Ben Healy confirms his breakaway talent winning Stage 6 of the Tour de France
Vire (France) (AFP) - Ireland’s Ben Healy won stage six of the Tour de France in Normandy on Thursday with a long solo break, as Mathieu van der Poel reclaimed the overall leader’s yellow jersey by one second.
Sixth at the start of the day, Van der Poel climbed above overnight leader Tadej Pogacar.
Van der Poel was billed at the start of the Tour as a potential winner of stage seven to Mur de Bretagne, where he first took the yellow in 2021.
“It would be a great finale to a great week,” said an exhausted Van der Poel on Thursday. “If I get the win or not it’ll be great anyway just to wear the yellow jersey again.”
Belgian Evenepoel is third at 49sec with Frenchman Kevin Vauquelin fourth at 1min. Jonas Vingegaard is fifth at 1min 14sec.
The 24-year-old Healy became the first Irish stage winner since sprinter Sam Bennett won on the Champs Elysees in 2020.
“That was so enjoyable, and once we had all got away I discussed it with the team car and we chose that unlikely place to attack,” said Healy.
“I’m very proud to be presenting Ireland, I’m from an Irish family and though I wasn’t born there it was an option I chose as a youngster,” he said.
Stage six was intense from the off over a series of hills between Bayeux and Vire as temperatures rose above 26.5 Celsius (80 Fahrenheit) with the peloton putting the hammer down at 47 kilometres per hour (29mph) average over the first three hours.
Healy and Van der Poel were part of a nine-man mid-race escape who set a relentless pace.
Dutch rider Mathieu van der Poel crossed the line at the limit
The Irishman broke solo knowing that if he waited for the hilly finale he had little chance of beating the proven experts in the breakaway.
He made his move suddenly on a flat section, 32km out. As he pulled to the left and accelerated, the eight others dithered as the distance widened.
For Pogacar, allowing the Dutch powerhouse to sneak into the escape meant he got rid of the overall lead and relieved himself of media duties and the draining hullabaloo that comes with wearing the yellow jersey.
Once Healy had broken away, even Van der Poel sat up, saving energy, possibly for Friday’s run up the Mur de Bretagne, scene of his 2020 triumph to seize the Tour lead he kept for eight days.
The Dutch Alpecin rider wilted at the end on Thursday. Behind him Pogacar and arch-rival Jonas Vingegaard battled up the final 10 percent slope, but van der Poel regained the lead by the narrowest margin.
- Kevin the conqueror -
After an all-day effort, American champion Quinn Simmons came second, and Michael Storer put Team Tudor on the Tour podium for the first time in third.
A house bearing a banner supporting French rider Kevin Vauquelin
The day started at Bayeux, renowned for its tapestry of the 1066 Norman conquest of England, but also the birthplace of burgeoning French star Kevin Vauquelin.
The 24-year-old Arkea rider was toast of the town as he left in third position on the Tour, just 59sec adrift of Pogacar and ended in fourth overall at 1min.
Ahead of the stage he hailed “the roads where I grew up and learned to love the hills”.
At the finish line he spoke of “goose bumps” as the fans cheered him along with local media speaking of ‘Vauquelin-mania’.
After six days of racing in the North of France the Tour heads west on Friday with a 197km run from Saint Malo over rolling hills in Britany, finishing atop the steep climb called the Mur-de-Bretagne.