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Adam Yates steps out of twin's shadow in Tour de France triumph

AFP
Adam Yates (L) trails twin Simon Yates down the final descent on the opening stage of the Tour de France
Adam Yates (L) trails twin Simon Yates down the final descent on the opening stage of the Tour de FranceAFP
After decades in the shadow of his twin, Adam Yates struck back Saturday, taking a stage win and the overall lead in the Tour de France by beating brother Simon to the line in Bilbao.

Simon won the first race between the two when he was born a few minutes ahead of his sibling in August 1992

At the finish, Simon told reporters that the brothers had had countless contests growing up "not just even in racing but in training as well".

The twins come from the same town, Bury in the Manchester region, as football's Neville brothers Gary and Phil of England and Manchester United fame.

Back in 2013, the Yates brothers came first and second at the Tour de l'Avenir, a sort of junior Tour de France, with Simon winning.

The pair are close. They started their careers together with the Orica team, which has evolved into Jayco. While Simon, who won the Vuelta a Espana in 2018, stayed put Adam moved to Ineos in 2021 before a further switch to Team UAE where he is understudy to Tadej Pogacar.

"We get on great and see each other almost every day. He lives just five minutes away," Adam said on Saturday.

"I saw him this morning and he asked me what my plans were but obviously I couldn't tell him," said the younger sibling.

"I'm sure he'll be a pain in the ass for me somewhere along the road though," he said smiling.

UAE Team Emirates' Adam Yates (L) cycles to the finish line to win ahead of his brother, Team Jayco Alula's Simon Yates
UAE Team Emirates' Adam Yates (L) cycles to the finish line to win ahead of his brother, Team Jayco Alula's Simon YatesAFP

Simon Yates said that was his plan.

"I've a fantastic relationship with my brother. I'm really happy for him," he said warming down after the finish. "I'll stick it to him in a couple of days."

The win came after confusion followed the race to the top of stage one's final hill on the outskirts of Bilbao.

Adam had led his teammate Pogacar up the climb, with the champion Jonas Vingegaard lurking close behind.

But when the Yates brothers broke, nobody seemed interested in intervening in the fraternal struggle.

Pogacar raised his arms as he followed them over the line in third.

"I cannot tell you how much that means to me," said the Slovenian Team UAE leader.

"It's wonderful to see this team developing and a win for the team like that is almost better than a win for myself," he said, with what sounded like genuine joy.

UAE Team Emirates' Tadej Pogacar celebrates on the podium with the best young rider's white jersey
UAE Team Emirates' Tadej Pogacar celebrates on the podium with the best young rider's white jerseyAFP

It must have meant quite a lot to their mother too.

"I haven't spoken to my parents yet," Adam said after the race. "They are here somewhere along the coast in a campervan."

Simon was long considered the more talented of the two and has won two stages on the Tour de France previously, with Saturday's outcome being Adam's first Tour de France stage win.

Simon also won the Tour de France white jersey as the best young rider in 2017 before winning the Vuelta a Espana the following season.

'Bit of carnage'

Saturday's stage win was a first for Adam on the Tour de France but he did have the yellow jersey, by default, in 2020 after Julian Alaphilippe was hit with a time penalty.

He then defended the yellow for four more stages.

Yates has promised to defend the jersey again, and try and help team leader Pogacar win a third Tour de France

"Tadej's the best rider in the world, and if I can cause a bit of carnage here that helps him I will. Tomorrow there's a time bonus and we'll target that.

"But maybe this is a bluff."

UAE Team Emirates' Adam Yates celebrates on the podium with the overall leader's yellow jersey
UAE Team Emirates' Adam Yates celebrates on the podium with the overall leader's yellow jerseyAFP

Concern over two-time winner Pogacar's fitness led his UAE Emirates team to name Yates as their co-leader for the Tour de France

"Sometimes you get injured or sick and you always need backup," Yates had said in the build-up to Saturday's opening stage in the Bilbao back-country.

Pogacar, 24, suffered the injury during April 24th's Liege-Bastogne-Liege. He was soon training in a gym but missed over a month on the bike as he allowed time for his wrist to heal.

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