Jason Tesson (TotalEnergies) threw his bike across the line alongside proven sprinter Arnaud Démare (Arkéa-B&B Hotels), with a photo review needed to tip the victory to Tesson on stage 1 of Tour Poitou-Charentes en Nouvelle Aquitaine.
Démare raised his arms in celebration as he thought the win was his, which would have been his preferred outcome on his 34th birthday, but he was denied by his fellow Frenchman. It would have been Démare’s 10th win at the French stage race.
Tesson goes into stage 2 with the GC lead, just one second ahead of Lewis Bower (Groupama-FDJ), who was in the day’s breakaway and scooped up bonus seconds at intermediate sprints along the way. Démare sits third, four seconds back.
The four-day race opened with the longest route of the week, 193.3km from Sauzé-Entre-Bois to La Genétouze. Once across the first pair of intermediate sprints, five categorised climbs punctuated the rolling route, with just one additional sprint point at Chantillac on the approach to the finish circuit in La Genétouze.
The climbs of the day included Côte de Burie (900 metres at 4.7%), Côte de Sainte-Lheurine (500 metres at 6.6%) and Côte de Saint-Maigrin (500 metres at 5.4%) on the southward journey from the start, and then back-to-back punchy climbs of Côte de la Croix de Chiron (500 metres at 5.3%) and Côte de Boscammant (1km at 4.2%) on the one-lap circuit.
Just two kilometres into the race a quartet of riders forged ahead with a gap – Bower, Maël Guégan (CIC-U-Nantes), Wessel Mouris (Unibet Tietema Rockets) and Niek Voogt (Parkhotel Valkenburg). The group cruised across 100km holding a margin of close to three minutes, the peloton behind led by Cofids and Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale waiting patiently as they edged southward in the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region.
With 42km to go, Bower was the first in the lead group to take his foot off the accelerator and drop back to the peloton. He had taken all bonus points and 9 bonus seconds across the three intermediate sprints, including early sprints in Loubigné and Fontaine-Chalendray, and his job was done.
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