Arndt Wins 2017 Tour Point d’Appui

Bicycle racers in the Tour de France rounding a curve.

Nikias Arndt, winner of the Point d’Appui in the 2017 Tour de France, rides in protection of Warren Barguil, the holder of the polka dot jersey.

After a tour in which the Point d’Appui changed hands 16 times, Nikias Arndt of Team Sunweb grabbed the fulcrum on Saturday’s individual time trial and held onto it Sunday, despite some last minute changes in the standings swirling around him.

Arndt was one of the riders leading out the eventual winner of the points classification, Michael Matthews, but also riding in support of Sunweb’s eventual winner of the King of the Mountains, Warren Barguil, who was also named the most-combative rider overall. So Sunweb takes home four of the top seven honors available in the Tour: the green jersey, the polka dot, the red jersey number and the gray jersey of the Point d’Appui.

Arndt won minor tours early in his career, including the Tour of Alanya and the Tour of Berlin, more recently winning the points classification in the Tour of Bulgaria and best young rider of the Arctic Race of Norway. He won the Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race earlier this year. He has ridden in the Vuelta a Españas three times, finishing as the Lanterne Rouge in the 2016 edition, and twice in the Giro d’Italia, winning stage 21 of the 2016 Giro.

This was Arndt’s first Tour de France. He finished 11th on Stage 1 of the Tour, the individual time trial, with the same time as fellow German Marcel Kittel of the Quick-Step Floors team and Edvald Boasson Hagen of the Dimension Data team. He rose to 10th place on Stage 2 and held that spot until Stage 5, slowly settling back to the middle of the peloton. In the final time trial of the Tour, Stage 20, Arndt finished at 7th place on the stage, showing he still had legs under him. Sunweb, which signed him for the 2017 season, announced the next day that it would extend his contract.

The winner of the Tour, of course, was Christopher Froome of Team Sky, and his teammate Luke Rowe finished as the Lanterne Rouge, 4 hours, 35 minutes and 52 seconds adrift. The median time of the race also went to a Team Sky cyclist, Michal Kwiatkowski, who had a time of 2 hours, 7 minutes and 48 seconds.

On the stage, Dylan Groenewegen of Team LottoNl-Jumbo won the sprint on the Champs-Élysées, and Daniel Martin of the Quick-Step Floors team, was the fulcrum finisher for the day.

The general classification fulcrum placement by stage:

  • Stage 1: No fulcrum.
  • Stage 2: Jay McCarthy of Bora-Hansgrohe.
  • Stage 3: Janez Brajkovič of Bahrain-Merida.
  • Stage 4: No fulcrum.
  • Stage 5: Vegard Stake Laengen of UAE Team Emirates.
  • Stage 6: Yoann Offredo of the Wanty-Groupe Gobert team.
  • Stage 7: Yukiya Arashiro of the Bahrain-Merida team.
  • Stage 8: Mike Teunissen of Team Sunweb.
  • Stage 9: Nils Politt of the Katusha-Alpecin team.
  • Stage 10: No fulcrum.
  • Stage 11: Michael Albasini of the Orica-Scott team.
  • Stage 12: Paul Martens of Team LottoNl-Jumbo.
  • Stage 13: Michael Schär of BMC Racing Team.
  • Stage 14: No fulcrum.
  • Stage 15: Andrey Amador of Movistar Team.
  • Stage 16: Jay McCarthy of the Bora-Hansgrohe team.
  • Stage 17: Danilo Wyss of BMC Racing Team.
  • Stage 18: Andrey Amador of Movistar Team.
  • Stage 19: Danilo Wyss of BMC Racing Team. Wyss finished on the cusps of the 2013 Vuelta.
  • Stage 20: Nikias Arndt of Team Sunweb.
  • Stage 21: Nikias Arndt of Team Sunweb.

Dutch Rider Teunissen on Fulcrum After Stage 8

Portrait of bicycle racer Mike Teunissen

Mike Teunissen

Mike Teunissen of Team Sunweb found his way to the Point d’Appui on Stage 8 of the 2017 Tour de France as 193 riders came safely home again.

Teunissen came into racing on the cyclo-cross tracks, placing second in the UCI Under-23 World Championships in 2012 and winning them in 2013. He racked up several road-racing wins in 2014, including the Paris-Roubaix Espoirs, the Rabo Baronie Breda Classic and the Paris-Tours Espoirs. He finished 119th in the 2015 Vuelta a España, and this is his first Tour de France start.

A large group of around 50 riders created a break, including several riders who have briefly vied for the Point d’Appui in the past, including Greg Van Avermaet of BMC Racing Team, Jan Bakelants of the AG2R La Mondiale team, Koen De Kort of the Trek-Segafredo team, Michael Valgren of the Astana team, Serge Pauwels of the Dimension Data team, and Thomas De Gendt of the Lotto Soudal team. The stage led from

On the stage, Lilian Calmejane of the Direct Energie team managed to escape the break on the last mountain climb of the day, going over the top with nearly 30 seconds over his next closest competitor, Robert Gesink of Team LottoNl-Jumbo. Calmejane provided a little last-minute excitement when his right calf began cramping and he slowed to a crawl within 5 kilometers of the finish, but was able to work out the kinks and continue to glory. The victory was Calmejane’s second in a Grand Tour, having also won a stage at the 2016 Vuelta a Espana.

Chris Froome continues as the holder of the Tour’s Yellow Jersey, and Olivier Le Gac of the FDJ team remains the Lanterne Rouge.