“He can believe in many things”, who is Kévin Vauquelin, the winner of the 2nd stage of the Tour de France with a great future ahead of him?

“He can believe in many things”, who is Kévin Vauquelin, the winner of the 2nd stage of the Tour de France with a great future ahead of him?
“He can believe in many things”, who is Kévin Vauquelin, the winner of the 2nd stage of the Tour de France with a great future ahead of him?

Winner of the second stage of the Tour de France this Sunday in Bologna, after having had a difficult day the day before, Kévin Vauquelin is considered by those who know him as a future great. And one of the best representatives of a French cycling that is definitely doing very well.

“At this rate, you’ll even manage to find a sprinter to win tomorrow.” The confidence is released with a smile, and a hint of jealousy, by a Spanish colleague at the finish of the second stage of the Tour de France, this Sunday, in the orange and bright streets of Bologna. It must be said that the blue-white-red clan could hardly have done better on this inaugural weekend. The day after the fabulous number achieved by Romain Bardet, crowned emperor of Rimini and first yellow jersey of this 111th edition, it was Kévin Vauquelin’s turn to transform this June 30 into a July 14 before its time. A simple statistic to measure the magnitude of the performance: it is the first time since 1968 and Charly Grosskost’s double, with Jacques Anquetil’s Bic, that France has won the first two stages of the Tour. Another era.

Fifty-six years later, Vauquelin came to offer Arkéa-B&B Hotels its first victory in the Grande Boucle after having dropped his breakaway companions in the second ascent of the terrible and sumptuous San Luca hill, pushed by the encouragement of a crowd of tifosi unleashed as if they were supporting one of their own. Further proof of the ability of this race to make its competitors experience a slide of emotions. On Saturday, his face reddened and distorted by the blazing sun of the Adriatic coast clearly reflected the suffering experienced by the 23-year-old Norman during the first stage. “I knew straight away that things weren’t going well. The heat played a role and I preferred to get up,” he said this morning, far from being dejected but cautious, his eyes already turned towards the future. “It’s true that I know San Luca well for having raced the Giro dell’Emilia. I’ll try to see how I position myself.”

“He has plenty of cards to play”

You only have to look at the way he took off on the emblematic climb of the Emilian city, then resisted the return of the pack of favorites, to understand that the night was a salvation. The fifth success of his career, and the confirmation that he has reached a new level this season, after taking second place in La Flèche Wallonne, and narrowly failing to put on the tricolor jersey of French time trial champion (second, three seconds behind Bruno Armirail). “He has been following a magnificent evolution for three years. He is capable of extraordinary things. He is an excellent rider and when he isolated himself at the front, I knew he would not be caught”, confides our consultant Cyrille Guimard, convinced that the native of Bayeux, considered from the beginning as a great hope, has “the profile to play the general classifications on stage races, provided he works a little in the mountains”.

“It might be a little tight over three weeks, but over one week he can be brilliant. I see him succeeding in races like the Dauphiné and the Tour de Suisse, but also in classics. He has plenty of cards to play. playing What I like is his consistency and his ability to reproduce intense efforts at several specific moments. What he lacks, even if today that wasn’t the case, is perhaps one. little velocity in the passes,” continues Guimard. His teammate Arnaud Démare could go on superlatives all evening to describe the man he considers “an incredible puncher”. He also reveals a lesser known side of his “little brother”. “He’s someone who doubts. At the moment, young people are asking themselves a lot of questions while watching Tadej Pogacar, Remco Evenepoel… I discovered him this year and he surprises me. Before him I had never seen someone of his size (1m76 for 69kg) send so many watts”, testified the sprinter when joining his team bus, where the emotion was obviously immense.

The fiber of a future boss

Special mention for sports director Didier Rous, who couldn’t hold back his tears in front of the journalists. “When you win, you’re moved, and I still am. Yesterday, Bardet won and took the jersey. Today, Kévin won. We’re not on the same team, but we’re still French. The main thing is that the French are having a great start to the Tour. It’s working out for us, so much the better for us. We knew that Kévin was riding very strong, but we’ve had some complicated months with lots of problems, guys who fell. So you have to savour things and that’s what we’re going to do!” confided the former rider, after falling into the arms of Emmanuel Hubert, manager at Arkéa-B&B Hotels and also overjoyed: “I never doubted!”

“He’s a guy who is never satisfied with what he does. When he finished second in the Flèche Wallonne, he told me that first place would have been a lot better. Above all, he’s a boy with a lot of values. I love his parents, drinking a little drink of Calva Normandy with them when they come to the races. I hope that we will go a long way together. Kevin wants to be one of the great runners in the world and his progress is enormous. His maturity is growing. He knows how to listen and lead by example. Does he have the fiber of a future boss? What is certain is that when you win. at 23 years old a stage of the Tour, you have the right to believe in many things You must not say that he is the French rider who will win the Tour, you have to go little by little. The bird will do it. its nest”, insists Hubert.

As for French cycling, propelled into the spotlight, even if Tadej Pogacar couldn’t help but steal the yellow jersey from Romain Bardet’s shoulders this Sunday, he is now starting to dream of a hat-trick. With a promised arrival for the sprinters this Monday in Turin, the ball is in the court of Arnaud Démare, Axel Zingle and even Bryan Coquard.

Rodolphe Ryo, in Bologna (Italy)

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