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Laura Weislo

Tour de France: Pello Bilbao scorches sprint from breakaway to win stage 10

Pello Bilbao of Bahrain Victorious sprints to stage 10 victory ahead of Georg Zimmermann and four other riders in the breakaway group (Image credit: ANNECHRISTINE POUJOULAT AFP via Getty Images)
Pello Bilbao of Bahrain Victorious sprints to stage 10 victory from breakaway group (Image credit: David Ramos/Getty Images)
Bahrain Victorious' Spanish rider Pello Bilbao wins stage 10 (Image credit: ANNE-CHRISTINE POUJOULAT AFP via Getty Images)
Spanish rider Pello Bilbao (Bahrain Victorious) hits full gas to the finish line and wins stage 10 (Image credit: ANNE-CHRISTINE POUJOULAT AFP via Getty Images)
Pello Bilbao (R) celebrates after winning the 10th stage (Image credit: GONZALO FUENTES / POOL AFP via Getty Images)
Ben O'Connor of AG2R Citroën Team crosses the finish line in third (Image credit: Michael Steele/Getty Images)
Chasing in the peloton headed to final climb are Carlos Rodriguez and Tom Pidcock of Ineos Grenadiers (Image credit: David Ramos/Getty Images)
Finishing as final pair from breakaway, Julian Alaphilippe (right) of Soudal-QuickStep in 10th place acknowledges Warren Barguil of Arkéa-Samsic in ninth (Image credit: David Ramos/Getty Images)
Driving the front of the lead group of 14 riders with under 75km to go is Michal Kwiatkowski (Ineos Grenadiers) (Image credit: David Ramos/Getty Images)
Jonas Vingegaard of Jumbo-Visma, in the Yellow leader's jersey, rides behind Tadej Pogačar of UAE Team Emirates, in the White best young jersey during stage 10 (Image credit: David Ramos/Getty Images)
Julian Alaphilippe (Soudal-QuickStep) competes in the breakaway (Image credit: David Ramos/Getty Images)
The peloton on stage 10 of the 2023 Tour de France (Image credit: Getty Images)
Esteban Chaves of EF Education-EasyPost climbs the Col de la Croix Saint-Robert at the front of the race while fans cheer (Image credit: David Ramos/Getty Images)
Warren Barguil of Arkéa-Samsic on the Col de la Croix Saint-Robert in chase mode (Image credit: David Ramos/Getty Images)
Julian Alaphilippe and Matej Mohoric attack early on stage 10 (Image credit: Getty Images)
Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) in the white best young rider jersey rides in front of Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) who wears the yellow leader's jersey (Image credit: Getty Images)
Alberto Bettiol of EF Education-EasyPost (left) and Michal Kwiatkowski of Ineos Grenadiers charging across final 75km in the breakaway (Image credit: Getty Images)
A general view of the peloton passing through a village during stage 10, with 167.2km from Vulcania to Issoire (Image credit: David Ramos/Getty Images)
Yevgeniy Fedorov (Astana Qazaqstan) rides in peloton alongside Neilson Powless (EF Education-EasyPost), in the Polka dot Mountain Jersey (Image credit: David Ramos/Getty Images)
Krists Neilands of Israel-Premier Tech and Bryan Coquard of Cofidis compete in the breakaway early on stage 10 (Image credit: David Ramos/Getty Images)
Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) in the Yellow leader jersey recognises his rival Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) in the White best young jersey at the start in Vulcania (Image credit: David Ramos/Getty Images)
Race leader Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) wears a special cooling vest prior to the stage 10 start on a hot day (Image credit: David Ramos/Getty Images)
Stage 10 winner Pello Bilbao of Bahrain Victorious celebrates at podium and dedicates the victory to his teammate Gino Mäder who died at the Tour de Suisse earlier this year (Image credit: Michael Steele/Getty Images)
Jonas Vingegaard of Jumbo-Visma celebrates at podium as Yellow leader jersey winner (Image credit: Michael Steele/Getty Images)
Krists Neilands of Israel-Premier Tech celebrates as most combative rider for stage 10 (Image credit: Michael Steele/Getty Images)

Pello Bilbao (Bahrain Victorious) claimed the first stage victory of his career in Issoire on stage 10 of the Tour de France.

The cagey Spaniard made the day's breakaway, helped chase down a dangerous attack from Israel Premier-Tech's Krists Neilands and then out-sprinted Georg Zimmerman (Intermarché-Circus-Wanty) and Ben O'Connor (AG2R Citroën) to take the win.

It has been a long time coming for the 33-year-old Basque rider and an emotional victory not only because it was his first, but because of the recent death of his teammate Gino Mäder which rocked the team last month.

"A first victory in the Tour after 13 years, it's such a special moment for me," Bilbao said.

"I crossed the line and just put out all the anger I had inside, remembering the reason for this victory," he said, pointing to the team's special jersey emblem remembering Mäder. "It's a special one for Gino. It was the only reason. It was hard to prepare the last two weeks with him in mind. I put all my positive energy to do something nice in the Tour."

The Grand Départ of the Tour was on his home soil in the town eponymous with his surname, but he missed the split on stage 1. Since then, he has bided his time patiently and struck out on a viciously tough opening to the stage.

"I wanted to do something in the first stages which were special for me. It was not possible. I just waited for my moment.

"We started the stage full focus - yesterday we checked the first 40km and we were expecting a hard race day after the rest day. In a critical moment, we were five teammates in the first 20 riders. I just wanted to make the right group if it was possible."

With just 5km to go, Bilbao was in a group chasing solo leader Neilands, but patiently worked to reel him in with 3km remaining.

"Neilands did an impressive attack. I think he was the strongest one but he spent a lot of energy with a hard wind in the face," Bilbao said. "In the back group, we collaborated and in the last 3km I knew I was probably the fastest man in the group. I took the responsibility, I closed the gap to O'Connor first, then with cold blood let Zimmermann make his sprint and got on the wheel and then went full in the last 200 metres without thinking of nothing."

The breakaway gained 2:53 on the group containing race leader Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma), rival Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) third-placed Jai Hindley (Bora-Hansgrohe) and Carlos Rodriguez (Ineos Grenadiers) to keep the top four in the GC standings the same.

However, with the time bonus, Bilbao moved up from 11th place at 7:37 to fifth at 4:34, overtaking Adam Yates (UAE Team Emirates), Simon Yates (Jayco-AlUla), Tom Pidcock (Ineos Grenadiers), David Gaudu (Groupama-FDJ) and Sepp Kuss (Jumbo-Visma).

How it unfolded

The finishing times belied the intensity of the stage which only saw the breakaway truly escape halfway into the stage.

Stage 10 was a wickedly hilly 167.2 kilometre route from Vulcania to Issoire, and started with the usual flurry of attacks as the course headed up the Col de la Moréno (4.8km at 4.7%) from the drop of the flag.

The climb was too much for the first few attacks, but Rémi Cavagna (Soudal-QuickStep), Matteo Jorgenson (Movistar) Michał Kwiatkowski (Ineos Grenadiers), Ion Izagirre (Cofidis), Anthon Charmig (Uno-X), Corbin Strong and Krists Neilands (Israel-Premier Tech) formed an early group.

Just before the top of the Moréno, Romain Bardet (Team dsm-firmenich) attacked to bridge across and stirred a hornet nest in the peloton, creating a chain reaction that rapidly sent the sprinters out the back as the yellow jersey himself Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) were part of an attack behind after only 14km of racing.

Pogačar made the move but Jai Hindley (Bora-Hansgrohe), Tom Pidcock and Carlos Rodriguez (Ineos Grenadiers) and David Gaudu (Groupama-FDJ) missed out, raising the alarm bells in the peloton behind.

Cavagna continued forcing the pace and making the GC men decide how to use their bullets, while Ineos Grenadiers led the chase 50-second behind.

Finally, Vingegaard and Pogačar opted not to become anchor weights for the escape and Ben Turner was able to close the final gap to the maillot jaune with just 17 kilometres done.

Charmig led Cavagna over the top of the Col de la Moréno, but had only a slight gap over the chasing bunch, where Bilbao continued to bide his time.

Col de Guéry

On the lower slopes of the Col de Guéry (7.8km at 5%) still with 147km to go, Van Aert attacked from the chasing group sparking a massive reformation of the race situation.

The peloton caught the attackers with 6.6km still to climb, Kwiatkowski went again with Neilands, Skjelmose, Clement Champoussin (Arkéa-Samsic) and Louis Meintjes (Intermarché-Circus-Wanty).

Meanwhile, the vicious start to the stage sent Bardet and David Gaudu (Groupama-FDJ) out the back in a chasing group and in danger of losing time.

Wout Poels (Bahrain Victorious) led Neilands atop Col de Guéry with the yellow jersey group hot on their heels. Neilands sat up and was replaced by Julian Alaphilippe (Soudal-QuickStep) in the lead with Poels on the descent.

Breakaway and regrouping behind

It wasn't until the undulating approach to the intermediate sprint in Le Mont-Dore that the day's breakaway finally began to solidify.

Bilbao, together with Esteban Chaves (EF Education-EasyPost), Kasper Asgreen (Soudal-QuickStep), Mattias Skjelmose (Lidl-Trek), Zimmermann, Nick Schultz (Israel-Premier Tech) and Warren Barguil (Arkéa-Samsic) came together with just a 14-second lead over the maillot jaune as more attacks flew from the second group on the road.

O'Connor, his GC hopes dashed in the first week, followed Antonio Pedrero (Movistar) as he attacked to go across. Anthony Perez (Cofidis), Julian Alaphilippe (Soudal-QuickStep) and Harold Tejada (Astana Qazaqstan).

Asgreen led across the intermediate sprint line as the chasers closed to within 20 seconds and in the peloton behind, Philipsen took the final point available behind the leaders in Le Mont-Dore.

Barguil followed a surge from Chavez on the next climb, the Col de la Croix Saint-Robert but didn't push too hard to lose their breakaway companions over the top, while Asgreen dropped back to help Alaphilippe get to the lead group.

Barguil attacked again on the next climb but Chavez mowed him down to take the points on the Côte de Saint-Victor-la-Rivière. The surge opened a bigger gap to Alaphilippe's group and they fought for 20 kilometres before finally making contact with 86km remaining.

The race finally settled into a normal rhythm and the reformed breakaway held a steady lead of around three minutes for most of the stage.

The finale

With 55km to go, Neilands tried to go it alone as Alpecin-Deceuninck poured on the power in the chase, bringing the lead down to 2:20.

The first chase began to disintegrate behind Neilands and Chavez sensed an opportunity to bridge. Neilands led over the final climb, the Côte de la Chapelle-Marcousse, with Chavez taking the last point behind.

Neilands opened up a lead of 35 seconds as Alaphilippe, Barguil, Skjelmose and Kwiatkowski let go of the chasing group, leaving only Bilbao, Chavez, O'Connor, Zimmermann and Pedrero in pursuit of Neilands and Schlutz headed back to the peloton.

With the gap to the maillot jaune group hovering at 3:30 it looked to be going the breakaway's way with 25km to go - it only remained to be seen what became of the leader and his poursuivants. Ineos began to scramble to keep Bilbao from overtaking Pidcock in the GC.

The Chavez group were at 20 seconds and Alaphilippe's at 50 seconds with 20km to go, and began to reel in Neilands on the fast run-in to Issoire. The gap to Bilbao's group was down to the single digits at the 5km to go mark, with Alaphilippe's hopes snuffed out at 25 seconds.

The chasers could see Neilands with 4km to go and he kept looking at his legs for more power but he couldn't hold them off and they caught him with 3km to go - but they could not relent because the gap to the next group was coming down.

Zimmermann attacked at the red kite and Bilbao was quickly on his wheel and, despite a chase back thanks to O'Connor, the Spaniard claimed the stage and the time bonus to move up in the GC.

Results

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