es La Vuelta Ciclista a España
WorldTeam Men 23 Aug '25 - 14 Sep '25
15/21 Avilés › La Farrapona. Lagos de Somiedo 135km
16/21 A Veiga/Vegadeo › Monforte de Lemos 167km
17/21 Poio › Mos. Castro de Herville 167km
nl Simac Ladies Tour
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4/6 Alkmaar › Alkmaar 125km
5/6 Doetinchem › Westendorp 10km
6/6 Lichtenvoorde › Lichtenvoorde 156km
gb Lloyds Bank Tour of Britain Men
WorldTeam Men 02 Sep '25 - 07 Sep '25
4/6 Atherstone › Burton Dassett 186km
6/6 Pontypool › The Tumble 133km
7/6 Newport › Cardiff 112km
cz Okolo jižních Čech / Tour of South Bohemia
Development Team 04 Sep '25 - 07 Sep '25
2/4 Nové Hrady › Studená 167km
3/4 Český Krumlov › Horská Kvilda 126km
4/4 Trhové Sviny › Jindřichův Hradec 173km
fr Tour Cycliste Féminin International de l'Ardèche
WorldTeam Women 09 Sep '25 - 14 Sep '25
1/6 Laudun-l’Ardoise › Laudun-l’Ardoise 127km
2/6 Saint-Rambert-d'Albon › Saint-Donat-sur-l'Herbasse 113km
3/6 Avignon › Pernes-les-Fontaines 119km
ca Grand Prix Cycliste de Québec
WorldTeam Men 12 Sep '25
1/1 Québec › Québec 216km
fr La Choralis Fourmies Féminine
WorldTeam Women 14 Sep '25
1/1 Fourmies › Fourmies 123km
be GP Rik Van Looy
Development Team 14 Sep '25
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Gesink focused during Tour de France sprint stage

Robert Gesink passed a trouble-free day in the Tour de France on Friday. The leader of Team LottoNL-Jumbo ended the seventh stage in Fougères 27th. Etixx-QuickStep’s Mark Cavendish won the stage.

Gesink had a minor crash in neutralisation, however. “Luckily the pace wasn’t too high and a tumble in the neutral zone doesn’t really count as a real crash,” Gesink laughed afterwards. “I rolled through the day well, like I’ve done this whole week.”

Important moment
Gesink Gesink moved up to 13th overall on Friday because yellow jersey Tony Martin wasn’t able to start the stage. Immediately after the stage, he looked ahead to his next challenge: the Mûr de Bretagne.

“Tomorrow will be spectacular,” Gesink said. “On the one hand it’s an important arrival, on the other hand, it doesn’t mean too much, as it’s not a real climb. It’s still an important moment where you want to score, though.”

‘Goal is simple'
Gesink tackled the Mûr de Bretagne once before. In 2011, when the fourth stage of the Tour finished on the steep climb, the Dutchman placed 16th at eight seconds behind winner Cadel Evans.

“I’m going to the watch the final kilometres of the stage tonight. The goal is simple: I need to go up as fast as possible and hope that others need more time than me.”

Nico Verhoeven
Nico Verhoeven said Friday’s relatively easy stage was good for Laurens ten Dam and Wilco Kelderman’s recovery. “The calm racing and the weather were in their favour,” the sports director said.

“They’re going in the right direction. They are slowly crawling back to their former level. Lau and Wilco have proven themselves in grand tours, if they are fully fit, they can get in the mix in every stage with a climb. Especially, as they are deep down in the overall.”

Jos van Emden
Jos van Emden started his first Tour last Saturday with an excellent fifth place. The 30-year-old Dutchman looked back on the first week with a good feeling.

“I secretly think back about that TT in Utrecht every day,” the former Dutch time trial champion said. “The fatigue starts to come into play, but I didn’t need bandages. Actually, it’s going pretty well. Tomorrow is a normal working day for me, but on Sunday, the team time trial awaits. I’m looking forward to it. Time trials suit me, of course, but after a week of racing it’s always a little different.”  

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