Eritrea's Girmay ready to become first Black African to win on the Tour

FLORENCE, Italy - Biniam Girmay is the first Black African rider to win a stage in a grand tour and starting on Saturday, the Eritrean will be looking to prevail again at the biggest cycling event of all, the Tour de France.

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FILE PHOTO: Cycling - Tour de France - Stage 3 - Amorebieta-Etxano to Bayonne - France - July 3, 2023 Intermarche–Circus–Wanty's Biniam Girmay before stage 3 REUTERS/Benoit Tessier/File Photo FLORENCE, Italy - Biniam Girmay is the first Black African rider to win a stage in a grand tour and starting on Saturday, the Eritrean will be looking to prevail again at the biggest cycling event of all, the Tour de France. The 24-year-old won in a bunch sprint at the 2022 Giro d'Italia and quickly turned his sight towards becoming the first Black African to win on the Tour too, but on his first attempt last year he found the level was higher than at any other race. "Last year I was really nervous before the start.

It's the biggest race in the world and to be part of that made me really nervous, and I panicked from the start to the end of the Tour," Girmay told Reuters on Friday ahead of his second Tour. "It's a different race, you need to prepare well mentally, and I think this year will be different." Girmay admitted that last year, he was caught by surprise by the intensity of the Tour de France.



"The first thing I learned is that it's a different atmosphere than other races, even Monument (classics) or the Giro," he explained. "The level of the riders especially in sprint stages, it's crazy. (On the Giro) the peloton starts to gear up for the sprint 10km (from the finish) but on the Tour it starts 55, 60 km (from the line).

"The best sprinters in the world are here and that make.