Simon Yates seizes chance of Tour de France stage win as brother Adam waits in wings

Simon Yates grabbed a slice of Tour de France glory with victory on stage 12 from Toulouse to Bagneres-de-Bigorre.
Simon Yates leads the breakaway in the Pyrenees on his way to victory in Bagneres-de-Bigorre. Picture: Marco Bertorello/AFP/GettySimon Yates leads the breakaway in the Pyrenees on his way to victory in Bagneres-de-Bigorre. Picture: Marco Bertorello/AFP/Getty
Simon Yates leads the breakaway in the Pyrenees on his way to victory in Bagneres-de-Bigorre. Picture: Marco Bertorello/AFP/Getty

The 26-year-old Vuelta a Espana champion is riding the Tour to help his twin brother Adam in the general classification but, when an opportunity for a stage success came his way in the Pyrenees, he did not pass it up.

“I’ve been saving energy until we got here in the mountains and this was the first chance to try something,” said Simon, who became the 14th different Brit to win a Tour stage and completes the set with victories in all three Grand Tours.

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“Normally I would be back helping Adam but I had my own chance and grabbed it with both hands.”

What was only the second mountain stage of this Tour enticed a 40-man breakaway but, after they crested the Col du Peyresourde, it was Simon who did much of the work to break it apart on the second of two category one climbs, the Hourquette d’Ancizan.

The Mitchelton-Scott man rode clear with Bora-Hansgrohe’s Gregor Muhlberger before they were joined by 
Pello Bilbao of Astana on the long descent into town.

The Lancastrian looked perhaps the least likely of the three to win in a sprint given his slight frame, but he used some of his old track racing nous to attack on the way into a corner with 200 metres to go and got the power down on the final straight.

“I wasn’t super confident in my own sprint,” he said. “But you never really know after such a long day how fresh the other guys are, how fast.”

Simon has insisted throughout he is only here to help Adam but there was always a sense he might look for a stage or two along the way.

He said; “This is probably one of two opportunities total I will have so I was just thankful that I was able to pull it off. Now it’s back to the day job in the coming days, looking after my brother.”

Adam – seventh overall – had a beaming smile on his face as he rolled into town in the peloton some 10 minutes later.

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The top of the general classification was unchanged on a day when Julian Alaphilippe was able to stay with the main contenders to retain the yellow jersey and a 72-second advantage over Geraint Thomas.

“I was expecting that maybe some riders can attack but at the end everybody was quiet, it’s not bad,” said Deceuninck-Quick Step’s Alaphilippe, who is not expected to keep yellow through the mountains to come this weekend.

Thomas also expected attacks, but Team Ineos were never going to initiate them as they hold second and third in the GC. Thomas said: “Everyone was rock steady and nothing really happened. We were happy with that. Everyone is mindful that the next three days are going to be big for the GC and they’re waiting for that.”

The weekend brings a summit finish on the Tourmalet tomorrow but major movements in the standings are expected in today’s 27km time trial around Pau.

It is a clear opportunity for Thomas to pick up time on Alaphilippe, and he may now be favourite to win the stage after the bizarre exit from the race of reigning world time trial champion Rohan Dennis.

The Australian climbed off his bike at the feed zone midway through the stage, with his Bahrain-Merida team at a loss to explain why.

There were suggestions Dennis had been unhappy with his time trial equipment and had been arguing with the team, but sports director Gorazd Stangelj said he was not aware of an issue, or any injury.

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