Sports

Teunissen stays in yellow as Jumbo-Visna win Tour time trial

July 07, 2019
Dutch rider Mike Teunissen (L) wearing his overall leader's yellow jersey and a teammate of Netherlands' Jumbo-Visma cycling team react as they win on the finish line of the second stage of the 106th edition of the Tour de France cycling race, a 27.6km team time-trial in Brussels, Belgium, on Sunday. — AFP
Dutch rider Mike Teunissen (L) wearing his overall leader's yellow jersey and a teammate of Netherlands' Jumbo-Visma cycling team react as they win on the finish line of the second stage of the 106th edition of the Tour de France cycling race, a 27.6km team time-trial in Brussels, Belgium, on Sunday. — AFP

BRUSSELS — Dutchman Mike Teunissen clung on to the yellow jersey for another day as his Jumbo-Visna team powered to victory in the Tour de France's second stage on Sunday – a 27.6-km team time trial around the streets of Brussels.

It had looked as though Team Ineos, with defending Tour champion Geraint Thomas leading them home, had done enough to lay down an ominous marker, but Jumbo-Visna, the last team to start, obliterated their rivals with a show of power.

With the extra motivation of keeping Teunissen, the first Dutchman to don the yellow jersey since 1989, in the overall lead, the eight Jumbo-Visna riders hammered around the city streets to beat the British outfit by 20 seconds.

Three of their riders were dropped but Teunissen and team mates Steven Kruijswijk, George Bennett, Wout van Aert and Tony Martin roared across the line next to the city's iconic Atomium landmark in 28 minutes 58 seconds.

"Yesterday it was a dream come true, and it's the case today again," 26-year-old Teunissen, who surprisingly won Saturday's bunch sprint, said. "We went hard from the start.

"Everybody kept their pace. We heard we were the fastest. It gave us a lot of morale. We were flying."

While it was hard for the Ineos team to lose the time trial at the death, it was still a productive day for Thomas and co-leader Egan Bernal, who put chunks of time between themselves and some of their general classification rivals.

Frenchman Romain Bardet (AG2R-Mondiale) lost 59 seconds on the Ineos duo although he will still feel he can claw that damage back when the road goes up.

Australian Richie Porte will be disappointed after his Trek-Segafredo team finished 58 seconds slower than Ineos.

Others will be happy to have limited their losses, however.

Jakob Fuglsang, who suffered a heavy crash on Saturday, lost only 21 seconds on Thomas and Bernal as his Astana team produced a solid time trial while former Tour champion Vincenzo Nibali (Bahrain) lost only 16 seconds.

French hope Thibaut Pinot might be best pleased though after his Groupama FDJ team lost only 12 seconds to Ineos.

After two days in Belgium the race moves into France on Monday with a 215-km trek from Binche to Epernay when Teunissen, 10 seconds ahead, will be confident of retaining the overall lead.

Jumbo-Visna riders occupy the top five places in the GC. — Reuters


July 07, 2019
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