Top Banana: Tour de France stage 7 – Wout van Aert

Top Banana: Tour de France stage 7 – Wout van Aert

The Tour’s dazzling debutant has caught the eye throughout the first week. Why not a stage win for wondrous Wout?


Tour de France? More like Bore de France today. Stage seven was the endless hangover after yesterday’s wild party. Even purists would struggle to glean enjoyment or point out the hidden subtexts to the racing.


It’s simple: the bunch rested their legs, let two wild card breakaways reap the publicity and brought it all back together for a sprint royale.

 

A few minutes of intrigue threatened to break out after Dan Martin and Nairo Quintana were caught out 30 kilometres from the finish, but order was soon restored.

 


What is it about stage seven of the Tour? The same number was just as long, forgettable and sprinter-friendly in 2018 and 2017, with Groenewegen winning into Chartres and Kittel in Nuits-Saint-Georges respectively.


Yet, a fair few contenders for our fruity fillip came to mind. Offredo or Rossetto, the hapless breakaways off the front for a third time already in the opening week? (On that note, there’s a few teams who should put a man up the road rather than working for sprinters who invariably finish eighth or ninth.)


The noble Tour commentators of the world? Reduced to discussing rotary enginges and 17th century chateaux during six hours of inaction. This dirge, suffice to say, was not what wall-to-wall live Tour coverage was intended for.


Or the citizens of Chalon-sur-Saône, since the bunch rolled into town 25 minutes behind the slowest schedule? They’d waited 31 years for another finish; they could wait a little longer.

On the Bourgogne town’s outskirts, Wout van Aert continued his dazzling Tour debut. He hit the front with four kilometres to go… and stayed there for 2,000 metres, stringing out the bunch. The stage was set up for Dylan Groenewegen from there. All the more impressive considering 40 minutes earlier, he’d been off the back, nearly dropping Martin and Quintana.

The king of ‘cross continues to catch the eye here, whether helping out his fast man, sprinting to second yesterday or proving a key part of the winning TTT effort.


As the Jumbo-Visma Tour juggernaut rolls on, why not a stage win later in the race?


The Rouleur Top Banana goes to an unsung hero of each stage of the Tour de France – not the winner, not the yellow jersey – but a rider whose efforts deserve recognition

 

 

The post Top Banana: Tour de France stage 7 – Wout van Aert appeared first on The world's finest cycling magazine.

READ MORE

A Linguistic Tour de France: A guide to the languages and dialects along the 2026 route

A Linguistic Tour de France: A guide to the languages and dialects along the 2026 route

The 113th Tour de France starts in Barcelona and finishes in Paris, covering 3,333 kilometres across two countries, five mountain ranges, and – if you...

Read more
Tadej Pogačar in the yellow jersey and Jonas Vingegaard cross the line together at the 2025 Tour de France

Tour de France 2026 preview: the contenders, sprinters and stage-hunters to watch

From four-time champion Tadej Pogačar to 19-year-old debutant Paul Seixas, a 3,333km route from Barcelona to Paris sets the stage. Here's who to watch across...

Read more
Yannick Talabardon portrait set inside a map of France

Yannick Talabardon: Thoroughly Modern Map Man

Former pro Yannick Talabardon is a rising star in the ASO firmament, modernising the Tour while respecting its history. He pores over the 2026 route...

Read more
Tour de France bookies' favourites 2026: Who will win the yellow jersey?

Tour de France bookies' favourites 2026: Who will win the yellow jersey?

A look at who the bookmakers are backing to win the general classification at this year's Tour

Read more
Miles Baker-Clarke walking through a Catalan old town with his gravel bike

From model to role model: Miles Baker-Clarke and Cycling Culture Club

Miles Baker-Clarke is building Cycling Culture Club, a hub determined to make cycling a place where everyone can see themselves.

Read more
Tour de France peloton

Tour de France 2026 start list: The riders for this year’s race

All the riders who will be in attendance at the Grand Départ in Barcelona

Read more

READ RIDE REPEAT

JOIN ROULEUR TODAY

Get closer to the sport than ever before.

Enjoy a digital subscription to Rouleur for just £4 per month and get access to our award-winning magazines.

SUBSCRIBE