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Iván Romeo breaks rivals' hearts to claim lead at Criterium du Dauphiné
Iván Romeo breaks rivals' hearts to claim lead at Criterium du Dauphiné

The Guardian

time10-06-2025

  • Sport
  • The Guardian

Iván Romeo breaks rivals' hearts to claim lead at Criterium du Dauphiné

Spain's Iván Romeo won the third stage of the Criterium du Dauphiné when he streaked clear at the end of a 207km run from Brioude, claiming the overall lead. Romeo surprised his breakaway companions, including the Dutch world champion Mathieu van der Poel, to drop them in the final kilometres and lead the dash into the town of Charantonnay. '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,' said time-trial specialist Romeo. 'But I followed my instincts in the final. It's the best day of the year for me. Hard work pays off.' It was the second win of the 21-year-old Movistar rider's career, and earned him the yellow leader's jersey on the eve of the first time-trial in this edition of the Dauphiné. Romeo completed the hilly run across the southeast of France in 4hr 34min 10sec. Colombian Astana rider Harold Tejada came in second at 14sec, with Frenchman Louis Barré of Intermarché completing the podium. The peloton, containing many of the race favourites, rolled in just over a minute later at the end of a day without any major incidents. One of those contenders for the general classification is Red Bull leader Florian Lipowitz – in the absence of last year's winner Primoz Roglic – who did well to slip into the breakaway and come in just outside the podium. The German sits fourth overall, with a 42sec advantage over ninth-placed Tadej Pogacar. The breakaway formed quickly after the start, and was composed of 13 riders. The first big break came on the Côte du Château Jaune, with its average gradient of more than 9%, situated 19km from the finish. After this final climb, only 10 riders remained amongst the contenders for the stage, and victory seemed to be in the grasp of Van der Poel – the fastest of the bunch. But Romeo had other ideas, attacking for the first time with 9km remaining before going again and quickly opening up a sizeable gap on the chasing pack. Wednesday's fourth stage will be a 17.4km time-trial between Charmes-sur-Rhône and Saint-Péray.

Milan wins Dauphine stage two to take over yellow jersey
Milan wins Dauphine stage two to take over yellow jersey

BBC News

time09-06-2025

  • Sport
  • BBC News

Milan wins Dauphine stage two to take over yellow jersey

Jonathan Milan took victory on stage two of the Criterium du Dauphine with a sprint finish in Trek's lead-out train hit the front during the final kilometre of the 204.6km ride from Premilhat, and they left Milan alone with 150m year's Milan-San Remo and Paris-Roubaix winner Mathieu van der Poel then fought hard to catch the Italian held on to clinch his first road race win in France, with British rider Fred Wright edging out Van der Poel for also claimed the yellow jersey from reigning Tour de France and Giro d'Italia champion Tadej Pogacar, who won the opening stage on Sunday."It was really tough," said Milan, 24. "Yesterday and today, I suffered a lot."At one point I was really on the limit, but I have to say thanks to my team-mates because they brought me back."We knew we had to take the last corner at the front, and it was just a perfect lead-out. I'm really happy because this means a lot to all of us."Local rider Romain Bardet, who is competing in his last professional race, attacked on the final categorised climb of the day and built a 20-second Bardet did not get any support in the breakaway so the peloton soon closed the gap, with Lidl Trek putting Milan in a prime position during the three will begin in the 34-year-old Bardet's hometown of Brioude. Stage two results Jonathan Milan (Ita/Lidl Trek) 4hrs 54mins 49secsFred Wright (GB/Bahrain Victorious) Same timeMathieu van der Poel (Ned/Alpecin-Deceuninck)Stian Edvardsen-Fredheim (Nor/Uno-X Mobility)Paul Penhoet (Fra/Groupama-FDJ)Emilien Jeanniere (Fra/TotalEnergies)Bastien Tronchon (Fra/Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale)Yevgeniy Fedorov (Kaz/XDS Astana)Matis Louvel (Fra/Israel-Premier Tech)Clement Venturini (Fra/Arkea-B&B Hotels)

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