Tim Merlier made it two from two at Paris-Good on Monday, sprinting to a powerful victory on stage two of the race whereas carrying the chief’s yellow jersey.
None of Merlier’s rivals have been in a position to match his deadly flip of pace, with the reigning European champion taking a comparatively simple sixth win of the 12 months after being completely arrange within the ending straight. It adopted victory on stage one, too.
French duo Emilien Jeannière of TotalEnergies and Hugo Web page of Intermarche-Wanty took second and third respectively, with Mads Pedersen (Lidl-Trek) and Alexander Kristoff (Uno-X Mobility) finishing the highest 5. Pedersen and Kristoff later moved up a spot every after Web page was relegated for an irregular dash.
“It’s one to recollect, for positive,” Merlier mentioned afterwards. “I feel that is the primary time in my profession that I’ve gained whereas carrying the chief’s jersey. It was a bit annoying at this time because the breakaway was taking part in with us slightly, I feel. Ultimately Abrahamsen was actually robust and stayed a very long time in entrance. However the workforce did a very good job for me once more.”
A number of crashes occurred on the street, and Merlier defined that he was compelled to chase again after choosing up a mechanic difficulty because of one of many incidents. “There was a crash earlier than me and there wasn’t time to interrupt. Somebody hit me from the again and my wheel was damaged so I wanted to alter the bike,” he mentioned.
Merlier joked that stage three’s workforce time trial ought to, on paper, spell the top of his stint in yellow, however mentioned his Soudal Fast-Step workforce would do every little thing inside their energy to tug off a shock.
“In fact, we’re going to attempt however it is going to be very troublesome, I feel,” he added with a smile.
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(Picture credit score: Getty Photographs)
The race preceded with out a lot incident, till 42 kilometres have been left to race when an enormous pile up took out massive numbers of riders. A number of have been seen swinging into the farmland alongside the slim street with a view to keep away from the chaos. Frenchman Florian Sénéchal (Arkéa–B&B Lodges) was loaded into an ambulance along with his arm strapped up.
The occasions again down the street performed into the fingers of the final man standing from the day’s breakaway, Jonas Abrahamsen of Uno-X Mobility. The Norwegian rider was a part of an preliminary three-rider transfer, however his breakaway compatriots have been unable to stay with the laborious tempo set by the 29-year-old. Abrahamsen had a lead of greater than a minute because the riders entered the ultimate part of racing.
The peloton step by step ate into Abramsen’s lead as he approached the 20 kilometre to go banner, with Visma-Lease a Bike being certainly one of a number of groups jostling for place on the head of the pack, seeking to get organised forward of an anticipated dash end in Bellegarde.
Abrahamsen led the race into the ending circuit for what can be the race’s first passage throughout the road, sweeping up six bonus seconds for his efforts.
In the meantime. Soudal Fast-Step had the European Champion, and winner of the primary stage, Tim Merlier, well-placed because the peloton got here by way of the centre of Bellegarde. A small crash within the peloton brought on just a few small splits, which quickly caught out a number of GC riders, permitting Abrahamsen to push on with the true end drew nearer. His lead stood at 35 seconds with beneath ten kilometres to race.
Abrahamsen was lastly caught by the onrushing peloton with two and a half kilometres to go. The peloton tore beneath the flamme rouge with Visma-Lease a Bike, Lidl-Trek and Soudal Fast-Step main the cost. However in the long run, no person might cease Merlier, because the Belgian cantered to a second successive stage win.
2025 Paris-Good stage 2, Montesson > Bellegarde (183 km)
1. Tim Merlier (Bel) Soudal Fast-Step, in 4:11:29
2. Emilien Jeanniere (Fra) Complete Energies,
3. Mads Pedersen 9Den) Lidl-Trek,
4. Alexander Kristoff (Nor) Uno-X Mobility
5. Timo Kielich (Bel) Alpecin-Deceuninck,
6. Axel Zingle (Fra) Visma-Lease a Bike,
7. Arnaud Demare (Fra) Arkea B&B Lodges,
8. Matevz Govekar (Slo) Bahrain Victorious,
9. Fabio Jakobsen (Ned) Picnic PostNL,
10. Cees Bol (Ned) Astana Qazaqstan, all at similar time
Normal classification after stage two
1. Tim Merlier (Bel) Soudal Fast-Step, in 7:43:12
2. Arnaud Démare (Fra) Arkéa-B&B Lodges, +14s
3. Jhonatan Narváez (European) UAE Workforce Emirates-XRG, st
4. Matteo Jorgensen (USA) Visma-Lease a Bike, st
5. Jhontan Narvaez (European) UAE Workforce Emirates-CRG, st
6. Jonas Abrahamsen (Nor) Uno-X Mobility, st
7. mads Pedersen 9Den) Lidl-Trek, +16s
8. Mick van Dijke (Ned) Pink Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe, st
9. Alberto Dainese (Ita) Tudor Professional Biking, st
10. Magnus Sheffield (USA) Ineos Grenadiers, +18s
