Visma win Auvergne team time-trial but Baudin keeps yellow

American Matteo Jorgenson led Visma-Lease a Bike over the line to win Tuesday's 28km team time-trial at the Tour Auvergne-Rhone-Alpes as Frenchman Alex Baudin retained the overall leader's yellow jersey.
Baudin, who won Sunday's opening stage, led his EF Education-Easy Post team to a third-placed finish, 29 seconds off Visma's time.
That was enough to give him a 12sec lead over Frenchman Kevin Vauquelin and Briton Oscar Onley in the overall standings after they led Netcompany Ineos to a second-placed finish on the third stage around Perreux.
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Jorgenson, a twice former winner of Paris-Nice, moved up to fourth overall at 15sec.
🐝 @vismaleaseabike remporte le contre-la-montre par équipes et Alex Baudin se bat jusqu’au bout pour garder son beau @MaillotjauneLCL 💛
⏪ Revivez le dénouement de l’étape 3.
🐝 @vismaleaseabike wins the TTT, while Alex Baudin fights all the way to the line to keep the yellow… pic.twitter.com/j8iciVR0I7 — Tour Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes (@tourauverhalpes) June 9, 2026
"It's seven times better than winning on your own because we get the moment right afterwards together, which in cycling you don't often get where you win together with your teammates," said Jorgenson in reference to the seven-man team.
"It's a really cool discipline and a really nice day."
But pre-race favourite Paul Seixas, the teenage French prodigy, lost 45 seconds with his Decathlon CMA CGM team finishing sixth, while overall contenders Juan Ayuso and Isaac Del Toro lost 32 and 61 seconds respectively.
Spaniard Ayuso and his Danish Lidl-Trek teammate Mattias Skjelmose moved up to fifth and sixth overall at 47sec, with Seixas now 12th at 1min and Mexican Del Toro 16th at 1min 16sec.
Australian sprinter Michael Matthews had set the early pace for Team Jayco Aula with a time of 33:46 after a blistering finish to the race against the clock.
But Lidl, who finished fourth at 32sec, soon smashed that before Netcompany then set the new benchmark.
Baudin's EF were inspired by their bid to retain the yellow jersey and kept in touch through the two time checks.
Visma finished the strongest, in part due to Onley's troubles, and Jorgenson is now well-placed to push for overall victory once the race hits the high mountains at the end of the week.
"I think the last 10 kilometres we couldn't have gone any faster. I was given a free ride to the last climb," said Jorgenson, who crashed out of the Ardennes classics in April after a good start to the season where he was second at Tirreno-Adriatico and the Drome Classic.
"On a personal level, it feels good to win a race and it is really nice after the spring I've had to come back and be on top again."
Vauquelin and Onley are also well-placed but there is work to do for Seixas and Del Toro to claw back the time they lost.
Before the final three summit finishes, Wednesday and Thursday's stages invite a battle between the breakaway and the sprint teams.
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