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#AUTOMATIC FISHERMAN PROFESSIONAL#
Saturday 23 July: Stage 20 – Lacapelle-Marival - Rocamadour (time trial, 40.308 Tactical is a team of professional instructors with current and past involvement in law enforcement, SWAT, military, executive protection, and 3 letter agencies we won't mention here, not to mention their certifications which are too long to list. Thursday 21 July: Stage 18 – Lourdes-Hautacam (143.5km)įriday 22 July: Stage 19 – Castelnau-Magnoac – Cahors (188.5km) Wednesday 20 July: Stage 17 – Saint-Gaudens-Peyragudes (130km) Tuesday 19 July: Stage 16 – Carcassonne-Foix (178,5km) Sunday 17 July: Stage 15 – Rodez-Carcassonne (202.5km) -Won by Jasper Philipsen (Belgium). Saturday 16 July: Stage 14 – Saint Etienne-Mende (192.5km) - Won by Michael Matthews (Australia). Thursday 14 July: Stage 12 – Briancon-Alpe d’Huez (165.5km) - Won by Tom Pidcock, Jonas Vingegaard keeps overall lead.įriday 15 July: Stage 13 – Le Bourg d’Oisans-Saint Etienne (193km) - Won by Mads Pedersen. Wednesday 13 July: Stage 11 – Albertville-Col du Granon Serre Chevalier (152km) - Won by Jonas Vingegaard, who claimed the yellow jersey. Tuesday 12 July: Stage 10 – Morzine Les Portes du Soleil-Megeve (148.5km) - Won by Magnus Cort (Denmark), Tadej Pogacar hangs on his overall lead. Sunday 10 July: Stage 9 – Aigle-Chatel les Portes du Soleil (193km) - Won by Bob Jungels (Luxembourg), who claimed his first Le Tour stage victory. Sat 9 July: Stage 8 – Dole-Lausanne (186.5km) - Won by Wout van Aert (Belgium), who increased his green jersey classification lead. Thu 7 July: Stage 6 – Binche-Longwy (220km) - Won by Tadej Pogacar (Slovenia), who took the overall race lead.įri 8 July: Stage 7 – Tomblaine-La Super Planche de Belles Filles (176.5 km) - Won by Tadej Pogacar (Slovenia), who increased his overall lead Wed 6 July: Stage 5 – Lille Metropole-Arenburg Porte du Hainaut (157 km) - Won by Simon Clarke (Australia), Wout van Aert (Belgium) retained overall race lead. Tue 5 July: Stage 4 – Dunkerque-Calais (171.5 km) - Won by Wout van Aert (Belgium), who retained overall race lead. Mon 4 July: Transfer Day - from Denmark to France. Wout van Aert (Belgium) retained overall race lead. Sun 3 July: Stage 3 – Vejle-Sonderborg (182 km) - Won by Dylan Groenewegen (Netherlands). Wout van Aert (Belgium) claimed overall race lead. Sat 2 July: Stage 2 – Roskilde-Nyborg (202.5 km) - Won by Fabio Jakobsen (Netherlands). Schedule and stage winners: Day-by-day route of 2022 Tour de Franceįri 1 July: Stage 1 – Copenhagen-Copenhagen (time trial, 13.2 km) - Won by Yves Lampaert (Belgium), who also took the yellow jersey for overall lead of the race's general classification. READ: Jonas Vingegaard: From fisherman to Grand Tour contender READ: Everything you need to know about this year's Tour de France. On Monday the riders take a well earned day off. Kruijswijk broke his collarbone in a crash at 135 km which also saw van Aert come off his bike, before Jumbo-Visma were involved in another accident 10 km later involving Vingegaard, who went down along with his team-mate Tiesj Benoot. Jonas Vingegaard retained the yellow jersey despite a crash and after losing two important team-mates for the coming mountains: Primoz Roglic and Steven Kruijswijk.

We just had to wait, and today was the day." It’s been a tough Tour we believe it was possible I am so happy. I knew I had to make some positions and it was good I could pass Mads. "I knew Wout was coming close, and I also knew the finishing line. I cannot believe it," Philipsen, who sealed his first Tour de France stage victory, said after. I know what it was like to lose so many times, it was incredible. It was a sprint right to the line, with 24-year-old Philipsen just edging ahead of Wout van Aert, with Mads Pedersen in third and Peter Sagan fourth. The Belgian Alpecin-Deceuninck rider was part of the pack that chased down and overtook breakaway rider Benjamin Thomas on the final straight. Jasper Philipsen won an action-packed Stage 15 at road cycling's 2022 Tour de France that saw several riders, including race leader Jonas Vingegaard, involved in crashes on Sunday (17 July).
