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Seven strong escapees hope to win the stage
Together with six others, Tiesj Benoot managed to break away. He was joined by fellow Belgian Junior Lecerf (Soudal Quick-Step), Hugo Houle (Israel – Premier Tech), Felix Engelhardt (Jayco-AlUla), Aleksandr Vlasov (Red Bull-BORA-hansgrohe), stage 3 winner Quinn Simmons (Lidl-Trek), and Frank van den Broek (Picnic PostNL). There was little threat to the GC contenders, as Vlasov was the closest in the standings, over 12 minutes behind. Still, the peloton kept the pace high.
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Immediate battle on tricky penultimate climb, tense battle for stage win and GC win
Heading into the climb to Bürgenstock, the gap had already narrowed. Simmons and Vlasov tried to push on, but the race exploded behind them. The first big move came from Felix Gall (Decathlon AG2R), with Vauquelin, Almeida, Alaphilippe, and Oscar Onley (Picnic PostNL) all responding. They bridged up to the leaders, where Van den Broek was still riding. Seeing his teammate Onley arrive, Van den Broek immediately went to the front and began setting the pace. This meant the group of GC favorites, plus the Dutchman, crested the climb with a lead.
Van den Broek emptied the tank for the Scotsman in the white jersey, helping the group stay clear of the chasers all the way to the foot of the final climb to Emmetten. At that point, they still had a 30-second gap over the group containing Ben O’Connor (Jayco-AlUla) and Lennard Kämna (Lidl-Trek). On the final climb, it was time for the GC favorites to battle it out, Van den Broek’s job was done after a tremendous effort.
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Van den Broek had done a great job for Onley.
Gall attacks on final climb
Almeida set a strong pace, but Gall was feeling good and launched an attack. The Austrian opened up a gap on his rivals, while Alaphilippe, Vauquelin, and Onley stayed put. But everyone knows the Portuguese favorite is a master of pacing on climbs. Almeida steadily turned up the pressure and gradually closed the gap to the leader. That spelled the end for Alaphilippe, who had to drop off.
Once they caught Gall, the pace stalled, allowing the former world champion to return to the group. Then it was Onley’s turn to accelerate, but no one gave him space. It became a cat-and-mouse game among the favorites. Vauquelin launched his sprint early, but was overtaken by Almeida and Onley. The Portuguese rider took the win, just ahead of the Scot. On Sunday, Almeida will need to make up 33 seconds on his French rival.