Valentin Ferron brought a second victory to his TotalEnergies team at this 2022 edition of the Critérium du Dauphiné. On Friday, the young Frenchman, a member of the breakaway of the day, sniffed out the right move by escaping solo in the last kilometer of the course of the sixth stage which counted 196, between Rives and Gap.
The peloton counting in its ranks the holder of the yellow jersey Wout Van Aert (Jumbo-Visma) showed a deficit of 32 seconds on the Frenchman. Quebecer James Piccoli (Israel – Premier Tech) crossed the finish line in 116th place with a delay of 3 minutes 30 seconds.
The six breakaway riders held a lead of 2 minutes 45 seconds with 20 kilometers to go. The Jumbo-Vismas in the yellow jersey started their train to get back to the front of the race and the gap fell below the one-minute mark with 5 kilometers from the finish, but even rolling at more than 65 km/h, the peloton was only able to make up about fifteen seconds.
“The guys are starting to get tired in the peloton,” Piccoli said straight away in an interview with Sportcom after the stage. “All the riders in the breakaway were super strong today (Friday). If the peloton wanted to catch the guys, you had to really push and eventually they surrendered (all the way). »
Ferron wins his second professional victory. His first was signed last year, as part of the fourth stage of the Tour of Rwanda (2.1). The Frenchman was then ahead of his compatriot Pierre Rolland (B&B Hotels – KTM), also second on Friday. James Piccoli finished second in the final classification of this Tour.
The Montrealer mentioned that he tried his luck to take the right breakaway, without however succeeding, knowing that it was a double or nothing for him if he wanted to preserve his energies for the mountain stage. the next day.
“It took almost an hour and a half for a breakaway to come out and we were going 50 km/h. It was really super demanding because of the tailwind and the climbs in the course. Everyone forced,” added the 30-year-old cyclist.
No change in the provisional general classification where the Belgian Wout van Aert still holds a lead of just over a minute over the Italian Mattia Cattaneo (Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl Team). James Piccoli is 111th (+24 minutes 50 seconds).
The penultimate stage of the Critérium du Dauphiné will be presented on Saturday. On the menu, the mythical passes of the Galibier and the Croix de Fer classified out of category will spice up the 135 kilometer route between Saint-Chaffrey and Vaujany.
“Honestly, it’s going to be a super tough day for everyone and I hope my body is going to be there tomorrow,” Piccoli concluded.
Zukowsky climbs the Tour ZLM
In the Netherlands, the Italian Jakub Mareczko (Alpecin-Fenix) deprived the Dutchman Olav Kooij (Jumbo-Visma) of a third victory in a row at the Tour ZLM (2.Pro). Mareczko had also finished second behind Kooij in the first stage. The only Canadian registered, Nickolas Zukowsky (+21 seconds, Human Powered Health) finished in the second group, in 62nd place.
This victory for the Italian allows him to move up two places in the general classification, 12 seconds behind Kooijé. Forty-fifth the day before, Zukowsky climbed to 41st place (+2 minutes 5 seconds).
The relief of Saturday’s stage is flat, which suggests a massive sprint finish in the streets of Mierlo at the end of the 196 kilometers that will await the cyclists.
Classification of the 6th stage :
1. Valentin Ferron (FRA / TotalEnergies), the 196.5 km in 4 h 22:17.
(average: 44.951 km/h)
2. Pierre Rolland (FRA / BBH) at 03.
3. Warren Barguil (FRA/ARK) 03.
4. Andrea Bagioli (ITA/QST) 03.
5. Geoffrey Bouchard (FRA/AG2) 03.
6. Victor Lafay (FRA/COF) 03.
7. Edvald Boasson Hagen (NOR/TEN) 32.
8. Dylan Groenewegen (NED/BIK) 32.
9. Matis Louvel (FRA / ARK) 32.
10. Jordi Meeus (BEL/BOR) 32.
11. Wout van Aert (BEL/JUM) 32.
…
21. Damiano Caruso (ITA/BAH) 32.
27. David Gaudu (FRA/GFJ) 32.
28. Tobias Johannessen (NOR/UNO) 32.
31. Primoz Roglic (SLO/JUM) 32.
33. Jack Haig (AUS/BAH) 32.
35. Brandon McNulty (USA/UAE) 32.
39. Tao Geoghegan Hart (GBR/INE) 32.
40. Jonas Vingegaard (DEN/JUM) 32.
41. Eddie Dunbar (IRL/INE) 32.
49. Ben O’Connor (AUS/AG2) 32.
56. Enric Mas (ESP/MOV) 32.
70. Rémi Cavagna (FRA / QST) 32.
71. Valentin Madouas (FRA/GFJ) 32.
85. Jan Hirt (CZE/INT) 32.
86. Wilco Kelderman (NED/BOR) 32.
98. Aurélien Paret-Peintre (FRA/AG2)
100. Benjamin Thomas (FRA/COF) 51.
111. Christophe Laporte (FRA / JUM) 2:47.
120. Filippo Ganna (ITA/INE) 4:28.
128. Chris Froome (GBR/ISR) 5:07.
137. Michael Storer (AUS/GFJ) 5:07.
146 runners at the start, 142 classified.
Not starting: Juan Ayuso (ESP/UAE)
give up : Michal Kwiatkowski (POL/INE), Alexis Gougeard (FRA/BBH), Taj Jones (AUS/ISR), Leon Heinschke (GER/DSM)
Out of the game : Juan Sebastian Molano (COL/UAE)
General classification after the 6th stage :
1. Wout van Aert (BEL/Jumbo) 9:27:20 p.m.
2. Mattia Cattaneo (ITA / QST) at 1:03.
3. Primoz Roglic (SLO/JUM) 1:06.
4. Ethan Hayter (GBR/INE) 1:32.
4. Jonas Vingegaard (DEN/JUM) 1:36.
6. Damiano Caruso (ITA/BAH) 1:49.
7. Tao Geoghegan Hart (GBR/INE) 1:55.
8. Matteo Jorgenson (USA/MOV) 2:00.
9. Ben O’Connor (AUS/AG2) 2:10.
10. Wilco Kelderman (NED/BOR) 2:12.
11. David Gaudu (FRA/GFJ) 2:13.
12. Enric Mas (ESP/MOV) 2:17.
…
15. Jack Haig (AUS/BAH) 2:29.
17. Tobias Johannessen (NOR/UNO) 2:39.
19. Brandon McNulty (USA/UAE) 2:45.
24. Eddie Dunbar (IRL/INE) 3:02.
36. Warren Barguil (FRA / ARK) 4:23.
39. Remi Cavagna (FRA / QST) 4:34.
41. Jan Hirt (CZE/INT) 5:07.
48. Valentin Madouas (FRA / GFJ) 5:31.
58. Benjamin Thomas (FRA/COF) 6:51.
76. Chris Froome (GBR/ISR) 11:19.
84. Michael Storer (AUS/GFDJ) 12:13.
91. Filippo Ganna (ITA/INE) 14:10.
105. Aurélien Paret-Peintre (FRA / AG2) 19:13.
108. Christophe Laporte (FRA / JUM) 22:45.
