Paul Seixas and Tom Pidcock on the backfoot after Tour de France stage one
Debutant Paul Seixas lost time to all of his expected podium contenders in Barcelona.
A team time trial – especially one that essentially acts as one long leadout train for the protected rider – always creates notable differences among the general classification riders, and stage one of the 2026 Tour de France has left a number of key riders already playing catch-up.
The 19.6km TTT in Barcelona ended with a climb up to Montjuïc, the fortress that overlooks the Mediterranean port city. Jonas Vingegaard, twice a Tour winner, proved victorious, with defending champion Tadej Pogačar finishing 12 seconds in arrears to his rival.
That’s a time gap that could be closed as early as stage two, but there are others with a lot more work on their hands.
Paul Seixas, the great French hope, finished 39 seconds back from Vingegaard, while Britain’s Tom Pidcock was 57 seconds slower than the stage winner. In fact, Seixas and Pidcock lost time to all of their expected rivals in the battle for a top-three finish.
Uno-X Mobility's Tobias Halland Johannessen, viewed by some as an outsider for a top-five spot, was one minute behind, and Netcompany-Ineos are already facing an uphill battle – Thymen Arensman was 1:01 adrift, and Kévin Vauquelin was 1:14 shy of Vingegaard.
Nineteen-year-old Seixas, however, was in an optimistic mood, having made his Tour debut. “Really good,” was his assessment of the day. “It was special because it was a TTT and we were really focused on it.
"I took it as a normal TTT and we did a great job today. We did the best we could do today and that’s the most important thing for me.”
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Like Pogačar, Seixas is aiming to claw back time as soon as stage two, which finishes on the same Montjuïc circuit. “It’s a good stage for me I think,” he said. “I did different work for this race so we will see how it goes and how I feel. I hope it will be a good stage tomorrow.
“They [Vingegaard and Pogačar] are the best in the world so we will see how it goes during the coming weeks. I hope to really perform and see what I can do.”
Pidcock, who hasn’t publicly stated his ambitions in the race, is also needing to fight back if indeed he is targeting the GC as is assumed. He had known he would have had to, but he also would have hoped to have lost less time than he did.
“It’s a hard final and you want to keep Tom’s best skills intact – he’s very explosive and powerful on that kind of finish and our strategy was to save as much energy as possible. I don’t think it was a bad strategy,” Pinarello-Q36.5’s coach Kurt Bogaerts said afterwards.
Pidcock’s punchiness makes him one of the top contenders to win stage two, but claiming yellow seems out of the question now. “I think there are many stages that are good for Tom on paper, but it all depends on how the ball falls on the day,” Bogaerts said.
“That kind of finish is all about momentum, legs and having a little bit of luck. We will definitely go for tomorrow.”
On the flip side, the TTT confirmed the positive condition of some of the other podium contenders: Juan Ayuso of Lidl-Trek was only 16 seconds slower than the winner, and just four seconds back from Pogačar.
Time trial world champion Remco Evenepoel, meanwhile, was 19 seconds down but crucially finished 16 seconds faster than his Red Bull-Bora-hansgrohe teammate Florian Lipowitz.
“The difference was limited,” Red Bull sports director Klaas Lodewyck told the Belgian press, who like most are intrigued who will come out on top in the Evenepoel-Lipowitz battle for team leadership. “Does this immediately clarify the hierarchy between our leaders? I don’t think so – the final reckoning will only be made in Paris.”
Evenepoel uttered the same thing. “Whether I am now leader number one? I’m not concerned with that. I just did my thing,” the Belgian said.
“This is more or less the result we expected. It was quite OK. I don’t think we could have ridden any faster. It was a successful first day.”
One day down, and the GC is already taking shape.
A freelance sports journalist and podcaster, you'll mostly find Chris's byline attached to news scoops, profile interviews and long reads across a variety of different publications. He has been writing regularly for Cycling Weekly since 2013. In 2024 he released a seven-part podcast documentary, Ghost in the Machine, about motor doping in cycling.
Previously a ski, hiking and cycling guide in the Canadian Rockies and Spanish Pyrenees, he almost certainly holds the record for the most number of interviews conducted from snowy mountains. He lives in Valencia, Spain.
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