SPORT / MISCELLANY
Van Aert, the Tour de France man for all seasons maintains hot streak
Published: Jul 10, 2022 04:28 PM
Belgium's Wout Van Aert celebrates as he crosses the finish line to win the fourth stage of the Tour de France cycling race in Calais, France on July 5, 2022. Photo: VCG

Belgium's Wout Van Aert celebrates as he crosses the finish line to win the fourth stage of the Tour de France cycling race in Calais, France on July 5, 2022. Photo: VCG

Belgian Wout van Aert has been on form in the first week of the Tour de France winning two stages including Saturday's sprint finale in Lausanne and finishing second three times.

The 27-year-old has built up a seemingly unassailable lead in the sprints point race.

"It's a mythical thing, but I believe I deserve it," the Jumbo-Visma rider after pulling on his first overall leader's jersey this week.

He then proceeded to lead a long range breakaway though his homeland, parading the yellow, before giving it up to concentrate on the green.

"I wanted to give my fans something to remember," he said.

Van Aert is the runaway leader for the green sprint points jersey and alongside Slovenian two-time defending champion Tadej Pogacar, who is now wearing the leader's yellow jersey, has been the standout rider of the 2022 Tour.

Van Aert joined road cycling late after taking three consecutive world championships titles at cyclo-cross from 2016 to 2018.

"When I was young I didn't much think about road racing, bunch sprints were boring for me," he admitted after Saturday's impressive win ahead of Michael Matthews and Pogacar.

"I only started to like sprints when I got into the mix myself."

He joined Jumbo-Visma in 2018 and has been a key man ever since winning stages on all four Tour de France he has taken part in.

Disaster struck the following year when he badly injured his thigh at a Tour's time-trial, but Van Aert has deep willpower.

"There's always another day," he insisted after coming second three times on the first three stages on this Tour in Denmark.

"It's never easy to win a bike race, and it's never easy to win a Tour de France stage and never will be," he said on Saturday. "I have done four Tour de France now, and have always managed to get a win at least a stage."

He was on fire on the 2021 Tour too, winning three iconic stages.

First he triumphed on the summit finish on the lunar upper reaches of Mont Ventoux, then took a second on the time-trial through the Bordeaux vineyards and finally on the Champs Elysees cobbles of stage 21, where he denied British great Mark Cavendish a record 35th stage win.

In 2022, he has taken things a step up, claiming the yellow jersey despite three second places in Denmark before taking his first stage win of the 2022 Tour at Calais.

AFP