Tour de France 2024 – Richard Carapaz wins stage 17 as race returns to the Alps – live | Tour de France

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Top five on stage 17

1. Richard Carapaz
2. Simon Yates +37sec
3. Enric Mas +57sec
4. Laurens De Plus +1min 44sec
5. Oscar Onley +1min 44sec

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Pogačar jumps Vingegaard with about 300m to go! He might get a second or two more on the Danish rider with that move.

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Evenepoel has attacked and has about 80 metres gap from Vingegaard and Pogacar. Are those two bothered? I can’t tell.

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Richard Carapaz wins stage 17!

Smiles for Carapaz as he crosses the line and takes his first Tour de France stage win! The EF Education – Easypost rider has got the Grand Tour trio now, as he adds the Tour de France stage win to his previous Giro and Vuelta stage wins.

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1km to go: The race leaders are on the third category climb, the Côte de SuperDévoluy Good news for Romain Gregoire. He gets the combativity award today.

Vingegaard, Evenepoel and Pogacar are all together.

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2km to go: Vingegaard is with Evenpoel now and they’re gaining on Pogacar. There’s only about 30 metres between them now. Carapaz is still going strong out front.

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3km to go: Vingegaard is dropped by Pogačar. Evenepoel goes past and Vingegaard shakes his head.

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Pogačar attacks!

4km to go: Pogačar attacks and Vingegaard is on his wheel.

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6km to go: That move earlier from Ciccone fizzled out pretty quickly.

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10km to go: Carapaz’s gap on Yates has grown as they both descend. There’s about 18sec between them.

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12km to go: Mas is 30sec behind Carapaz. The Ecudorian rider is absolutely pushing it up this climb. The crowds here are so energised and I’ve even seen someone dressed as Santa Claus shouting encourgament to Carapaz. It’s July isn’t it?

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Carapaz attacks on the Col du Noyer

13km to go: Carapaz attacks! There’s 1.7km to the top of the Col du Noyer. Back in the yellow jersey group, Giulio Ciccone has made a move.

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14km to go: Carapaz has caught Simon Yates. Williams is now 37sec behind them.

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15km to go: Carapaz has dropped Williams and is putting down the power again to try to catch Simon Yates.

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16km to go: Carapaz and Williams are chasing Simon Yates and closing in on him. There’s about 4kms of the climb to go and Yates has a slim 4sec advantage on the duo behind him.

Simon Yates makes a break for it. Photograph: Jérôme Delay/AP
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17km to go: Madouas and Martin have joined the four in the break (Benoot, Jungels, Grégoire and Cort).

Simon Yates has caught the group and surpassed them on the climb. He’s on a mission!

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19km to go: Madouas and Martin are closing the gap on the breakaway. They’re just 10sec behind now. The next climb is the 7.5km first category Col du Noyer, with an average gradient of 8.1%.

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22km to go: In a bid to clear up who’s where, here’s a race situation update from the Tour de France race centre.

Race situation at the top of Col Bayard:

Leading the race: Tiesj Benoot (Visma-Lease a Bike), Bob Jungels (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe), Romain Grégoire (Groupama-FDJ), Magnus Cort (Uno-X)
+30sec: Guillaume Martin (Cofidis), Valentin Madouas (Groupama-FDJ)
+1min: 30 cyclists; among others: Van Aert (Visma), Sivakov (UAE), Yates (Jayco), De Plus, Thomas (Ineos), Armirail (Decathlon-Ag2r), Haig, Poels (Bahrain), Hirt (Soudal), Gaudu, Pacher (Groupama-FDJ), Carapaz (EF), Vanhoucke (Lotto), Williams (Israel), Mas, Aranburu (Movistar), Vauquelin, García Pierna, Rodríguez (Arkéa), Meintjes, Zimmermann (Intermarché), Bardet, Barguil, Onley (dsm-firmenich), Abrahamsen, Kulset (Uno-X), Cras, Jegat (TotalEnergies) …
+6min 40sec: Peloton

Does that make it easier to follow? I’m not sure, but it might help locate a rider of interest.

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24km to go: There’s a 30sec gap between the breakaway and two riders chasing them (Martin and Madouas). The larger counterattack group are 1min behind the brekaway.

Here are the results from the Col Bayard climb:

1. Magnus Cort (Uno-X), 5pts
2. Romain Gregoire (Groupama-FDJ), 3pts
3. Bob Jungels (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe), 2pts
4. Tiesj Benoot (Visma-Lease a Bike), 1pt

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26km to go: Here are some pictures from today’s stage via the newswires:

Intermarche – Wanty’s Louis Meintjes leads a pursuing group in the ascent of Col Bayard during stage 17 of the Tour de France 2024. Photograph: Thomas Samson/AFP/Getty Images
Riders in action during stage 17. Photograph: Stéphane Mahé/Reuters
Uno-X Mobility team’s Danish rider Magnus Cort, with his moustache dyed blue, cycles in a breakaway during stage 17 of the Tour de France 2024. Photograph: Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP/Getty Images
Spectators alongside a VW bus cheer Team Visma – Lease a Bike team’s Tiesj Benoot and Groupama – FDJ team’s Romain Gregoire during stage 17. Photograph: Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP/Getty Images
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33km to go: As the four-man breakaway plugs steadily away up the climb, riders have been dropping back from the big chasing group. Küng, Juul Jensen, Soler, Tejada, Dujardin, Denz and Thomas are among those that are out of the chasing group now.

The spectators on this climb are having fun, aren’t they?

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35km to go: While the riders climb, here’s an email from Pierre in Normandy about the broom wagon (voiture balai):

Hi Amy from wet and cold Normandy where I try to improve my fluency in English by reading your live coverage, and thank you for that. About Sam Bennett abandon:

Having chosen lastminute.com as the sponsor on the voiture balai, which is the most feared vehicle by all TdF riders, demonstrates that either (i) TdF directors have some humour or (ii) they (like me) should try to improve their English.

Have an nice afternoon.

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36km to go: There was a 1min 45sec gap between the chasing group (which now numbers 48 riders) and the breakaway at the foot of the Col Bayard. The yellow jersey group is 4min 55sec behind the break.

A group of 48 riders broke away, but before you ask, no we won’t into detail (there are a lot).🫠

Un groupe de 48 coureurs s’est échappé, ne comptez pas sur nous pour le détailler (ils sont beaucoup). 🫠#TDF2024 pic.twitter.com/bcBSvkW3ZO

— Tour de France™ (@LeTour) July 17, 2024

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38km to go: The breakway are coming up to today’s first classified climb. The second category Col Bayard is just under 7km with an avergae gradient of 7.3%.

Here’s an interesting fact for you today, via the official Tour de France website:

Col Bayard was the first Alpine pass to be climbed by Tour de France riders, having been ridden for the first time in 1905.

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46km to go: The breakaway has almost 4min on the yellow jersey group. A group of about 40 riders, including Gaudu, Mas and Van Aert have broken away in pursuit of the breakaway and are about 1min 33sec behind.

⏱️ Still 54’ lead for the leading quartet with almost 50 km to go.

⏱️ Toujours 54″ d’avance pour le quatuor de tête à près de 50 km de l’arrivée. #TDF2024 pic.twitter.com/o3CqRLklLY

— Tour de France™ (@LeTour) July 17, 2024

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49km to go: Here are the results of the intermediate sprint in Veynes:

1. Magnus Cort (Uno-X), 20pts
2. Romain Grégoire (Groupama-FDJ), 17pts
3. Tiesj Benoot (Visma-Lease a Bike), 15pts
4. Bob Jungels (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe), 13pts
5. Biniam Girmay (Intermarche-Wanty), 11pts
6. Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck), 10pts
7. Bryan Coquard (Cofidis), 9pts
8. Arnaud de Lie (Lotto-dstny), 8pts
9. Anthony Turgis (TotalEnergies), 7pts
10. Mike Teunissen (Intermarche-Wanty), 6pts
11. Robbe Ghys (Alpecin-Deceuninck), 5pts
12. Laurenz Rex (Intermarche-Wanty), 4pts
13. Jonas Abrahamsen (Uno-X), 3pts
14. Stefan Küng (Groupama-FDJ), 2pts
15. Sandy Dujardin (TotalEnergies), 1pt

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56km to go: Here’s how the points classification stands after the intermediate sprint results:

1. Biniam Girmay (Intermarche-Wanty), 387pts
2. Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck), 354pts
3. Bryan Coquard (Cofidis), 188pts

Elston has asked: “Do you think Bini has enough points to win the green jersey?” Well, Girmay has got a healthy lead in the points classification, so although nothing is guaranteed, it does look highly likely that he’ll be in the green jersey unless something drastic happens. He’s keeping close to Philipsen, so if he keeps doing that, his rival shouldn’t be able to catch him up on points with what’s left in the Tour.

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59km to go: So, Cort was the first to cross the intermediate sprint finish line, ahead of his breakaway companions Gregoire, Benoot and Jungels. But in news that will make Ollie in Kyiv happy (see 1.33pm BST), Girmay reacted strongly to Philipsen’s push towards the line. Girmay is looking to be in good form given his crash yesterday.

Magnus Cort at the front with his blue moustache, which he had promised to colour if his Instagram account reached 200,000 followers. He’s at 234,000 and counting. Photograph: Jérôme Delay/AP
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63km to go: The intermediate sprint is on us. There is up to 20 points to be earned for the points classification. The breakaway have ridden through but the interest is between Jasper Philipsen and Girmay to see how that unfolds.

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67km to go: Bill has been sending over very eloquent musings on the Tour stages, and today is no exception. Here is his latest take, via email:

Even though there’s only three categorised climbs on this stage, the profile is attritional. It begins with fifty miles of uphill, a brief slope down then another twenty miles. Then it goes again before hitting the hills with the numbers above them.

For a breakaway to work, they’ll need to spend so much energy getting a stomp on to escape the peloton, which will require teamwork. Then it’ll be a ride of thrilling heroics to drop Van Aert before he wins.

I think the yellow jersey will be on the end of some shenanigans today, to tire him out and soften him up before the next two stages. Have a great afternoon.”

Thanks Bill. Hope you have a great afternoon too!

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71km to go: The breakaway’s lead is staying steady for the moment at about 1min. Healy, who doesn’t seem to tire, tried to attack but was shut down. UAE Team Emirates have been cancelling out attacks.

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76km to go: The counterattack group have been caught and now the peloton are 1min behind the breakaway. The intermediate sprint will be coming up shortly.

James in Amsterdam has emailed in some thoughts:

Both Gaviria and Bennett, sprinters who abandoned the Tour today, used to ride for Quick Step. As did Fabio Jakobsen, who abandoned last week.

In fact the only sprinter to have ridden for Quick Step not to have abandoned this edition of the race (so far) is Mark Cavendish.

It seems that not only do sprinters win significantly fewer races when they leave Lefevere’s powerhouse squad, they also struggle to finish the Tour.”

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