Merlier doubles up as Van der Poel denied epic win at Tour de France

Merlier doubles up as Van der Poel denied epic win at Tour de France
Belgium’s Tim Merlier celebrates as he wins ninth stage of the Tour de France on Sunday. (AP)
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Updated 14 July 2025
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Merlier doubles up as Van der Poel denied epic win at Tour de France

Merlier doubles up as Van der Poel denied epic win at Tour de France
  • This was a second Tour win for Soudal Quick-Step sprinter Merlier this year, who was first across the line on stage three at Dunkirk
  • After finishing in the peloton on Sunday, Pogacar was already looking ahead to Monday’s mountainous 165.3km slog

CHATEAU, France: Tim Merlier won stage nine of the Tour de France at Chateauroux on Sunday after a heroic long-range escape from Mathieu van der Poel was caught in the final kilometer.

There was no change atop the overall standings with Tadej Pogacar now holding a 54sec advantage over Remco Evenepoel in second with French starlet Kevin Vauquelin third.

This was a second Tour win for Soudal Quick-Step sprinter Merlier this year, who was first across the line on stage three at Dunkirk.

Merlier was led in by team leader Evenepoel.

“It’s mad, we are supposed to be helping him (Evenepoel) but he’s helping us,” Merlier said.

“I need to make it through the mountains now, I won’t be any use to Remco there, but I want to help him in the other ones,” said the 32-year-old.

On a sun drenched slog from the Chinon vineyards, Van der Poel and a teammate broke early and built up a lead of 5min 30sec on the flat roads to Chateauroux.

Jonas Rickaert won the combativity award for accompanying Van der Poel to within 10km of the line before slumping over his handlebars.

“I’m really happy. That was one of his (Rickaert) dreams, to win the combativity award and that’s why we went,” Van der Poel explained.

“In the end we nearly made it but we hadn’t expected to get that far,” he said of his 173km breakaway at an average speed on 49.9kph.

As with many heroic exploits, their epic escape was ultimately doomed to a gut wrenching narrow failure.

But with his gung-ho all-in style Van der Poel grew his Tour de France legend here despite being caught with 700m to go, the plaudits will be both his and Merlier’s.

“It’s hard to not be able to finish it off, but we put on a good show,” said the Dutch rider.

As Van der Poel was reeled in, it looked as though Jonathan Milan would win a second consecutive stage but Merlier got ahead with 30m remaining as Milan finished second with Arnaud De Lie completing the podium.

Road signs in honor of British cycling great Mark Cavendish had been placed at entry points to Chateauroux — reading Cavendish City — in homage to the now-retired 40-year-old, after he won three stages there in 2008, 2011 and 2021.

Pogacar’s Tour de France defense took a hit Sunday as his key teammate Joao Almeida threw in the towel two days after his nasty fall at the Mur de Bretagne, where he fractured a rib.

“It’s a big loss he was in good shape. He’s our hero. I was suffering today so I understand how he must have felt. Every respect to him,” the Slovenian said.

Stage 10 should shake up the race with eight classified climbs in the Massif Central on the July 14 French national holiday.

After finishing in the peloton on Sunday, Pogacar was already looking ahead to Monday’s mountainous 165.3km slog.

“Visma have a strong team for tomorrow and I think Jonas (Vingegaard) will be ready,” Pogacar said of his great Danish rival.

“There will be attacks from the main contenders, it’s up and down all day.

“I’m pretty confident in my team though. I’m looking forward to the hard stages,” added the 26-year-old three-time champion.


Chelsea down Wolves to ease criticism of Maresca’s rotation policy

Chelsea down Wolves to ease criticism of Maresca’s rotation policy
Updated 09 November 2025
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Chelsea down Wolves to ease criticism of Maresca’s rotation policy

Chelsea down Wolves to ease criticism of Maresca’s rotation policy
  • The Blues had hit their stride and Neto put the seal on the victory in the 73rd minute, the former Wolves winger tapping in Garnacho’s tempting cross

LONDON: Chelsea quelled criticism of Enzo Maresca’s rotation policy with a 3-0 win against Wolves featuring the first goal of Malo Gusto’s career on Saturday.

Former Manchester United star Wayne Rooney said Chelsea’s senior players should “question” Maresca’s selections after the Italian made seven changes for a 2-2 draw against Azerbaijani minnows Qarabag in the Champions League on Wednesday.

Having defended himself from Rooney’s jibe by insisting the physical demands on players are greater than ever, Maresca made eight changes at Stamford Bridge.

It was the sixth consecutive match that Maresca had made seven or more alterations and the move paid off with a strong second half performance that lifted Chelsea into second place in the Premier League.

French defender Gusto, who arrived from Lyon in 2023, put Chelsea ahead after the interval with his maiden professional goal.

Joao Pedro doubled the lead and Pedro Neto wrapped up Chelsea’s fourth win in their last five league games as they closed within six points of leaders Arsenal.

Although they will drop out of second place after Manchester City face Liverpool on Sunday, Maresca will be relieved to silence his critics heading into the international break.

Bottom-of-the-table Wolves, led by academy coaches James Collins and Richard Walker after Vitor Pereira’s sacking last weekend, are eight points from safety following their ninth defeat in 11 league games.

Middlesbrough have granted their manager Rob Edwards permission to speak to Wolves over the job after agreeing a compensation deal on Saturday.

Chelsea only arrived home in London at six o’clock on Thursday morning after their long flight back from Baku and, despite Maresca’s switches, they looked jet-lagged in the first half.

- Chelsea hit their stride -

Alejandro Garnacho had rescued Chelsea with an equalizer against Qarabag and the Argentine winger should have opened the scoring in the early stages in west London.

Enzo Fernandez’s pass sent Garnacho through but his low drive was well saved by Sam Johnstone.

Johnstone came to Wolves rescue again, tipping over Fernandez’s blast from the edge of the area.

After making two fine stops, Johnstone was guilty of a mistake when he allowed Fernandez’s corner to loop over him toward the goal, with Toti Gomes making an agile clearance off the line.

Despite Chelsea’s territorial dominance, their fans began to grow frustrated at their ponderous passing and failure to put Wolves to the sword.

Joao Pedro squandered a golden opportunity to ease Chelsea’s angst on the stroke of half-time when he shot wide from an unmarked position on the edge of the area.

Chelsea were booed off at the interval, but their frustrated fans were finally able to cheer in the 51st minute.

Garnacho was the catalyst with a driving run and cross into the six-yard box, where Gusto headed home with aplomb.

Maresca sent on emerging star Estevao Willian and the teenage Brazilian took just 67 seconds to make immediate impact as he set up Chelsea’s second goal in the 65th minute.

Estevao’s dynamic burst ended with a perfectly-weighted cross for Joao Pedro, who drilled a fierce strike past Johnstone from 12 yards.

The Blues had hit their stride and Neto put the seal on the victory in the 73rd minute, the former Wolves winger tapping in Garnacho’s tempting cross.

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