On stage one of the Tour de France Romain Bardet and Frank van den Broek made history, finishing one-two in Rimini after an epic day of racing. Bardet’s double celebration included the first yellow jersey of his career and was the culmination of incredible teamwork from his Team dsm-firmenich PostNL colleagues.
One of the riders instrumental in the success was road captain John Degenkolb. The German, now racing in his tenth Tour de France, played a pivotal role in helping van den Broek infiltrate the main break of the day, and then joined forces to catapult Bardet up the road to create the winning move. Now 35, the versatile Degenkolb has seen it all, and raced in several roles, from team leader to finisher, before nestling in as the squad’s well-respected road captain since returning to the team in 2022.
Those with a long memory will remember that Degenkolb was part of the team back in 2013, when he made his Tour de France debut alongside a fresh-faced teammate by the name of Marcel Kittel. That year the pair tore up the sprints, with Kittel winning four stages in total, and just like Bardet on stage one of this year’s race, Degenkolb played a pivotal role in Kittel winning the opening stage and taking first yellow jersey.
“John did a huge lead-out for me on stage one, doing a massive turn because we were the only team doing a full lead-out,” Kittel tells us as he looks back at the race with fond memories.
“It was a great team there and that was our first Tour de France together. Taking the win, and the yellow jersey, was a beautiful memory. John is a special guy because he was loyal, always a great teammate and I always felt he had the right mindset to become a road captain. He’s a really strong character, and the choices he makes are really on the right side. He gives clear direction to young riders and they can really trust his experience. He knows how to lead and he always had that. He was always a natural born leader in my eyes.”