Before the race reached Bordeaux, the peloton had already faced a team time trial, explosive uphill finishes, temperatures exceeding 40°C and the first major mountain confrontation on the Col du Tourmalet.
“We’ve had a
Tour de France in which a lot has happened,” Hamilton told TV 2 Sport. “It has been hectic and very exciting. You need to have these quiet days where the riders can conserve some energy.”
The mood inside the peloton appeared noticeably different on Stage 8. The three-man breakaway was controlled throughout, allowing the GC contenders to stay away from trouble and the bulk of the field to converse before the pace increased towards Bergerac. “You could see from their faces today that they looked fresher and were chatting in the peloton,” Hamilton observed.
The damage inflicted earlier in the week remained clear in the standings. Tadej Pogacar leads Jonas Vingegaard by 2:42, with Isaac del Toro third at 3:27. Only nine riders remain within five minutes of the yellow jersey after eight stages.
“I know some people think these stages are boring, but I’ve ridden the Tour de France myself,” Hamilton said. “This edition is so hard. You can see how difficult it has been. Just look at the
general classification. It is crazy how big the time gaps already are.”
Merlier has taken back-to-back sprint wins on stage 7 and 8
Extreme heat makes quiet stages anything but easy
Temperatures have repeatedly climbed beyond 30°C since the Grand Depart and exceeded 40°C during Stage 4 from Carcassonne to Foix. Riders have depended on frequent bottles, ice and additional cooling measures throughout the opening week. “The riders are going through a lot, and the heat is also extreme,” Hamilton said.
Christian Vande Velde has spent the race reporting from an NBC motorbike inside the peloton, giving him a close view of conditions which can be difficult to judge from television pictures alone.
“I heard Christian Vande Velde, the former top rider who commentates for NBC in the United States, during Saturday’s stage,” Hamilton continued. “He is on one of the motorbikes in the peloton. He says it is absolutely incredible how much they are suffering out there. Even on a flat day like today, they are suffering a lot. He spoke about how much water they drink, how much ice they put down the backs of their jerseys and how difficult it has been. He sees it all from close range.”
The heat escalated from a source of physical strain to a direct intervention in the race shortly after Stage 8. With Correze placed under a red heatwave alert, organisers cut Sunday’s route from Malemort to Ussel by 30 kilometres, reducing Stage 9 from 185.5 to 155.5 kilometres.