Fabio Jakobsen winner of the second stage, Wout Van Aert in yellow

by time news

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Fabio Jakobsen won the second stage of the Tour de France in the sprint on Saturday. The Norwegian from the Quick-Step team beat Wout Van Aert (Jumbo-Visma), who however took the yellow jersey.

Dutchman Fabio Jakobsen (Quick-Step) took the 2e sprint stage of the Tour de France, Saturday July 2 in Nyborg, after crossing the large bridge that connects two of the islands of Denmark.

The Belgian Wout Van Aert (Jumbo), second at the finish, took on the leader’s yellow jersey at the end of this stage slowed down by the headwind on the Great Belt strait. Dane Mads Pedersen took third place.

>> To read also: “Yellow jersey, stage victories: nine riders to watch during the Tour de France 2022”

“I come back from very, very far away,” admitted Fabio Jakobsen, who started in the Tour de France at the age of 25. The Dutchman won less than two years after his very serious accident in August 2020 at the Tour of Poland and signed the 36e victory of his career, his eleventh of the year.

Behind him, Wout Van Aert finished second again, like on Friday in the inaugural time trial in Copenhagen. The Belgian, one of the Tour’s most prominent riders since his first participation in 2019, is wearing yellow for the first time.

He dispossessed Belgian Yves Lampaert (Quick-Step) of the leader’s jersey, delayed by a fall at the start of the last twenty kilometers but then quickly returned to the peloton.

Chute collective

Another collective fall occurred in the last three kilometers, without chronometric consequences. The outgoing winner of the Tour, the Slovenian Tadej Pogacar, crossed the line late without a gap being charged according to the regulations.

In this 202.2 kilometer stage, the Danish public, who came en masse but wisely lined up on both sides of the road, celebrated the passage of the Tour peloton until the approach of the final on the Great Belt bridge which connects two of the country’s large islands, Seeland and Funen.

Without knowing the series of falls often frequent at the start of the event, the race was summed up, in its first half, in a parade preceded by a breakaway of four runners, the Dane Magnus Cort Nielsen, who ensured the first best climber’s polka dot jersey, the Norwegian Sven Erik Byström, as well as the French Cyril Barthe and Pierre Rolland, left behind along the way.

Byström, who remained alone in the lead, was caught before the last thirty kilometers by the peloton, which was becoming more and more nervous due to the changes of direction.

On the very wide carriageway of the double bridge, entirely occupied by the riders, the pace was slowed by the headwind which deterred the attackers. But Colombian Rigoberto Uran (second in the 2017 Tour), delayed before entering the bridge, was forced into a long chase to get into the peloton before the last eight kilometers.

Sunday, the Tour spends its last day in Denmark with a 182 kilometer long third stage between Vejle and Sönderborg, before the evening transfer to France.

With AFP

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