The Guardian Australia

Australian hopes high at Tour de France following Giro glory

- Kieran Pender

It is a good time to be an Australian cycling fan. Jai Hindley recently became the second Australian to win a grand tour, clinching the Giro d’Italia at the end of last month. The women’s Giro Rosa is imminent, with a strong Australian contingent in the peloton. The Commonweal­th Games are not far away, offering up a plethora of cycling events, including a return to the velodrome for Australia’s track cyclists after the disappoint­ment of Tokyo. In September the world’s best will arrive on these shores for the world championsh­ips, taking in the scenic roads around Wollongong. And, on Friday, the Tour de France begins.

Beginning in Denmark, the 109th edition of the Tour promises to be a bountiful one for Australian riders. Following Hindley’s Giro triumph, hopes are high among Australian members of the World Tour peloton. While Hindley is not competing in France – an expected decision, given the race comes so soon after the Giro – there are at least two yellow jersey hopefuls eager to match their compatriot’s recent achievemen­t.

First up is Ben O’Connor. The 26year-old West Australian announced himself on the world stage at last year’s Tour de France, with a remarkable solo win in the Alps. The stage win catapulted O’Connor into general classifica­tion contention; while a podium spot ultimately eluded him, his fourth-place finish was impressive nonetheles­s – with only two other Australian­s, Cadel Evans and Richie Porte, having done better at the Tour. The performanc­e was all the more remarkable given it was O’Connor’s Tour debut.

Riding for French team AG2R Citroën Team, O’Connor will start on Friday in fine form. He placed seventh in his opening tour of the season, the Ruta del Sol in Spain, sixth in the Catalan Tour, fifth at the Tour de Romandie and won the one-day Tour du Jura. Earlier this month, O’Connor secured a spot on the podium at the traditiona­l pre-Tour warm-up Critérium du Dauphiné.

When the going gets tough at the Tour, O’Connor will find a familiar face in the selection with fellow Australian Jack Haig named as co-leader for Bahrain Victorious. Perhaps the most highly-rated Australian climber of the generation during his youth, even more so than Hindley and O’Connor, Haig made good on that promise with a podium finish at last year’s Vuelta a España, the Spanish grand tour.

The Victorian, now 28, has continued that form throughout the new season – finishing sixth overall at Ruta del Sol and Paris-Nice, and just back from O’Connor in fifth at the recent Dauphiné. Supported by a strong squad and with Bahrain aiming to secure their first Tour podium, Haig looks to be a contender – unless the team has been rattled by a recent police raid.

Whether O’Connor or Haig can genuinely challenge for the hallowed yellow jersey remains to be seen. Tadej Pogačar has won consecutiv­e editions of the Tour and will be difficult to beat. Jumbo-Visma duo Primož Roglič and Jonas Vingegaard took first and second at the Dauphiné, comfortabl­y ahead of O’Connor; Roglič, a three-time Vuelta winner, will be hoping to avenge his heart-breaking 2020 Tour, when Pogačar snatched the yellow jersey off him on the penultimat­e stage. Longtime force Ineos Grenadiers will no doubt be influentia­l on the road, too, with past Tour winner Geraint Thomas recently victorious at the Tour de Suisse.

A podium spot might be more likely than overall victory, but the history of grand tours shows that anything is possible. The first week, in particular, could cause early chaos – with a range of challengin­g stages likely to shake up the establishe­d order.

Elsewhere in the peloton, Australian sprint sensation Caleb Ewan will be hoping to reprise his past Tour glories after a disappoint­ing showing at the recent Giro, where crashes and other mishaps saw him exit early without a stage win. On sprint stages Ewan will find himself pitted against his former team, Australian outfit BikeExchan­ge Jayco, riding for Dutch sprinter Dylan Groenewege­n. BikeExchan­ge will also be hunting for stage wins through Canberran Michael Matthews, 2017 green jersey winner at the Tour, who starts on the back of a promising run of form.

In the mountains, fellow Australian­s Michael Storer (GroupamaFD­J) and Chris Hamilton (Team DSM) will look to take any chances that present themselves. Storer had a breakout performanc­e at the Vuelta last year, showing his climbing prowess with two stage wins and the king of the mountain jersey, while Hamilton finished second on a tough stage at the 2021 Giro. Part of the same generation as O’Connor and Haig, the quartet demonstrat­e the present strength of Australian cycling.

In the three weeks ahead, Australia’s best male cyclists will have plenty of chances to shine at the biggest event on the annual cycling calendar. The race will be followed by the historic Tour de France Femmes, an eightstage tour beginning on the ChampsÉlys­ées, on the same day the men conclude, replacing the more limited La Course. And with the Commonweal­th Games in Birmingham and road world championsh­ips on home soil to come, opportunit­ies beckon for Australian cycling.

 ?? Photograph: Toni Albir/EPA ?? Australian rider Ben O'Connor, along with Jack Haig, represent Australia’s best hopes of Tour de France success.
Photograph: Toni Albir/EPA Australian rider Ben O'Connor, along with Jack Haig, represent Australia’s best hopes of Tour de France success.
 ?? Photograph: Dario Belingheri/Getty Images ?? Jack Haig at the Criterium du Dauphine earlier this month.
Photograph: Dario Belingheri/Getty Images Jack Haig at the Criterium du Dauphine earlier this month.

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