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Vingegaard wins Paris Nice as Martinez claims final stage

Bahrain – Victorious’ French rider Lenny Martinez (L) sprints, ahead of Team Visma – Lease a Bike’s Danish rider Jonas Vingegaard, to win the 8th and final stage of the Paris-Nice cycling race, 129.2 km between Nice and Nice, on March 15, 2026. AFP

Two-time Tour de France winner Jonas Vingegaard claimed his first Paris-Nice title as Frenchman Lenny Martinez pipped him in a sprint finish to win Sunday’s final stage.

Vingegaard had already won two stages earlier in the eight-day race but left his charge for the line a fraction too late in the two-up sprint after the pair had broken away on the final climb of the hilly 145-kilometre eighth stage that started and finished in Nice on the French Riviera.

After the peloton reeled in the last of the day’s breakaway riders, Frenchman Valentin Paret-Peintre, Vingegaard attacked 21km from the finish, with only Martinez able to hang onto his wheel.

The Dane crested the final climb, the Cote du Linguador, first to seal victory in the polka-dot King-of-the-Mountains competition to go with his inevitable overall victory.

He also won the green points jersey.

But when it came to the sprint finish, Martinez launched his bid for the line early and Vingegaard simply did not have the power to overhaul him.

“Today was almost the perfect day,” said Vingegaard, who crashed out of the race while wearing the leader’s yellow jersey last year.

“Finally I’m able to win Paris-Nice. It’s been a tough one for me but I’m extremely happy to sit here in the yellow jersey today.

“Of course I would have loved to win the stage as well but Lenny was very strong so he deserves to win.”

With three victories from his first eight days of racing this season, Vingegaard is in fine form ahead of his tilt at a Giro d’Italia-Tour de France double.

And having won two of the three Grand Tours — adding the 2025 Vuelta a Espana to his 2022 and 2023 Tour victories — he has also now won three of the sport’s major one-week stage races — claiming the Criterium du Dauphine in 2023 and Tirreno-Adriatico a year later.

Colombian Harold Tejada, who won Friday’s sixth stage, took third on the day, coming home in a small group seven seconds after the winner.

Fellow Colombian Daniel Martinez, who crashed more than 50km from the finish and lost touch with the leading peloton, battled through pain to limit his losses and came home 51sec back to preserve his second place overall, more than four minutes behind Vingegaard.

German Georg Steinhauser took the final spot on the podium some six minutes off the pace, holding off Frenchman Kevin Vauquelin.

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