it Giro d'Italia Women
WorldTeam Women 30 mei '26 - 07 jun '26
4/9 Belluno › Nevegal 12km
5/9 Longarone › Sante Stefano di Cadore 146km
6/9 Ala › Brescello 160km
at Oberösterreich Rundfahrt
Development Team 04 jun '26 - 07 jun '26
1/4 Linz Hauptplatz › Pöstlingberg 4km
2/4 Eferding › Reichersberg 187km
3/4 Paneum Asten › Bad Schallerbach 156km
fr Tour Auvergne - Rhône-Alpes
WorldTeam Men 07 jun '26 - 14 jun '26
1/8 Vizille › Saint-Ismier 146km
2/8 Saint-Martin-Le-Vinoux › Le Puy-en-Velay 234km
3/8 Perreux › Perreux 28km
be Circuit Franco-Belge
WorldTeam Men 10 jun '26
1/1 Tournai › Mont-de-l'Enclus 195km
dk Copenhagen Sprint
WorldTeam Women 13 jun '26
1/1 Roskilde › Copenhagen 156km
it Giro d'Italia Next Gen
Development Team 14 jun '26 - 21 jun '26
1/8 Reggio Calabria › Vibo Valentia 170km
2/8 Tropea › Crotone 156km
3/8 Sibari › Villa d'Agri di Marsicovetere 163km
dk Copenhagen Sprint
WorldTeam Men 14 jun '26
1/1 Roskilde › Copenhagen 228km
ch Tour de Suisse
WorldTeam Men 17 jun '26 - 21 jun '26
1/5 Sondrio › Sondrio 144km
2/5 Locarno › Locarno 157km
3/5 Bad Ragaz › Bad Ragaz 157km

Teunissen wins prologue and is first Tour de l'Ain leader

Mike Teunissen triumphed in the prologue of the Tour de l'Ain today and is the first leader of the French stage race. On his Bianchi Aquila CV, the 22-year-old Team LottoNL-Jumbo rider was the fastest man on the 3.8-kilometer course in Bourg-en-Bresse. The difference with runner-up Alexandre Geniez (FDJ) was minimal, just six-hundredths of a second.

Mike Teunissen triumphed in the prologue of the Tour de l'Ain today and is the first leader of the French stage race. On his Bianchi Aquila CV, the 22-year-old Team LottoNL-Jumbo rider was the fastest man on the 3.8-kilometer course in Bourg-en-Bresse. The difference with runner-up Alexandre Geniez (FDJ) was minimal, just six-hundredths of a second.

Teunissen was not the only Team LottoNL-Jumbo rider punching into the top of the ranking. Trainee Twan Castelijns recorded the fifth-fastest time, while Timo Roosen was good for 12th.

“I got it and nobody can take this from me now,” Teunissen said after his winning effort. “My advantage was that I started as second-to-last. The other boys had already set good times, and so I knew what I had to do.”

Course record

With a time of 4’31”, Teunissen, who finished second in the Prudential RideLondon & Surrey Classic last week, broke Wilco Kelderman’s mark set in 2011.

“I needed an average speed of more than 50 kilometres per hour, and that’s not easy on a course with two sections with tricky corners. But London went well, and I knew that my shape should still be there.”

Dream ride

Teunissen, still a neo pro, expects to have a good night of sleep. “After London, I made a mistake by going back to watch the final kilometres before I went to bed. That left me with the idea like I had ruined an opportunity, and that feeling kept me awake all night. This time, I think I’ll quickly fall asleep and that I’m going to have some sweet dreams.”

Yellow jersey

The yellow jersey will hang around Teunissen’s shoulders during the first road stage tomorrow, and the youngster will do everything to retain the jersey.

"I want to get involved in the sprints during the stage, and take bonus seconds. In the bunch sprints, Nacer Bouhanni will certainly be a problem, but if I’m well-placed, I can do well. And we have some guys here who know what’s required in a sprint.”

Dekker delighted

Erik Dekker was delighted with the performance of his team. “The guys really rode on their limits today. They really went for it,” the Sports Director said.

“At the start, I was able to look them in the eye, and I really saw that they wanted to fight. In the end, we did great as a team. We’ve won the team classification, just as in the prologue of the Tour de France. With the arrival of the new time trial bike, confidence has returned.”

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