1686401205 Criterium du Dauphine stage 7 live showdown in the

Critérium du Dauphiné stage 7 live – showdown in the high mountains – Cyclingnews

Update

2023-06-10T12:11:07.494Z

Ineos came to the fore on the Madeleine but happily took a back seat on the Mollard.

2023-06-10T12:10:03.188Z

Campenaerts holds its own on these gentle upper slopes of the Mollard. These climbs will suit his style, but again the group just rides at a steady pace with no one really slowing down.

2023-06-10T12:04:36.065Z

25.3 km to go

Charming gets caught. It’s called Campenaerts vs the Rest.

2023-06-10T12:03:06.095Z

Jumbo-Visma is now on the rise, approaching 90 seconds behind Campenaerts. They’re hot on Charmig’s heels now. The group may be smaller, but it’s still sizeable with 26 kilometers to go.

2023-06-10T11:59:56.716Z

Perez was caught by the peloton, who now want to catch up with Bayer. So now we only have two men ahead of us – Charamig by 30 seconds and Campenaerts by 1:45.

2023-06-10T11:58:44.234Z

In the middle chasing group, Charmig left Bayer and Perez behind.

2023-06-10T11:58:03.474Z

Four Jumbo Visma drivers at the top: Van Hooydonck, Van Baarle, Valter, Vingegaard. It looks like they have Benoot further down the group.

2023-06-10T11:53:54.061Z

Here you can find out what we are dealing with. The ascent becomes much gentler a few kilometers closer to the summit.

ASO

(Image credit: ASO) 2023-06-10T11:52:53.503Z

30 km to go

10km to the top of the Col du Mollard and Campenaerts will take the lead in the mountains classification if he can stay in the lead all the way to the top. He has 1:25 in hand.

2023-06-10T11:48:51.432Z

Campenaerts plays at his own pace. He’s losing time but is still 1:30 ahead of the three pursuers, but the peloton is now only two minutes closer.

2023-06-10T11:45:37.307Z

Even more mountain fun

COL DE LA CROIX DE FER FRANCE JUNE 10 A general view of the peloton climbing the Col de la Madeleine 1993m during the 75th Criterium du Dauphine 2023. Stage 7, a 1479km stage from PortedeSavoie to the Col de la Croix de Fer 2067m UCIWT on June 10, 2023 at Col de la Croix de Fer, France Photo by Dario BelingheriGetty Images

(Credit: Getty Images) 2023-06-10T11:45:18.026Z

Here is our sole leader on the mountain

COL DE LA CROIX DE FER FRANCE JUNE 10 Victor Campenaerts of Belgium and Team Lotto Dstny compete in the breakaway climb to the Col de at the 75th Criterium du Dauphine 2023 Stage 7, a 1479km stage from PortedeSavoie to the Col de la Croix de Fer la Madeleine 1993m to 2067m UCIWT on June 10, 2023 at Col de la Croix de Fer, France Photo by Dario BelingheriGetty Images

(Credit: Getty Images) 2023-06-10T11:37:17.381Z

35 km to go

Thompson is being caught by the peloton so we now have an easier situation on the Col du Mollard…

– Campenaerts leads solo
– Perez, Charmig, Bayer are at 1:50
– Peloton is at 3 minutes
– Gruppetto (incl. Laporte, Bjerg, Burgaudeau) takes 11 minutes

2023-06-10T11:34:22.374Z

Jumbo-Visma are back at the front of the peloton, taking over from Ineos who dictated the madeleine.

2023-06-10T11:31:29.227Z

The Latour group is quite predictably caught up by the peloton, which is 3:30 behind Campenaerts as they reach the Mollard.

2023-06-10T11:30:36.851Z

37.5 km to go

The Col du Mollard begins. Campenaerts makes it with a two-minute lead over Perez, Charmig and Bayer.

2023-06-10T11:29:30.204Z

Pierre Latour, I’m not kidding you, went on the offensive again. He is just ahead of the field in a trio with teammate Alexis Vuillermoz and Arkea-Samsic’s Simon Gugliemi.

2023-06-10T11:24:53.826Z

On the valley road leading to our final climbs, Campenaerts pulls away from the rest at full speed. Perez is now back with Charmig and Bayer and they are 90 seconds down on our solo leader.

2023-06-10T11:23:57.719Z

That was Ineos on the Madeleine a little earlier

COL DE LA CROIX DE FER FRANCE JUNE 10 Omar Fraile of Spain and Team INEOS Grenadiers lead the peloton during the 75th Criterium du Dauphine 2023, Stage 7, a 1479km stage from PortedeSavoie to the Col de la Croix de Fer 2067m UCIWT on June 10, 2023 in Col de la Croix de Fer France Photo by Dario BelingheriGetty Images

(Credit: Getty Images) 2023-06-10T11:14:51.521Z

Latour is back in the peloton. We were right all along – that’s the Pierre Latour thing anyway.

2023-06-10T11:14:25.784Z

We’ve come to the bottom of the descent and Campenaerts has lost some of their lead but is still 50 seconds ahead of Perez. Charmig and Bayer are at 1:10, while Thompson and Cavagna are at 1:50. Latour went through the groups.

2023-06-10T11:03:14.929Z

situation as it is

– Campenaerts
– Perez at 1:05
– Charmig and Bayer at 1:15
– Latour at 1:35
– Thompson and Cavagna at 2:00 p.m
– Peloton at 2:25

2023-06-10T11:01:34.211Z

Latour is now actually at the top of the mountains classification, but was left behind by Charmig and Bayer on this descent.

2023-06-10T11:01:10.272Z

KOM points at the Col de la Madeleine

1. Victor Campenaerts (Lotto Dstny), 15 points
2. Anthony Perez (Cofidis), 12 pts
3. Pierre Latour (Total Energies), 10 points
4. Anthon Charmig (Uno X), 8 pts
5. Tobias Bayer (Alpecin Deceuninck), 6 pts
6. Rémi Cavagna (Soudal Quick-Step), 5 pts
7. Reuben Thompson (Groupama-FDJ), 4 points
8. Omar Fraile (Ineos Grenadiers), 3 pts
9. Jonathan Castroviejo (Ineos Grenadiers), 2 pts
10. Egan Bernal (Ineos Grenadiers), 1 pt

2023-06-10T11:00:27.073Z

For those who are just joining, I’ll try to recap

After a quick start we had a group of four – Victor Campenaerts (Lotto-Dstny), Remi Cavagna (Soudal-QuickStep), Anthony Perez (Cofidis) and Madis Mihkels (Intermarché-Circus-Wanty) – followed by a four-man chasing group – Anthon Charmig (Uno-X), Tobias Bayer (Alpecin-Deceuninck), Reuben Thompson (Groupama-FDJ) and Matteo Vercher (TotalEnergies) – and then the peloton.

On the Col de la Madeleine, Campenaerts dropped first Mihkels, then Cavagna and then Perez to lead alone by a minute over Perez. Cavagna, Mihkels, Thompson and Vercher then fell behind Charmig and Bayer, who were later joined by Pierre Latour (TotalEnergies), who attacked from within the group and used Vercher to cross.

Latour made his move just before Ineos came forward to set a high pace, thinning the group and reducing the gap to the breakaway to just 2:30.

2023-06-10T10:54:40.596Z

It’s a long descent now and we might see some lineup changes on the way down.

2023-06-10T10:51:58.262Z

The peloton is only 2:30 from Campenaerts as it goes over the top. Ineos took on the Madeleine, loosening up the group while taking advantage of the break. The stage winner today will certainly come from the GC group.

2023-06-10T10:50:38.697Z

Top of the Madeleine – 72 km to go

Campenaerts leads solo over the Col de la Madeleine on Stage 7 of the Dauphiné. What’s impressive is that he’s pulled out a one-minute lead on those upper slopes, with Perez his closest pursuer.

2023-06-10T10:48:30.086Z

Latour made it to the chasing group with Charmig and Bayer. Thompson was excluded from this group.

2023-06-10T10:41:39.916Z

And now Perez is distanced, leaving Campenaerts alone in the lead on the upper slopes of the Madeleine.

2023-06-10T10:35:22.553Z

Up front Cavagna is distanced by Campenaerts and Perez.

2023-06-10T10:34:40.044Z

Mihkels has also been dropped from the chasing group and will be back in the field shortly.

2023-06-10T10:29:30.216Z

Vercher fell off after helping Latour on his way. The Frenchman had some brief banter earlier on this live blog but he came within 2:20 of the leader of the race.

2023-06-10T10:28:28.322Z

Matteo Jorgenson (Movistar) is among those who have now been dropped. He has already lost a lot of time on the 5th stage. Higher profile riders like David De La Cruz (Astana) and AG2R duo Nans Peters and Franck Bonnamour are also unable to keep up, which is an indication of the pace Ineos is setting.

2023-06-10T10:22:51.976Z

Former yellow jersey Mikkel Bjerg (UAE’s Team Emirates) is out as the peloton shrinks under pressure from Ineos.

2023-06-10T10:21:22.603Z

The Ineos Grenadiers take on the peloton

The gap to the leaders had shrunk back to over five minutes but is now closing again as the team of Egan Bernal, Dani Martinez and Carlos Rodriguez look to assert themselves on stage.

2023-06-10T10:19:48.335Z

Mihkels is eliminated from the leading group.

2023-06-10T10:09:50.024Z

More attacks from the group now halfway up the Col de la Madeleine, Simon Guglielmi (Arkéa Samsic), followed by Valentin Madouas (Groupama-FDJ) and Eduardo Sepulveda (Lotto-Dstny).

2023-06-10T10:05:03.710Z

Latour has another teammate in that chasing group, Vercher, who is now stepping back to help.

2023-06-10T09:58:44.348Z

Latour has pulled away from his spotted teammate Burgaudeau but is just ahead of the peloton. It’s classic Pierre Latour stuff.

2023-06-10T09:51:00.166Z

A few more – Kevin Geniets (Groupama-FDJ), James Shaw (EF Education-EasyPost) and Gianmarco Garofoli (Astana Qazaqstana) – try to chase after them, but to no avail.

2023-06-10T09:50:10.312Z

Now we’re on the first HC climb of the Dauphiné and have some fresh attacks from the peloton. TotalEnergies is trying to go with a duo of Pierre Latour and Mathieu Burgaudeau.

2023-06-10T09:47:18.164Z

That’s what we’re dealing with.

ASO

(Image credit: ASO) 2023-06-10T09:46:54.503Z

97 km to go

Anyway, we’re slowing down now as the riders reach the lower slopes of the Col de la Madeleine. The breakaway quartet (Campenaerts, Cavagna, Perez, Mihkels) has a 90 second lead over the four pursuers (Charmig, Bayer, Thompson, Vercher) and 5:30 over the peloton.

2023-06-10T09:44:34.058Z

50.7 km driven in the first hour. Rush.

2023-06-10T09:43:59.663Z

This was the breakaway group that had formed a little earlier.

COL DE LA CROIX DE FER FRANCE JUNE 10 LR Rmi Cavagna of France and Team Soudal Quick Step Victor Campenaerts of Belgium and Team Lotto Dstny Anthony Perez of France and Team Cofidis and Madis Mihkels of Estonia and Team Intermarch Circus Wanty compete during the breakaway 75th Criterium du Dauphine 2023 Stage 7 a 1479km stage from PortedeSavoie to the Col de la Croix de Fer 2067m UCIWT on 10 June 2023 at Col de la Croix de Fer France Photo by Dario BelingheriGetty Images

(Credit: Getty Images) 2023-06-10T09:36:58.400Z

100 km to go

Almost time to move up and the top quartet has nearly five minutes for a peloton led by Jumbo-Visma. The four pursuers are in between, 90 seconds behind the leader of the race.

2023-06-10T09:29:29.624Z

The gap now increases to four minutes as we approach the Madeleine.

2023-06-10T09:22:22.738Z

The peloton allows the four leaders to extend their lead to almost three minutes. This quartet is still stuck in no man’s land at 45 seconds.

2023-06-10T09:17:39.836Z

The rising breakaway reaches the intermediate sprint at Grignon after 29km and it is Mihkels who is first at the finish line ahead of Campenaerts and Perez.

2023-06-10T09:16:40.474Z

The peloton has started to calm down, but not without a fresh wave of attacks that sent another group of four into a counterattack chase. It features Anthon Charmig (Uno-X), Tobias Bayer (Alpecin-Deceuninck), Reube Thompson (Groupama-FDJ) and Matteo Vercher (Total Energies).

2023-06-10T09:14:38.069Z

Finally we have a parade with some daylight and it consists of Victor Campenaerts (Lotto-Dstny), Remi Cavagna (Soudal-QuickStep), Anthony Perez (Cofidis) and Madis Mihkels (Intermarché-Circus-Wanty).

2023-06-10T09:02:04.006Z

128 km to go

In about 10km we have an intermediate sprint ahead of us, after that it’s about 20km to the foot of the Madeleine, who could act as judge and jury in this breakaway fight.

2023-06-10T09:00:33.867Z

But that’s no use.

2023-06-10T09:00:10.163Z

Mathieu Burgaudeau (TotalEnergies), leader in the mountains classification and wearer of the polka-dot jersey, dares to take the latest step.

2023-06-10T08:56:39.635Z

Still fast and furious with no breakaway formed. At least we get to the mountains quickly and quickly.

2023-06-10T08:47:11.507Z

The appetite for the outlier is great. A fast start with a lot of attacks, but nothing stuck in the first kilometers.

2023-06-10T08:44:54.744Z

We’re off!

The riders reach kilometer zero, the flag is waved and the seventh stage of the Dauphiné is underway.

2023-06-10T08:42:59.033Z

We’re about to start, so now it’s time to catch up on yesterday’s action, including a Stage 6 report, the latest standings and lots of nice photos.

Critérium du Dauphiné: Zimmerman wins Stage 6 despite GC stalemate

2023-06-10T08:40:05.718Z

This is a crucial day in the fight for the overall title. The final stage tomorrow is tough and features some steep sections including the spectacular finish above Grenoble, but today’s stage hosts the bigger mountains.

After about 50 km on the flat, it first goes up to the Col de la Madeleine (25.1 km at 6.2%), then it goes to the lesser known Col du Mollard (18.5 km at 5.8%) and fast continue to the summit finish at the Col de la Croix de Fer (13.1 km at 6.2%).

That final climb doesn’t seem like much, but it’s sort of split in two, with a gentle initial section followed by a fairly violent final 5km.

2023-06-10T08:33:53.590Z

The riders have already rolled out and are currently working their way through the neutral zone before the actual stage begins.

2023-06-10T08:32:12.857Z

The starting line at Porte de Savoie was a little earlier here.

ASO

(Image credit: ASO) 2023-06-10T08:21:22.352Z

Good morning! Today we have an early start on the Dauphiné and we have a monster stage ahead of us, with more than 4,000 meters of climbing, while the race in the Alps gets really serious.