 10th – tenth! – German time trial title.
The biggest concern over Roglic’s support crew, though, surrounded the form of Wout van Aert who until last week had not raced since pipping Tom Pidcock to win the Amstel Gold Race on April 18. Having undergone surgery for appendicitis Van Aert skipped the Critérium du Dauphiné and it had been reported he would also miss the Belgian championships. However, after beating a strong field in Waregem last Sunday to win his first national road title, one suspects Van Aert will be strong enough to not only play a support role for Roglic, but also resume his long-standing rivalry with Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Fenix) while also pursuing his own personal goals.
And so to Ineos Grenadiers who may not have the best individual rider at this year’s race, but certainly appear to have the strongest team. Featuring three former grand tour winners – Geraint Thomas (Tour, 2018), Richard Carapaz (Giro, 2019) and Tao Geoghegan Hart (Giro, 2020) – along with Richie Porte, who was third at last year’s Tour and won this month’s Critérium du Dauphiné, the British squad is blessed with an embarrassment of riches. Or as one wag commented earlier this week, an ’embarrassment of Richies’.
After refusing to name a designated leader, at least not publicly, much of the chatter has surrounded how Ineos Grenadiers will approach the race. In an interview with S4C, the Welsh television channel that will be broadcasting every stage live while also showing nightly highlights – details and timings here – Thomas explains.
“I’m going to try and get the best result possible, and try and win it,” Thomas says. “The way I’ve treated it is to get here in the best shape I can, and I feel I’ve done that. Winning in 2018 was unbelievable, the highlight of my career by far. It wasn’t quite on a par, but I was still hugely satisfied with coming second the year after. My life was so bonkers after winning the Tour, like a six month party afterwards really, so to then get back into good enough shape to finish second and only lose to a team-mate – 2019 was also an amazing feeling.
“This is going to be my 11th Tour now and I’ve had plenty of ups and downs along the way. Obviously in 2017, I wore the yellow jersey for five days and then crashed out with a broken collarbone, so there has been up and downs, but it’s the best bike race in the world and the one you dream about being a part of, so it’s great to be here again.
“It’s a strong team”, adds Thomas. “We’ve got three guys who have won a grand tour and obviously Richie Porte, who was third in the Tour last year, so we’ve certainly got some strong guys.
“Obviously, there will be some sort of pecking order, but at the same time it’s good to have those options and those cards to play, because as long as we ride together and communicate really well, that’s key.
“I think the way the Giro went for the team last year, I was the sole leader there and I crashed out on the third day so they had to change the mindset of how they raced, and it was a really successful Giro for them, and we ended up winning with Tao and winning six stages, so they didn’t miss me too much! But after that, we thought let’s keep that mindset and philosophy going.
“We all know the Tour is three weeks of hard racing, it’s not like we can go out all guns blazing in the first week and doing all this crazy stuff because but the third week we’ll all be on our knees. But it’s nice to have a bit more freedom, a bit more spontaneity in the team.
“For sure I’d love to win it again, but if I can’t and a team-mate can, then I will 100 per cent get behind them.”
Whatever the approach of Ineos Grenadiers, one thing is almost certain: they should, along with UAE Team Emirates and Jumbo-Visma be challenging for the top honours at this year’s race which should, in theory, be a fascinating battle of will and wiliness on the long road – 3,414.4 kilometres, to be precise – to Paris.
But there are others that will be hoping to upset the odds and take home the fabled maillot jaune, the yellow jersey worn by the race leader. With numerous downhill finishes, it is a course that is perfectly suited to Julian Alaphilippe (Deceuninck-Quick Step) who is also a decent time trialist, but does the Frenchman have a strong enough team to target the general classification? While the romantics would love an Alaphilippe win, or at least a full blown challenge, I’m thinking he may be better suited to targeting stages.
Rigoberto Urán (EF Education-Nippo), runner-up to Chris Froome in 2017, arrives in fine shape and impressed at this month’s Tour de Suisse where the Colombian won the hilly time trial. A definite dark horse who will be sniffing around for a podium place. David Gaudu (Groupama-FDJ), Enric Mas (Movistar) and Nairo Quintana (Arkéa-Samsic) have all been mentioned as potential winners, but all fall short in one area or another to launch a credible assault on the Tour.
So, who is going to win the Tour? It is certainly a tight one to call and, in all honestly, I could have chosen the winner by the flip of a coin: Roglic or Pogacar? In the end I plumped for the older rider, while I feel the downhill finishes and high altitude summit finishes may suit the Ecuadorian Carapaz a little more than his Ineos Grenadiers team-mates. Again, though, it is so close to call and you could ask again tomorrow and that trio could easily be rearranged to also include Thomas, Urán, Geoghegan Hart or even Porte.
Away from those targeting the general classification, there should be plenty of interest and intrigue to keep the show rolling along. Can Van der Poel, who is making his Tour debut, take the yellow jersey in the opening week to honour his late grandfather the great Raymond Poulidor who was nicknamed the ‘Eternal Second’? Despite having won seven stages between 1962 and 1974, Poulidor who died in November 2019 never had the honour of wearing the maillot jaune.
The return of Mark Cavendish (Deceuninck-Quick Step) for the first time since 2018 should make the sprint stages very interesting. But can he roll things back and win a 31st stage 13 years after his first in 2008 when he triumphed in the rain in Châteauroux where, coincidentally, stage six finishes? I wouldn’t bet against it.
And then there’s the battle for the points classification: can Peter Sagan (Bora-Hansgrohe) win an incredible eighth green jersey, or will Caleb Ewan (Lotto-Soudal), Arnaud Démare (Groupama-FDJ) or Sonny Colbrelli (Bahrain Victorious) fancy a crack?
We don’t know the answers just yet, but stick with us here at Telegraph Sport and over the next three weeks we will talk you through almost every pedal stroke of the world’s biggest bike race.