[analyse_image type=”featured” src=”https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/vwVb5nbGtUVRSGunJjjv-2560-80.jpg”]
As it happened: Breakaway succeeds on opening day at Critérium du Dauphiné – Tour Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes stage 1
No Pogačar or Vingegaard but Paul Seixas faces test of Tour de France credentials against Del Toro, Ayuso and more – Analysing the contenders at Tour Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes
Giro d’Italia: Sepp Kuss triumphant on queen stage as Jonas Vingegaard lives up to promise
Critérium du Dauphiné: Frenchman Alex Baudin survives solo from early breakaway for biggest win of his career and yellow jersey on stage 1
By
James Moultrie
published
GC teams fail to bring back EF Education-EasyPost rider, who spent more than 120km in front
-
How it unfolded
-
Results
-
Facebook
-
X
-
Pinterest
-
Email
Follow us
French rider Alex Baudin took the biggest win of his career on stage 1 of the renamed Critérium du Dauphiné – now the Tour-Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes – surviving in front after more than 120km in the day’s early breakaway and 28km solo.
Baudin was part of a 10-rider group that emerged on the first uncategorised climb out of Vizille on Sunday, but emerged as the strongest on the final climb of the day, easily dropping George Bennett (NSN) and Clément Braz Afonso (Groupama-FDJ United) as he went alone.
At this point, the lead trio’s gap was around 40 seconds, but by the time Baudin reached the crest of the Côte de Rousset, he had eked it out to more than a minute, allowing him to stay away as a splintered peloton failed to chase him down.
Despite controlling much of the day, Paul Seixas’ Decathlon CMA CGM team didn’t pace the final climb all out, seemingly happy to see the stage win and responsibilities of being the race leader go up the road.
But they were countered and caught on the dragging road to the line, with a 10-rider group containing Netcompany Ineos GC duo Oscar Onley and Kévin Vauquelin getting up the road. This small group was led in by Ramses Debruyne (Alpecin-Premier Tech) in second at the line, and Léo Bisiaux (Decathlon CMA CGM) took third, 32 seconds behind Baudin.
The main GC group lost 12 seconds on the line, with Isaac del Toro (UAE Team Emirates) leading the likes of Seixas, Juan Ayuso (Lidl-Trek) and Matteo Jorgenson (Visma-Lease a Bike) across the line.
“I cannot describe the feeling right now. I don’t think I realise it yet; it’s just amazing to win here and with my family here. One hour from home, it’s just crazy,” said Baudin.
The latest race content, interviews, features, reviews and expert buying guides, direct to your inbox!
“I hope I can carry this confidence and shape into the Tour de France in July. Of course, I’ll want to defend the jersey as long as possible. It’s not going to be easy tomorrow with this super long stage, but a yellow jersey you have to defend it, so we’re going to do everything.”
How it unfolded
The race may have a new name, but it was business as usual at the Dauphiné at the start of stage 1, with a difficult opening hour giving no one a chance to settle. The riders climbed almost straight out of neutral from Vizille, with several attacks being launched.
An initial group of seven were caught back before a new group of 10 formed a small lead on the uncategorised climbing section to Monestier-de-Clermont: Alex Baudin, Alastair Mackellar (EF Education-EasyPost), Pepijn Reinderink (Soudal-QuickStep), Raul Garcia Pierna (Movistar), Georg Zimmerman (Lotto-Intermarché), Matteo Vercher (TotalEnergies), Alex Diaz (Caja Rural-Seguros RGA), Nadav Raisberg (NSN), Sergio Samitier (Cofidis) and Clément Braz Afonso (Groupama-FDJ United).
Paul Seixas’ Decathlon CMA CGM team made their ambitions clear, as they came to the front to control on the approach to the first climb of the stage, the Col de l’Arzelier (8.6km at 5.7%).
But one of their climbing domestiques, Matthew Riccitello, was dropped early on the day, with Seixas revealing that he was unwell in his pre-stage interviews. Not long after, the young American was forced to abandon the race.
Raisberg and Reinderink were dropped from the breakaway after fighting out the intermediate sprint, but the former soon had a teammate coming across, as George Bennett attacked from the peloton to join the break. This left nine in front over the Col de l’Arzelier with just under a two-minute lead and 100km to race.
Three climbs lined the final 60km of the stage, and with Decathlon still controlling on the front, the gap was down to 1:25 with 52km to go. By this point, several riders had already started to drop, notably João Almeida (UAE Team Emirates-XRG) and Wout van Aert (Visma-Lease a Bike).
Baudin, Bennett, and Braz Afonso emerged as the three strongest climbers in the break over the Col de Vence (5.1km at 6%), the penultimate categorised ascent of the stage, and Decathlon were continuing to work behind with the gap at 2:00 with 45km to go.
Heading onto the final climb, just the trio still remained in front, but with just a 40-second lead and a change coming in the peloton with Lidl-Trek and UAE overtaking Deathlon for the front position.
Baudin attacked solo from the break with 28km remaining on the Côte de Rousset (8.2 km at 7.6%), extending his lead to the peloton out to more than a minute as Bennett and Braz Afonso returned to the bunch.
The final climb was relatively underwhelming considering how hard it looked on paper, with the pace really coming out of the chase in the peloton, allowing Baudin to crest the climb with a 1:20 lead and a mostly downhill run to the line remaining.
Small counter moves were launched by the likes of Kevin Vermaerke (UAE Team Emirates-XRG), but neither Seixas, Isaac del Toro (UAE), nor any of the top GC teams wanted to fully commit, somewhat happy to let the stage win go up the road.
Racing did start to split, however, on the dragging approach to the finish, with Netcompany Ineos very interested, alongside Luke Plapp, but as a group of nine chasers broke away, it threatened to undo Baudin’s hold on the stage 30 secs up the road.
The chasing group was made up of Plapp, Vermaerke, Ben Tulett, Bruno Armirail (Visma-Lease a Bike), Oscar Onley, Kévin Vauquelin (Netcompany Ineos), Luke Tuckwell (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe), Léo Bisiaux (Decathlon CMA CGM), Rudy Molard (Groupama-FDJ United), and Ramses Debruyne (Alpecin-Premier Tech).
They worked relatively well, but were unable to bring back the lone Frenchman, who crossed the line 32 seconds in front for victory. Their gap to the chasing group also lessened in the finale, as Ayuso and Seixas upped the pace, and Del Toro surged to the line to limit the loss to just 12 seconds.
Results
Results powered by FirstCycling
James Moultrie is a gold-standard NCTJ journalist who joined Cyclingnews as a News Writer in 2023 after originally contributing as a freelancer for eight months, during which time he also wrote for Eurosport, Rouleur and Cycling Weekly. Prior to joining the team he reported on races such as Paris-Roubaix and the Giro d’Italia Donne for Eurosport and has interviewed some of the sport’s top riders in Chloé Dygert, Lizzie Deignan and Wout van Aert. Outside of cycling, he spends the majority of his time watching other sports – rugby, football, cricket, and American Football to name a few.
-
1‘It’s sad to lose it, but I fought with what I could’ – Another Grand Tour slips away for Anna van der Breggen on final stage as she’s unable to match Vollering at Giro d’Italia Women
-
2Giro d’Italia Women: Demi Vollering overtakes Anna van der Breggen on final day for overall title as Elisa Longo Borghini wins stage 9 sprint
-
3Brussels Cycling Classic: Jordi Meeus wins tight sprint after hectic finale
-
4Gravel World Series: Wendy Oosterwoud and Anton Albrecht score first wins of the season in Poland at Gravel Adventure
-
5Critérium du Dauphiné: Frenchman Alex Baudin survives solo from early breakaway for biggest win of his career and yellow jersey on stage 1
Critérium du Dauphiné: Frenchman Alex Baudin survives solo from early breakaway for biggest win of his career and yellow jersey on stage 1
By
James Moultrie
published
GC teams fail to bring back EF Education-EasyPost rider, who spent more than 120km in front
-
How it unfolded
-
Results
-
Facebook
-
X
-
Pinterest
-
Email
Follow us
French rider Alex Baudin took the biggest win of his career on stage 1 of the renamed Critérium du Dauphiné – now the Tour-Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes – surviving in front after more than 120km in the day’s early breakaway and 28km solo.
Baudin was part of a 10-rider group that emerged on the first uncategorised climb out of Vizille on Sunday, but emerged as the strongest on the final climb of the day, easily dropping George Bennett (NSN) and Clément Braz Afonso (Groupama-FDJ United) as he went alone.
At this point, the lead trio’s gap was around 40 seconds, but by the time Baudin reached the crest of the Côte de Rousset, he had eked it out to more than a minute, allowing him to stay away as a splintered peloton failed to chase him down.
Despite controlling much of the day, Paul Seixas’ Decathlon CMA CGM team didn’t pace the final climb all out, seemingly happy to see the stage win and responsibilities of being the race leader go up the road.
But they were countered and caught on the dragging road to the line, with a 10-rider group containing Netcompany Ineos GC duo Oscar Onley and Kévin Vauquelin getting up the road. This small group was led in by Ramses Debruyne (Alpecin-Premier Tech) in second at the line, and Léo Bisiaux (Decathlon CMA CGM) took third, 32 seconds behind Baudin.
The main GC group lost 12 seconds on the line, with Isaac del Toro (UAE Team Emirates) leading the likes of Seixas, Juan Ayuso (Lidl-Trek) and Matteo Jorgenson (Visma-Lease a Bike) across the line.
“I cannot describe the feeling right now. I don’t think I realise it yet; it’s just amazing to win here and with my family here. One hour from home, it’s just crazy,” said Baudin.
The latest race content, interviews, features, reviews and expert buying guides, direct to your inbox!
“I hope I can carry this confidence and shape into the Tour de France in July. Of course, I’ll want to defend the jersey as long as possible. It’s not going to be easy tomorrow with this super long stage, but a yellow jersey you have to defend it, so we’re going to do everything.”
How it unfolded
The race may have a new name, but it was business as usual at the Dauphiné at the start of stage 1, with a difficult opening hour giving no one a chance to settle. The riders climbed almost straight out of neutral from Vizille, with several attacks being launched.
An initial group of seven were caught back before a new group of 10 formed a small lead on the uncategorised climbing section to Monestier-de-Clermont: Alex Baudin, Alastair Mackellar (EF Education-EasyPost), Pepijn Reinderink (Soudal-QuickStep), Raul Garcia Pierna (Movistar), Georg Zimmerman (Lotto-Intermarché), Matteo Vercher (TotalEnergies), Alex Diaz (Caja Rural-Seguros RGA), Nadav Raisberg (NSN), Sergio Samitier (Cofidis) and Clément Braz Afonso (Groupama-FDJ United).
Paul Seixas’ Decathlon CMA CGM team made their ambitions clear, as they came to the front to control on the approach to the first climb of the stage, the Col de l’Arzelier (8.6km at 5.7%).
But one of their climbing domestiques, Matthew Riccitello, was dropped early on the day, with Seixas revealing that he was unwell in his pre-stage interviews. Not long after, the young American was forced to abandon the race.
Raisberg and Reinderink were dropped from the breakaway after fighting out the intermediate sprint, but the former soon had a teammate coming across, as George Bennett attacked from the peloton to join the break. This left nine in front over the Col de l’Arzelier with just under a two-minute lead and 100km to race.
Three climbs lined the final 60km of the stage, and with Decathlon still controlling on the front, the gap was down to 1:25 with 52km to go. By this point, several riders had already started to drop, notably João Almeida (UAE Team Emirates-XRG) and Wout van Aert (Visma-Lease a Bike).
Baudin, Bennett, and Braz Afonso emerged as the three strongest climbers in the break over the Col de Vence (5.1km at 6%), the penultimate categorised ascent of the stage, and Decathlon were continuing to work behind with the gap at 2:00 with 45km to go.
Heading onto the final climb, just the trio still remained in front, but with just a 40-second lead and a change coming in the peloton with Lidl-Trek and UAE overtaking Deathlon for the front position.
Baudin attacked solo from the break with 28km remaining on the Côte de Rousset (8.2 km at 7.6%), extending his lead to the peloton out to more than a minute as Bennett and Braz Afonso returned to the bunch.
The final climb was relatively underwhelming considering how hard it looked on paper, with the pace really coming out of the chase in the peloton, allowing Baudin to crest the climb with a 1:20 lead and a mostly downhill run to the line remaining.
Small counter moves were launched by the likes of Kevin Vermaerke (UAE Team Emirates-XRG), but neither Seixas, Isaac del Toro (UAE), nor any of the top GC teams wanted to fully commit, somewhat happy to let the stage win go up the road.
Racing did start to split, however, on the dragging approach to the finish, with Netcompany Ineos very interested, alongside Luke Plapp, but as a group of nine chasers broke away, it threatened to undo Baudin’s hold on the stage 30 secs up the road.
The chasing group was made up of Plapp, Vermaerke, Ben Tulett, Bruno Armirail (Visma-Lease a Bike), Oscar Onley, Kévin Vauquelin (Netcompany Ineos), Luke Tuckwell (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe), Léo Bisiaux (Decathlon CMA CGM), Rudy Molard (Groupama-FDJ United), and Ramses Debruyne (Alpecin-Premier Tech).
They worked relatively well, but were unable to bring back the lone Frenchman, who crossed the line 32 seconds in front for victory. Their gap to the chasing group also lessened in the finale, as Ayuso and Seixas upped the pace, and Del Toro surged to the line to limit the loss to just 12 seconds.
Results
Results powered by FirstCycling
James Moultrie is a gold-standard NCTJ journalist who joined Cyclingnews as a News Writer in 2023 after originally contributing as a freelancer for eight months, during which time he also wrote for Eurosport, Rouleur and Cycling Weekly. Prior to joining the team he reported on races such as Paris-Roubaix and the Giro d’Italia Donne for Eurosport and has interviewed some of the sport’s top riders in Chloé Dygert, Lizzie Deignan and Wout van Aert. Outside of cycling, he spends the majority of his time watching other sports – rugby, football, cricket, and American Football to name a few.
You must confirm your public display name before commenting
Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.
-
1‘It’s sad to lose it, but I fought with what I could’ – Another Grand Tour slips away for Anna van der Breggen on final stage as she’s unable to match Vollering at Giro d’Italia Women
-
2Giro d’Italia Women: Demi Vollering overtakes Anna van der Breggen on final day for overall title as Elisa Longo Borghini wins stage 9 sprint
-
3Brussels Cycling Classic: Jordi Meeus wins tight sprint after hectic finale
-
4Gravel World Series: Wendy Oosterwoud and Anton Albrecht score first wins of the season in Poland at Gravel Adventure
-
5Critérium du Dauphiné: Frenchman Alex Baudin survives solo from early breakaway for biggest win of his career and yellow jersey on stage 1
Critérium du Dauphiné: Frenchman Alex Baudin survives solo from early breakaway for biggest win of his career and yellow jersey on stage 1
By
James Moultrie
published
GC teams fail to bring back EF Education-EasyPost rider, who spent more than 120km in front
-
Facebook
-
X
-
Pinterest
-
Email
Follow us
French rider Alex Baudin took the biggest win of his career on stage 1 of the renamed Critérium du Dauphiné – now the Tour-Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes – surviving in front after more than 120km in the day’s early breakaway and 28km solo.
Baudin was part of a 10-rider group that emerged on the first uncategorised climb out of Vizille on Sunday, but emerged as the strongest on the final climb of the day, easily dropping George Bennett (NSN) and Clément Braz Afonso (Groupama-FDJ United) as he went alone.
At this point, the lead trio’s gap was around 40 seconds, but by the time Baudin reached the crest of the Côte de Rousset, he had eked it out to more than a minute, allowing him to stay away as a splintered peloton failed to chase him down.
Despite controlling much of the day, Paul Seixas’ Decathlon CMA CGM team didn’t pace the final climb all out, seemingly happy to see the stage win and responsibilities of being the race leader go up the road.
But they were countered and caught on the dragging road to the line, with a 10-rider group containing Netcompany Ineos GC duo Oscar Onley and Kévin Vauquelin getting up the road. This small group was led in by Ramses Debruyne (Alpecin-Premier Tech) in second at the line, and Léo Bisiaux (Decathlon CMA CGM) took third, 32 seconds behind Baudin.
The main GC group lost 12 seconds on the line, with Isaac del Toro (UAE Team Emirates) leading the likes of Seixas, Juan Ayuso (Lidl-Trek) and Matteo Jorgenson (Visma-Lease a Bike) across the line.
“I cannot describe the feeling right now. I don’t think I realise it yet; it’s just amazing to win here and with my family here. One hour from home, it’s just crazy,” said Baudin.
The latest race content, interviews, features, reviews and expert buying guides, direct to your inbox!
“I hope I can carry this confidence and shape into the Tour de France in July. Of course, I’ll want to defend the jersey as long as possible. It’s not going to be easy tomorrow with this super long stage, but a yellow jersey you have to defend it, so we’re going to do everything.”
How it unfolded
The race may have a new name, but it was business as usual at the Dauphiné at the start of stage 1, with a difficult opening hour giving no one a chance to settle. The riders climbed almost straight out of neutral from Vizille, with several attacks being launched.
An initial group of seven were caught back before a new group of 10 formed a small lead on the uncategorised climbing section to Monestier-de-Clermont: Alex Baudin, Alastair Mackellar (EF Education-EasyPost), Pepijn Reinderink (Soudal-QuickStep), Raul Garcia Pierna (Movistar), Georg Zimmerman (Lotto-Intermarché), Matteo Vercher (TotalEnergies), Alex Diaz (Caja Rural-Seguros RGA), Nadav Raisberg (NSN), Sergio Samitier (Cofidis) and Clément Braz Afonso (Groupama-FDJ United).
Paul Seixas’ Decathlon CMA CGM team made their ambitions clear, as they came to the front to control on the approach to the first climb of the stage, the Col de l’Arzelier (8.6km at 5.7%).
But one of their climbing domestiques, Matthew Riccitello, was dropped early on the day, with Seixas revealing that he was unwell in his pre-stage interviews. Not long after, the young American was forced to abandon the race.
Raisberg and Reinderink were dropped from the breakaway after fighting out the intermediate sprint, but the former soon had a teammate coming across, as George Bennett attacked from the peloton to join the break. This left nine in front over the Col de l’Arzelier with just under a two-minute lead and 100km to race.
Three climbs lined the final 60km of the stage, and with Decathlon still controlling on the front, the gap was down to 1:25 with 52km to go. By this point, several riders had already started to drop, notably João Almeida (UAE Team Emirates-XRG) and Wout van Aert (Visma-Lease a Bike).
Baudin, Bennett, and Braz Afonso emerged as the three strongest climbers in the break over the Col de Vence (5.1km at 6%), the penultimate categorised ascent of the stage, and Decathlon were continuing to work behind with the gap at 2:00 with 45km to go.
Heading onto the final climb, just the trio still remained in front, but with just a 40-second lead and a change coming in the peloton with Lidl-Trek and UAE overtaking Deathlon for the front position.
Baudin attacked solo from the break with 28km remaining on the Côte de Rousset (8.2 km at 7.6%), extending his lead to the peloton out to more than a minute as Bennett and Braz Afonso returned to the bunch.
The final climb was relatively underwhelming considering how hard it looked on paper, with the pace really coming out of the chase in the peloton, allowing Baudin to crest the climb with a 1:20 lead and a mostly downhill run to the line remaining.
Small counter moves were launched by the likes of Kevin Vermaerke (UAE Team Emirates-XRG), but neither Seixas, Isaac del Toro (UAE), nor any of the top GC teams wanted to fully commit, somewhat happy to let the stage win go up the road.
Racing did start to split, however, on the dragging approach to the finish, with Netcompany Ineos very interested, alongside Luke Plapp, but as a group of nine chasers broke away, it threatened to undo Baudin’s hold on the stage 30 secs up the road.
The chasing group was made up of Plapp, Vermaerke, Ben Tulett, Bruno Armirail (Visma-Lease a Bike), Oscar Onley, Kévin Vauquelin (Netcompany Ineos), Luke Tuckwell (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe), Léo Bisiaux (Decathlon CMA CGM), Rudy Molard (Groupama-FDJ United), and Ramses Debruyne (Alpecin-Premier Tech).
They worked relatively well, but were unable to bring back the lone Frenchman, who crossed the line 32 seconds in front for victory. Their gap to the chasing group also lessened in the finale, as Ayuso and Seixas upped the pace, and Del Toro surged to the line to limit the loss to just 12 seconds.
Results
Results powered by FirstCycling
[analyse_source url=”https://www.cyclingnews.com/pro-cycling/racing/criterium-du-dauphine-frenchman-alex-baudin-survives-solo-from-early-breakaway-for-biggest-win-of-his-career-and-yellow-jersey-on-stage-1/”]
You must confirm your public display name before commenting
Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.