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Adam Yates wins Tour de Romandie; Gaviria gets stage victory

Yellow jersey Adam Yates, from Great Britain of UAE Team Emirates in action during the fifth and last stage, a 170,8 km race between Vufflens-la-Ville and Geneva at the 76th Tour de Romandie UCI World Tour Cycling race, in Sullens, Switzerland, Sunday, April 30, 2023. (Jean-Christophe Bott/Keystone via AP)

Yellow jersey Adam Yates, from Great Britain of UAE Team Emirates in action during the fifth and last stage, a 170,8 km race between Vufflens-la-Ville and Geneva at the 76th Tour de Romandie UCI World Tour Cycling race, in Sullens, Switzerland, Sunday, April 30, 2023. (Jean-Christophe Bott/Keystone via AP)

Fernando Gaviria Rendon from Colombia of team Movistar celebrates as he crosses the finish line of the fifth and last stage, a 170,8 km race between Vufflens-la-Ville and Geneva at the 76th Tour de Romandie UCI World Tour Cycling race, in Geneva, Switzerland, Sunday, April 30, 2023. (Valentin Flauraud/Keystone via AP)

Yellow jersey Adam Yates, front center, from Great Britain of UAE Team Emirates in action during the fifth and last stage, a 170,8 km race between Vufflens-la-Ville and Geneva at the 76th Tour de Romandie UCI World Tour Cycling race, in Sullens, Switzerland, Sunday, April 30, 2023. (Jean-Christophe Bott/Keystone via AP)

Adam Yates from Great Britain of UAE Team Emirates crosses the finish line as the winner of the fourth stage, a 161,6 km race between Sion and Thyon 2000 at the 76th Tour de Romandie UCI World Tour Cycling race, in Les Collons, Switzerland, Saturday, April 29, 2023. (Jean-Christophe Bott/Keystone via AP)

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GENEVA (AP) — Adam Yates retained his yellow jersey to complete victory Sunday in the six-day Tour de Romandie for his biggest win in more than two years.

Yates’ solo ride in the mountains Saturday to win the queen stage had created a 19-second lead over Matteo Jorgenson of the United States. The English rider maintained that gap by finishing safely in the pack of a sprint that decided the final stage.

The stage win Sunday went to Fernando Gaviria who raced several bike lengths clear of the chasing pack on the lakeside finish in Geneva.

“We controlled the race perfectly today,” said Yates, who races for the same UAE team as two-time Tour de France winner Tadej Pogačar. “It’s been a perfect week for us, we had two stage wins.”

The Romandie race through the French-speaking region of Switzerland is a traditional warmup for the Tour de France though it was skipped this year by the expected main contenders in July.

The 30-year-old Yates, who has a best Tour de France result of fourth place in 2016, got his biggest win since the 2021 Tour of Catalonia.

After Yates and Jorgenson, Damiano Caruso placed third trailing the winner by 27 seconds.

More AP sports: https://apnews.com/hub/apf-sports and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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77e édition du 23 au 28 avril 2024

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De gauche à droite : Matteo Jorgenson (2 e ), Adam Yates (1 er ), Damiano Caruso (3 e )

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Tour de Romandie

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Lippert wins final stage of Tour de Romandie Feminin, GC glory for Vollering

Top stories.

'What a finish!' - Teuns snatches Stage 1 win from Dennis at Tour de Romandie

'What a finish!' - Teuns snatches Stage 1 win from Dennis at Tour de Romandie

27/04/2022 at 20:39

'Bike racing’s about winning' - Thomas happy to end three-year drought

'Bike racing’s about winning' - Thomas happy to end three-year drought

02/05/2021 at 15:21

'I can't say when that will be' - Froome's frank admission about reaching former level

'I can't say when that will be' - Froome's frank admission about reaching former level

02/05/2021 at 13:09

Thomas back to winning ways as blistering TT delivers Romandie GC title

Thomas back to winning ways as blistering TT delivers Romandie GC title

02/05/2021 at 15:04

'I feel like a right whopper' - Thomas explains cause of bizarre crash

'I feel like a right whopper' - Thomas explains cause of bizarre crash

02/05/2021 at 09:28

Thomas suffers ‘inexplicable’ finish-line crash as Woods wins Stage 4 to take yellow

Thomas suffers ‘inexplicable’ finish-line crash as Woods wins Stage 4 to take yellow

01/05/2021 at 16:43

Soler wins Stage 3, assumes GC lead ahead of Queen Stage

Soler wins Stage 3, assumes GC lead ahead of Queen Stage

30/04/2021 at 20:26

Colbrelli sprints to Romandie win, Dennis remains in yellow

Colbrelli sprints to Romandie win, Dennis remains in yellow

29/04/2021 at 17:17

Sagan claims Tour De Romandie first stage

Sagan claims Tour De Romandie first stage

28/04/2021 at 17:21

Dennis wins Tour de Romandie prologue, Ineos secure top three

Dennis wins Tour de Romandie prologue, Ineos secure top three

27/04/2021 at 17:11

Latest videos

Highlights: all the action from a thrilling stage 1 at the tour de romandie, ‘bike racing’s about winning’ - geraint thomas happy to end victory drought, tour de romandie geraint thomas finish as he claims yellow jersey, tour de romandie: rémi cavagna takes stage 5 win, tour de romandie: stage 5 highlights as thomas claims yellow jersey, froome: i can't say when i'll be back to my former level, thomas crashes at the death as woods wins stage 4 to take yellow, ‘i had no feeling in my hands’ – thomas on tour de romandie crash, woods rides into yellow as thomas suffers ‘inexplicable’ crash on stage 4, confusion reigns as it is unclear what section of the stage is neutralised, more top news, roglic triumphs in tour de romandie.

05/05/2019 at 14:59

Roglic wins Stage 1 of Tour de Romandie, takes yellow jersey

01/05/2019 at 17:51

Tratnik snatches prologue win in Tour de Romandie 2019

30/04/2019 at 17:44

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Tour de Romandie stage 5: Fernando Gaviria wins last stage, Adam Yates takes GC title over Matteo Jorgenson

Follow all the action as bernal, cavendish, jorgenson and more spar in six day swiss race..

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Fernando Gaviria (Movistar) claimed his second victory of the season on the final stage of the Tour de Romandie in Geneva.

Adam Yates (UAE Team Emirates) finished safely in the bunch to win the overall title after taking victory on the race’s queen stage, with Matteo Jorgenson (Movistar) securing second place in the GC.

Gaviria had a clear margin on the rest of the pack going around the final corner, just under 300m to the line, after being set up perfectly by his Movistar squad.

The Colombian held his advantage all the way to the line to take the win by around two bikes’ length. Nikias Arndt (Bahrain-Victorious) crossed the line for second place ahead of stage 2 winner Ethan Hayter (Ineos Grenadiers).

Yates held onto his 19-second advantage over Jorgenson by staying within the bunch to take the GC win in his first attempt at the Tour de Romandie.

“First of all, I wanted to say a big thanks to the guys. We controlled the race perfectly today, I didn’t really do much. It’s thanks to them that we won today,” Yates said afterward. “It’s been a perfect week for us, we’ve got two stage wins and the overall so we can’t ask for much more.”

There was a raft of non-starters for the fifth stage and final with illness and injury continuing to take its toll on the peloton. The day took the riders from Vlufflens-la-Ville to Geneva, bringing them over two classified climbs along the way.

A group of three riders got up the road after just a few kilometers of racing with two more eventually bridging over. The day’s move consisted of Thomas Gloag (Jumbo-Visma), Paul Lapeira (AG2R-Citroën), Robert Stannard (Alpecin-Deceuninck), Antoine Aebi (Switzerland), and Alexander Kamp (Tudor).

The five riders built up an advantage of close to five minutes at one point but the peloton was not going to allow them to stay clear and chased hard to bring them back with over 30km to go. The fast pace dropped several riders, including Gaviria, but the long run from the final climb allowed many to come back.

A second breakaway got up the road with three riders in it, but it too would eventually be brought back with Movistar and Ineos Grenadiers both working hard on the front to bring it home for a sprint.

Gaviria was at the front of the bunch as it approached the last corner and came out of it with a significant lead over the rest and did not slow until he knew he had the job done.

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S4: Adam Yates attacks into lead ahead of Matteo Jorgenson

Adam Yates (UAE Team Emirates) doubled up Saturday to win the decisive mountaintop finale and stopped Matteo Jorgenson (Movistar) from overtaking the race lead at the Tour de Romandie.

Overnight leader Juan Ayuso was gapped on the lower flanks for the decisive 20km climb through fog and rain, putting Jorgenson into the virtual lead.

Yates surged with just under 4km to go to win the stage and keep the leader’s jersey within UAE Team Emirates going into Sunday’s finale.

“I tried and pushed it all the way to the line,” Yates said. “We tried to help Juan because he deserved our support. He’s such a big talent, for sure he can win some big races in the future. He said to me 4-5km to go that I should go for the win.

“All week we’ve been riding well, so hopefully we can keep it tomorrow,” Yates said. “It’s nice to win, and I had some bad luck in the last few races. I had a bad crash at Catalunya, and I needed some time off to recovery.”

With the jersey in play, the American marked the attacks to defend his GC hopes when Yates jumped with less than 4km with a surge that no one could answer.

Jorgenson finished fifth out of the time bonuses to miss out on the chance to take over the race leader’s jersey, with Yates winning ahead of the chasing Thibaut Pinot (Groupama-FDJ).

“I did everything I could. Adam was the better climber and he won the race, so he deserves it,” Jorgenson said. “He’s really punchy, and when he went, at a certain point I couldn’t follow and I knew if I kept going I would blow up. I did the rest of the climb at my rhythm, with those guys on my wheel. It was close, but he deserves it.”

With one stage left to go, Yates moves into the lead, with Jorgenson remaining second, now at 19 seconds back, with Damiano Caruso (Bahrain Victorious) slotting into third.

An early break featuring Lawson Craddock (Jayco AlUla) featured in the day’s main escape before being caught on the lower flanks of the long summit to Thyon 2000. Mike Woods (Israel Premier Tech), who won here in 2021, crashed just at the base of the climb.

The lead bunch inevitably shrunk under the pressure of the steep slopes. Overnight leader Ayuso was gapped with about 8.5km to go, putting Jorgenson into the virtual lead.

The young Spanish star, who won Friday’s time trial to take over the lead, knew he’d be struggling in the mountains in his first race since finishing third in last year’s Vuelta a España.

“It was tough. I had no legs and I exploded,” Ayuso said. “When I knew I was out of the podium, I went easy because I was on the limit. I knew that I am still not in shape, because I am coming back from a hard injury. Yesterday was a surprise, and I think what happened today is normal when you consider how I arrived.”

Egan Bernal (Ineos Grenadiers) put in a solid ride with eighth at 54 seconds back in one of his best high-mountain performances in his comeback season so far in 2023.

The race concludes Sunday with the 170.8km final stage from Vufflens-la-Ville to Genève. Two short but steep climbs animate the middle of the stage in what should deliver a reduced bunch sprint.

Stage 3: Juan Ayuso blitzes to comeback victory in hilly TT, takes GC lead

where is tour de romandie

Juan Ayuso (UAE Emirates) edged out U.S. star Matteo Jorgenson (Movistar) to win the hilly time trial into Châtel-Saint-Denis in stage 3 of the Tour de Romandie.

Ayuso’s five-second victory was good to move him into the leader’s jersey ahead of Saturday’s grueling high-altitude summit finish on Thyon 2000. Jorgenson moves to second overall, 18 seconds back.

Victory on a tough hilly course makes for a huge landmark for Ayuso in what was his first race since he finished third at the 2022 Vuelta a España.

The Spanish 20-year-old spent the off-season struggling with tendinitis and only returned to racing in Romandie’s opening prologue this week.

“I am getting better but the legs are feeling worse every day,” Ayuso said after his ride.  “I am starting to suffer a lot and I feel like my form is still not there, but if I keep improving in the race I’ll be very happy.”

The 19km Swiss course was dominated by a long grinding climb before a long, fast descent toward the finishline.

U.S. racer Will Barta (Movistar) saw some time in the race leader’s hotseat before his countryman and teammate Jorgenson went faster and took the lead.

Jorgenson remained the rider to beat all the way through to the final flurry of GC contenders rolled down the ramp.

Ayuso’s blitzing climb and wild final kilometer at the very close of the stage was good to oust Jorgenson and mark an extra-successful comeback from the Spainiard’s long layoff with injury.

Stage 2: Ethan Hayter sprints to win, takes race lead

Ethan Hayter won stage 2 of the Tour de Romandie

Ethan Hayter (Ineos Grenadiers) took a sprint win from a reduced bunch sprint on stage 2 of the Tour de Romandie into La Chaux-de-Fonds, taking the race lead in the process.

Hayter had a clear margin over Juan Ayuso (UAE Team Emirates) in second place with Romain Bardet (Team DSM) taking third.

The bunch had been thinned out over a series of climbs inside the last 30 kilometers and a frenetic finale followed with several of the GC riders attempting to go on the attack as the line loomed into sight.

“Maybe the sprint wasn’t so close, but to get there was the hard part. It was a pretty hard stage and Jumbo made a good pace on all of the last climbs and there were a lot of attacks in the last part. I survived and did a good sprint,” Hayter said afterward.

“My team got to the front at the perfect time. We had to go a little bit early but I think it was best with all of the roundabouts to stay out of trouble and then I was just waiting for the guys to come from behind. I saw someone coming and then I started the wind up for the sprint.”

Illness has played havoc with the peloton already this week and James Knox (Soudal Quick-Step) was the next rider forced to leave due to sickness. U.S. rider Sean Quinn (EF Education-EastPost) also didn’t make the start Thursday morning.

It took around 25km of racing before a small three-rider breakaway made it up the road. Gleb Brussenskiy (Astana-Qazaqstan), Julien Bernard (Trek-Segafred), and Tom Bohli (Tudor) formed the move. The trio gained almost five minutes at one stage, but the peloton wasn’t content with the break taking the win and began pulling the group back in the second half of the stage.

Brussenskiy was the last of the attackers to hold off the inevitable, but he was eventually caught inside the final 30km.

While the terrain was far from the toughest that will be seen at the race, Jumbo-Visma set a stern pace for overnight leader Tobias Foss that gradually whittled down the bunch on the penultimate climb of the Col de la Tourne, a second-category ascent. However, there was still a sizeable number in the main group when the climb was completed with 25km to go.

The race exploded briefly on the final climb of Le Communal with Michael Woods (Israel-Premier Tech) trying to get away, but the third-category ascent wasn’t long wough to do too significant damage. From the top, there was a short descent before an uncategorized rise inside the final 10km and a flat finale.

A series of attacks on the flat roads to the finish strung out the bunch into the final kilometer. Ineos Grenadiers took control and launched Hayter to the win.

Stage 1: Ethan Vernon wins after half the peloton loses its way

where is tour de romandie

Ethan Vernon (Soudal Quick-Step) powered to victory in stage 1 at the Tour de Romandie in a stage marked by the back half of the peloton getting lost on course.

The bunch split on a steep climb with about one hour to go, and the leaders roared into the finish to contest for the sprint.

The laggards, however, seemed to get mixed up and steered off-course when the gap was about 5 minutes to the leaders.

The lost group was seen pedaling back toward the finish line with oncoming traffic on the course in what was a rolling closure at the week-long Swiss race.

It was not immediately clear what caused the misdirection. The group rolled in about 10 minutes back, but well within any risk of missing the time cut.

At the front of the race, Vernon was fastest in the reduced bunch, with Thibau Nys (Trek-Segafredo), son of CX legend Sven Nys,  pounding his handlebar after finishing second and just missing his first WorldTour win. Milan Menton (Lotto Dstny) crossed the line third.

“The group split with about 45km to go, so I knew it was all-in for the sprint. The nerves started to set in a bit when you know the stage is there. I didn’t see anyone behind me,” Vernon said. “I don’t think there’s much time to enjoy tomorrow, but it looks quite hard.”

Soudal Quick-Step played hot potato with the leader’s jersey, with Vernon also taking over the top spot on GC from teammate Josef Cerny, who won the opening prologue Tuesday.

Mark Cavendish (Astana Qazaqstan) and Simon Yates (Jayco AlUla) both did not finish.

The race continues Thursday with the 162.7km second stage from Morteau to La Chaux-de-Fonds. A couple of short but steep climbs could complicate things for the pure sprinters.

Prologue: Josef Černý blitzes to slim GC lead

where is tour de romandie

Josef Černý topped the prologue podium Tuesday and secured the leader’s jersey at the Tour de Romandie.

The Czech landed Soudal-Quick-Step’s 20th win of the season by topping world TT champion Tobias Foss (Jumbo-Visma) and Quick-Step teammate Rémi Cavagna in a lightning-fast 6.8km race around Port Valais.

Černý won by just one second with his 55.1kph ride around Port Valais.

“It was really tight, I’m super happy I was the lucky one today and could enjoy the win,” he said after the race.

“I work hard, so I was not super surprised [by the result]. I was not really the favorite today, but I was very confident and thought I could be top-10 or top-5. But victory is really nice for me.”

Nico Denz (Bora-Hansgrohe) landed in the hotseat early on Tuesday and lasted there for some time until Černý bettered his time by four seconds.

The 29-year-old’s ride was good enough to fend off challenges from pre-stage favorites Foss, Ethan Hayter (Ineos Grenadiers), and Ivo Oliveira (UAE Team Emirates).

Returning GC stars Egan Bernal (Ineos Grenadiers) and Juan Ayuso (UAE Emirates) finished 26 and 12 seconds back respectively. Matteo Jorgenson (Movistar) was the fastest U.S. racer with a time that put him 33rd, 19 seconds behind Černý.

Rui Costa (Intermarché-Circus-Wanty) saw a horror start to his tour.

The former world champ was derailed in the first meters of the race when his chainring ripped away from his frame as he stamped out of the start ramp.

Costa was forced to complete the TT on his road bike while nursing what looked to be an injured knee. He finished five minutes down but appears to have survived the time cut.

Disaster for Rui Costa in Switzerland #TourdeRomandie pic.twitter.com/uOJtkN44uB — Mark Contador (@MarkContador80) April 25, 2023

Racing kick starts proper Wednesday with a long hilly day into Valée de Joux.

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Tour de Romandie 2023: Gaviria sprints to triumph, Yates seals GC win

Fernando Gaviria - Tour de Romandie 2023: Gaviria sprints to triumph, Yates seals GC win

Results 5th stage 2023 Tour de Romandie

1. Fernando Gaviria (col) 2. Nikias Arndt (ger) s.t. 3. Ethan Hayter (gbr) s.t. 4. Milan Menten (bel) s.t. 5. Gianmarco Garofoli (ita) s.t. 6. Luca Mozzato (ita) s.t. 7. Lewis Askey (gbr) s.t. 8. Magnus Cort (den) s.t. 9. Matteo Sobrero (ita) s.t. 10. Dion Smith (nzl) s.t.

Final GC 2023 Tour de Romandie

1. Adam Yates (gbr) 2. Matteo Jorgenson (usa) + 0.19 3. Damiano Caruso (ita) + 0.27 4. Max Poole (gbr) + 0.38 5. Thibaut Pinot (fra) + 0.41 6. Cian Uijtdebroeks (bel) + 1.21 7. Romain Bardet (fra) + 1.28 8. Rafal Majka (pol) + 1.47 9. Egan Bernal (col) + 1.53 10. Thomas Gloag (gbr) + 2.14

Race report Thomas Gloag, Paul Lapeira and Robert Stannard intitiate the breakaway, while Antoine Aebi and Alexander Kamp track them down. The five carve out a lead of over 4 minutes.

While a numbers of sprinters, including Gaviria, are dropped in the hilly zone, the peloton neutralises the attack with 34 kilometres to go. Gaviria rejoins the bunch a few kilometres after that.

Moments later Bouchard jumps off the front to open a small lead, while Reichenbach and Kluckers rejoin him. The three race to a 30 seconds lead before they are caught inside the last 2 kilometres.

Gaviria opens the sprint early and he powers to a commanding victory. Yates finishes safely in the bunch to seal the GC win.

Another interesting read: route 5th stage 2023 Tour de Romandie.

Tour de Romandie 2023 – stage 5: route, profile, more

Click on the images to zoom

Tour de Romandie 2023, stage 5: route - source:tourderomandie.ch

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Sprint | Saint-Léonard (92.4 km)

Sprint | vex (133.7 km), points at finish, kom sprint (3) chamoson (6.3 km), kom sprint (1) anzère (45.1 km), kom sprint (3) lens (58 km), kom sprint (1) suen (118.2 km), kom sprint (1) thyon 2000 (161.3 km), youth day classification, team day classification, race information.

where is tour de romandie

  • Date: 29 April 2023
  • Start time: 10:55
  • Avg. speed winner: 34.544 km/h
  • Race category: ME - Men Elite
  • Distance: 161.6 km
  • Points scale: 2.WT.Stage
  • UCI scale: UCI.WR.C1.Stage
  • Parcours type:
  • ProfileScore: 405
  • Vert. meters: 4308
  • Departure: Sion
  • Arrival: Thyon 2000
  • Race ranking: 34
  • Startlist quality score: 539
  • Won how: 4.3 km solo
  • Avg. temperature: 14 °C

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‘He can win a Grand Tour’ – Vingegaard takes Uijtdebroeks under his wing at Visma

W hile Jonas Vingegaard takes the spotlight as the overall favourite and GC leader of Visma-Lease a Bike at Tirreno-Adriatico , by his side will be top young talent Cian Uijtdebroeks who the Dane has “taken under his wing.”

The 21-year-old Belgian will race alongside the two-time Tour de France winner for the second time this season at the Race of the Two Seas after working well in support of Vingegaard’s domination of O Gran Camiño .

Uijtdebroeks joined Visma-Lease a Bike after a controversial saga with Bora-Hansgrohe which saw both sides claim he would ride for them in 2024. His contract was eventually terminated and he signed for Visma in December. 

The Belgian has declared his satisfaction at the outcome, and he will now seek to progress as a GC rider at Visma-Lease A Bike, using Vingegaard as a model.

“Vingegaard has taken me under his wing a bit,” said Uijtdebroeks to Belgian newspaper Het Laatste Nieuws .

“He watches me race, he gives me tips during the race and then he gives me feedback. He sees me as a young guy who can do great things in the future. 

“If I have any questions, I can ask them immediately and I will immediately receive an honest answer. We get along very well.”

Uijtdebroeks has already performed well in his two years at Bora-Hansgrohe, taking eighth at last year’s Vuelta a España, sixth at the Tour de Romandie, ninth at the Tour de Suisse and the overall victory of the 2022 Tour de l’Avenir. 

But Vingegaard sees a much higher ceiling for his young teammate.

“I do think he can win a Grand Tour one day,” Vingegaard said to Cyclingnews and other media ahead of Tirreno-Adriatico.

“He’s still very young and has a lot of potential. He’s probably one of the biggest talents in the sport. It’s good he’s in our team and not a rival team and I’m happy to have him with me at Tirreno-Adriatico.”

Vingegaard will be the focus for the Dutch squad on the key mountain days on stages 5 and 6, but Uijtdebroeks will be one of the last riders in the Dane’s train alongside Ben Tullett and Steven Kruijswijk. 

“I think he’ll perhaps have a supporting role like in Gran Camiño, but he might go to the finish sometimes too. He’ll go full gas in the time trial and then we’ll see our tactics,” Vingegaard said.

“He fits in the team well. He’s professional and eager to learn. That makes him fit in very well.”

Uijtdebroeks was fifth at O Gran Camiño behind team leader Vingegaard and the rest of the GC riders who were all more than 1:55 down on the Dane after three days of competitive racing.

He’ll build on that at Tirreno before heading to the Volta a Catalunya alongside Sepp Kuss, with a debut and leadership scheduled for the Giro d’Italia in May. There he will be the only GC rider sent by the Dutch squad with Wout van Aert and Olav Kooij also in the hunt for stages. 

Jonas Vingegaard and Cian Uijtdebroeks at the 2024 O Gran Camiño

Aleksandr Vlasov wins Tour de Romandie

Bora-Hansgrohe rider wins final stage mountain time trial in Villars as overnight leader Dennis dropped to eighth overall

Aleksandr Vlasov claimed overall victory at the Tour de Romandie after winning the climactic uphill time trial.

The Bora-Hansgrohe rider deposed Rohan Dennis (Jumbo-Visma) at the top of the general classification, who dropped off the podium altogether after struggling on the uphill slopes.

In a stage that featured big time gaps, it was all change at the top of the general classification, with Gino Mader (Bahrain-Victorious) and Simon Geschke (Cofidis) both leapfrogging Dennis to take second and third respectively.

Juan Ayuso (UAE Team Emirates) also lost his place on the podium, finishing eighth on the stage and conceding almost a minute to Mader and Geschke, but holds on as the best young rider. 

For Vlasov, the Tour de Romandie becomes his first-ever WorldTour stage race title, having come close earlier this season with third at Itzulia Basque Country, and last year when he was second at Paris-Nice.

“I gave it my all today. Of course my main goal was to win the GC. I did my best today, I pushed full gas, and I’m super-happy with this result," he said.

“I said yesterday before the stage that maybe we’d arrive in a big group together at the finish, and that the day after [i.e. today’s time trial] would probably be a more important day for the general classification. Yesterday was just a warm-up! Yesterday I was in good shape, and today I was concentrated on going full gas.”

Vlasov had looked very strong throughout the week, showing great climbing legs as well as an unexpectedly quick sprinting kick to register to fourth-place finishes and second-place behind teammate Sergio Higuita yesterday. 

“I’m in good shape, I felt that I could win the race. I rode to avoid the crashes and injuries, and to have the best legs for today’s stage. It’s my first WorldTour win, and also my first general classification in a World Tour stage race. It’s amazing, I’m super-happy.” 

In doing so, he denied Dennis what would have been his second WorldTour following the 2015 Tour Down Under, and his first on European roads. 

There’s a certain irony that double world time trial champion Dennis emerged out of the mountainous queen stage in the overall lead, only to lose it in his favoured discipline of the time trial, but the uphill nature of the course played into the favour of climbers like Vlasov. 

He had already lost his virtual GC lead at the intermediate sprint, where, despite setting the third fastest time, he had already conceded a huge 28 seconds to a flying Vlasov.    

From that point on he laboured even more on the uphill slopes, rocking back and forth on the bike, and ultimately plummeted to eighth on GC.

“I’m absolutely spent,” said a resigned Dennis after finishing his ride. “I had absolutely nothing left in the final half of the climb. I think the week has taken its toll, fighting each day. It was a great week with the team, I want to thank them for the hard work.” 

His loss was Geschke and Mader’s gain, who both pulled off significant surprises to finish on the podium. 

How it unfolded

It was a sunny albeit cold final day at the Tour de Romandie, but each rider was sure to warm up on the intense uphill effort that awaited them. 

Harry Sweeny (Lotto-Soudal) set the quickest time early on, but with the riders setting off in a GC order that has by now been firmly established, the leader in the clubhouse changed frequently throughout the day. 

Marco Brenner (DSM) and then Remi Cavagna (QuickStep-AlphaVinyl) narrowly bested his time, before Antonio Tiberi (Trek-Segafredo) became the new leader by a whopping margin of almost a minute.

Despite setting a new standard with his time, it wasn’t long until Tiberi’s time was beaten by Ion Izagirre (Cofidis), resplendent in the colours of the Spanish flag as national time trial champion, and who himself was imminently deposed by Estonian national time trial champion Rein Taaramae (Intermarche-Wanty-Gobert Materiaux). 

Thibaut Pinot (Groupama-FDJ) was the next rider to post a new fastest time, but hot on his wheels was Steven Kruijswijk (Jumbo-Visma), who had bettered Pinot’s time at the intermediate sprint by 20 seconds, and just about held on by two seconds by the finish. 

Kruijswijk’s time as lead was even more brief, however, as Damiano Caruso (Bahrain-Victorious) flew up the climb to beat the Dutchman’s time by a fraction of a second, despite having been almost 20 seconds slower at the intermediate sprint. 

Caruso and Kruijswijk’s times were enough to see them catapult up to sixth and seventh respectively on GC, but only when Geschke arrived did the real podium threats materialise. 

The German smashed Caruso’s time by over half a minute, and, after holding off Mader’s time by five seconds, would have taken the stage victory were it not for Vlasov’s superb ride.

where is tour de romandie

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COMMENTS

  1. Tour de Romandie

    The Tour de Romandie is a stage race which is part of the UCI World Tour. It runs through the Romandie region, or French-speaking part of Switzerland. The competition began in 1947, to coincide with the 50-year anniversary of Swiss Cycling. It was held without interruption until the COVID-19 pandemic caused the cancellation of the 2020 edition.

  2. Tour de Romandie

    Fondation Tour de Romandie c/o Chassot Concept SA Champ de la Vigne 3 CH-1470 Estavayer-le-Lac Tél. : +41 26 662 13 49

  3. Tour de Romandie 2024: Results and news

    Rui Costa's chainring falls off on Tour de Romandie prologue start ramp. By Tom Wieckowski published 26 April 23. news The former World Champion finished last, nearly five minutes down on winner ...

  4. Tour de Romandie 2023 route

    Stage 5 route map for 2023 Tour de Romandie (Image credit: Tour de Romandie) The final day of racing begins in Vufflens-la-Ville in the south-west district of Gros-de Vaud. The valleys and hills ...

  5. 2021 Tour de Romandie

    The 2021 Tour de Romandie was a road cycling stage race, that took place between 27 April and 2 May 2021 in Romandy, the French-speaking part of western Switzerland. It was the 74th edition of the Tour de Romandie and the 17th race of the 2021 UCI World Tour. Teams.

  6. Tour de Romandie 2022 route

    Profile stage 3 2022 Tour de Romandie (Image credit: Tour de Romandie) The Queen Stage is set for stage 4, with six categorised climbs, four of them at category 1, and 4,160 metres of elevation ...

  7. 2022 Tour de Romandie

    The 2022 Tour de Romandie was a road cycling stage race held between 26 April and 1 May 2022 in Romandy, the French-speaking part of western Switzerland. It was the 75th edition of the Tour de Romandie and the 18th race of the 2022 UCI World Tour. Teams

  8. Tour de Romandie 2022: The Route

    The Tour de Romandie started on Tuesday 26 April with a prologue and finished on Sunday 1 May with an ITT for climbers. The 6-day stages race in the French-speaking part of Switzerland opens with a flat prologue of 5.12 kilometres before stage 1 is played out on a lumpy route with a steep final kilometre.. Stage 2 looks promising for fast men who do not shy away from on occasional climb, while ...

  9. Adam Yates wins Tour de Romandie; Gaviria gets stage victory

    Published 7:23 AM PST, April 30, 2023. GENEVA (AP) — Adam Yates retained his yellow jersey to complete victory Sunday in the six-day Tour de Romandie for his biggest win in more than two years. Yates' solo ride in the mountains Saturday to win the queen stage had created a 19-second lead over Matteo Jorgenson of the United States.

  10. Tour de Romandie 2023: The Route

    Slideshow 1/9. The 2023 Tour of Romandie opened with a prologue and ended with a hilly race to Geneva. One ITT, one mountain stage and two more hilly races round out the route. The Tour de Romandie opens with a pan flat prologue of 7.2 kilometres long before stage 1 serves a route with a lumpy first part and a flat finale.

  11. Tour de Romandie

    Tour de Romandie Foundation c/o Chassot Concept SA Champ de la Vigne 3 CH-1470 Estavayer-le-Lac +41 26 662 13 49

  12. Tour De Romandie

    Tour De Romandie. 21,732 likes · 264 talking about this. Le Tour de Romandie est un événement cycliste bénéficiant d'une audience suisse et internationale

  13. Tour de Romandie: Adam Yates takes queen stage summit victory and race

    The penultimate stage of the Tour de Romandie brought the peloton to the queen stage of the race and Hors Categorié summit finish of Thyon 2000 (20.9km at 7.6%), where the overall victory would ...

  14. Tour de Romandie

    Lippert wins final stage of Tour de Romandie Feminin, GC glory for Vollering. 00:01:35 | 18/09/2023 at 16:59. Top stories 'What a finish!' - Teuns snatches Stage 1 win from Dennis at Tour de Romandie.

  15. Startlist for Tour de Romandie 2023

    Alpecin - Deceuninck (WT) 41 HERMANS Quinten. 42 BAYER Tobias * (DNF #4) 43 OSBORNE Jason. 44 SBARAGLI Kristian. 45 STANNARD Robert. 46 TAMINIAUX Lionel. 47 VAN DEN BOSSCHE Fabio *. team statistics in race.

  16. Tour de Romandie 2023 Stage 5 results

    Adam Yates is the winner of Tour de Romandie 2023, before Matteo Jorgenson and Damiano Caruso. Fernando Gaviria is the winner of the final stage.

  17. 2024 UCI World Tour

    Tour de Romandie: 23-28 April Eschborn-Frankfurt: 1 May Giro d'Italia: 4-26 May Critérium du Dauphiné: 2-9 June Tour de Suisse: 9-16 June Tour de France: 29 June - 21 July Clásica de San Sebastián: 10 August Tour de Pologne: 12-18 August Vuelta a España: 17 August - 8 September Bretagne Classic Ouest-France:

  18. Tour de Romandie stage 5: Fernando Gaviria wins last stage, Adam Yates

    Ethan Hayter won stage 2 of the Tour de Romandie. (Photo: Dario Belingheri/Getty Images) Ethan Hayter (Ineos Grenadiers) took a sprint win from a reduced bunch sprint on stage 2 of the Tour de Romandie into La Chaux-de-Fonds, taking the race lead in the process.

  19. Tour de Romandie 2021

    Tour de Romandie was founded in 1947 to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Union Cycliste Switzerland. It continues to bring together all the French-speaking cantons of Switzerland under a ...

  20. Tour de Romandie 2023: Gaviria sprints to triumph, Yates seals GC win

    Another interesting read: route 5th stage 2023 Tour de Romandie. Tour de Romandie 2023 - stage 5: route, profile, more. Click on the images to zoom. live tracker. route. profile interactive map. Twitter. videos. Tour de Romandie Stage 4. Adam Yates Fernando Gaviria. Watch the highlights of recent races here:

  21. Tour de Romandie 2023 Stage 4 results

    Stage 4 » Sion › Thyon 2000 (161.6km) Adam Yates is the winner of Tour de Romandie 2023 Stage 4, before Thibaut Pinot and Damiano Caruso. Adam Yates was leader in GC.

  22. Tour de Romandie: Gaviria wins final sprint as Adam Yates seals overall

    The final stage of the Tour de Romandie took the peloton over 170km from Vufflens-la-Ville to Geneva, with hilly ground along the way including second- and third-category climbs. With a flat run ...

  23. Tour de Romandie 2024

    Le Tour de Romandie 2024 est la 77 e édition de cette course cycliste sur route masculine. La compétition a lieu du 23 avril au 28 avril 2024 en Suisse, entre Payerne et Vernier. Cette course est reprise dans l'UCI World Tour 2024, le calendrier le plus important du cyclisme sur route.

  24. 2012 Tour de Romandie

    The 2012 Tour de Romandie was the 66th running of the Tour de Romandie cycling stage race. It started on 24 April in Lausanne and ended on 29 April in Crans-Montana and consisted of six stages, including a race-commencing prologue stage and a race-concluding individual time trial.It was the 14th race of the 2012 UCI World Tour season.. The race was won by Great Britain's Bradley Wiggins of ...

  25. 'He can win a Grand Tour'

    Uijtdebroeks has already performed well in his two years at Bora-Hansgrohe, taking eighth at last year's Vuelta a España, sixth at the Tour de Romandie, ninth at the Tour de Suisse and the ...

  26. Aleksandr Vlasov wins Tour de Romandie

    Aleksandr Vlasov claimed overall victory at the Tour de Romandie after winning the climactic uphill time trial. The Bora-Hansgrohe rider deposed Rohan Dennis (Jumbo-Visma) at the top of the ...