Lampaert shocks 'big guys' in rain-drenched Tour de France opener
Belgian Yves Lampaert shocked the favourites to pull on the leader's yellow jersey after the rain-drenched first stage of the Tour de France, an individual time-trial in the Danish capital on Friday.
Quick-Step rider Lampaert suffered less thanks to a later start than the pre-race favourites on the slippery 13.2km route, finishing five seconds ahead of compatriot Wout van Aert, with defending champion Tadej Pogacar third best seven seconds off the pace.
Massive crowds lined the streets as riders sped past the Little Mermaid statue, the harbour-front Blox building and the Amalienborg palace, where Crown Prince Frederik joined the celebration.
Lampaert was overwhelmed with emotion as the 31-year-old realised he would wear the overall leader's yellow jersey on Saturday's second stage.
"I was hoping for a top ten, but not this," said the 2021 Belgian time-trial champion.
"I beat the big guys."
Two-time defending champion Pogacar pulled on the white jersey as the fastest under-25 rider.
"It's great to be back on the Tour, the white jersey was my aim today," said the Team UAE leader.
"I loved the crowds and my time was good for the GC (General Classification) against my rivals," he said.
Dutch rider Mathieu van der Poel had set the early pace when the rain was at its heaviest.
His face creased in pain from the relentless effort and stress of the rain-slick road, van Aert then took the lead ahead of his arch-rival, world champion Filippo Ganna, who suffered a puncture along the way.
- Tricky conditions -
Slovenian Pogacar threw down the gauntlet to his title rivals cruising through the puddles, the 23-year-old all-rounder sprinting out of every corner in an expert ride.
British hope Adam Yates was a picture of grim determination at the start gate but after producing a top drawer chrono, finished 23sec off the winner while his teammate Geraint Thomas was only a couple of seconds slower.
After a week of sweltering sun with Danes flocking to their beach lidos, rain began to fall on Copenhagen an hour ahead of the race.
But Danes enjoy an outdoor lifestyle and were almost uniformly equipped with colourful ponchos, producing a party atmosphere.
Runner-up on the 2021 Tour, former fish-factory worker Jonas Vingegaard was cheered loudest as the 25-year-old local rider went for broke to finish just 8sec off Pogacar's time.
"I'm just happy I didn't fall," said Vingegaard after several riders hit the tarmac in the tricky conditions.
His Team Jumbo–Visma co-leader, former Vuelta a Espana winner Primoz Roglic of Slovenia, was only a second faster.
French sports minister Amelie Oudea-Castera was in Copenhagen for the race and said up to 600,000 fans had turned up for what she described as "a lovely course in a magnificent city".
Oudea-Castera described the three-day Denmark Grand Depart of the Tour de France as an event that brought the two nations closer.
"It's wonderful to share these events with our European partners," she said.
Charismatic French climber Thibaut Pinot, a man known to play to the crowds, was impressed by the turn out.
"When you start the Tour de France abroad it's always special, but this is another thing altogether."
Wind and rain are forecast along the 202km coastal route for Saturday's stage two from Roskilde to Nyborg with a predicted crosswind on the giant 20km Grand Belt Bridge at the end of the race.
Lampaert insisted that the Quick-Step team priority was not to defend his yellow jersey but rather to set up a massive bunch sprint for their ace finisher Fabio Jakobsen, who was chosen ahead of British legend Mark Cavendish.
J.Goergen--LiLuX