fr Tour de France
WorldTeam Men 05 jul '25 - 27 jul '25
8/21 Saint-Méen-le-Grand › Laval (Espace Mayenne) 171km
9/21 Chinon › Châteauroux 174km
10/21 Ennezat › Le Mont-Dore Puy de Sancy 165km
it Giro d'Italia Women
WorldTeam Women 06 jul '25 - 13 jul '25
7/8 Fermignano › Monte Nerone 150km
8/8 Forlì › Imola 134km
be Baloise Ladies Tour
WorldTeam Women 16 jul '25 - 20 jul '25
1/6 Yerseke › Yerseke 3km
2/6 Jabbeke › Knokke-Heist 127km
3/6 Olsene › Olsene 127km
fr Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift
WorldTeam Women 26 jul '25 - 03 aug '25
1/9 Vannes › Plumelec 79km
2/9 Brest › Quimper 110km
3/9 La Gacilly › Angers 162km
fr Tour Alsace
Development Team 30 jul '25 - 03 aug '25
1/5 Sausheim › Sausheim 4km
2/5 Europa Park › Selestat
3/5 Vesoul › La Planche des Belles Filles
es Donostia San Sebastian Klasikoa
WorldTeam Men 02 aug '25
1/1 San Sebastián › San Sebastián 211km
fr Kreiz Breizh Elites
Development Team 02 aug '25 - 04 aug '25
1/3 Calanhel › Gourin 192km
2/3 Domaine de Trévarez › Carhaix 161km
3/3 Grâces › Rostrenen 181km
pl Tour de Pologne
WorldTeam Men 04 aug '25 - 10 aug '25
1/7 Wrocław › Legnica 199km
2/7 Hotel Gołębiewski Karpacz › Karpacz 148km
3/7 Wałbrzych › Wałbrzych 158km

Damage for LottoNL-Jumbo’s front men in Tour stage to Neeltje Jans

Wilco Kelderman and Robert Gesink lost time in the second stage of the Tour de France. Crashes and echelons told the story of the ride through the rain in Zeeland. Kelderman fell and lost more than five minutes. Gesink was held up by another crash and crossed the line 1-27 minutes later. André Greipel (Lotto-Soudal) won the stage in a group with Chris Froome and Alberto Contador.

“It was a bad day,” sports director, Nico Verhoeven said. “We were proud on top of the classification yesterday, but we took a dive. We had nobody in the first group and that’s bad, especially when you’re having some ambitions in the general classification.

“It starts with Wilco’s crash. Laurens and Tom Leezer were involved in that crash too. Three men stopped to wait for them afterwards, but they left our other front man, Robert, only with Sep. That’s where it went wrong. Four men waited there with good intentions because Wilco is a front man too. We didn’t lose our ambitions in the general classification with Robert, but we did with Wilco, unfortunately.”

Kelderman agreed. “My general classification is gone,” he said. The Dutch national time trial champion was unlucky two times in the stage. “My chain was derailed the first time and I was involved in a crash afterwards. A few kilometres after that crash, the peloton split up. I was hoping that I could limit the damage, but I lost five minutes in the end. That’s a lot.”

Hectic

Laurens ten Dam, who was involved in the same crash, was fed up with the outcome of the stage. “We were in charge, but today, it was the other way around. I’m fed up with that. It’s disappointing for Wilco, but for me as well.


“It was hectic. After the crash, we ended up in no man’s land. I knew that we were going to lose time at that moment, but we still have three weeks to repair this. Yesterday, we showed that it’s not about our form. We have to put ourselves back together.”

Steven Kruijswijk showed the others how to do that in the Giro d’Italia. He lost five minutes as well, so he must think about other things again. “We have to aim for other targets,” he said. “We knew that it was going to be hectic with all those passages through little villages and the crowds. The weather was turning and there was a lot of wind, so it became dangerous and there were many crashes. Unfortunately, Wilco, Laurens and Tom were involved in one. It was about chasing.”

Bad luck
Robert Gesink became the highlight of the day for a while, when he was part of the first echelon together with Sep Vanmarcke. “I was going quite well, actually,” he explained. “We already saw that the weather was turning and we prepared for that. I was well placed together with Sep, but when Nibali crashed, we ended up at the wrong side of the road. We had to ride there for four kilometres even before they started riding half-road. It was unlucky.”


The general classification isn’t lost for Gesink, who is out to prove that in Monday’s stage. “That’s going to be one for the overall riders,” Verhoeven said. “I think that the stage suits Robert. He was good today and fell out of the leading group because a little bit of bad luck. I expect him to finish with the best tomorrow.”

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