What Does Poverty Look Like 2024-07-07 What Does Poverty Look Like - Last update images today What Does Poverty Look Like Mbappé Lauds 'unique' Ronaldo Ahead Of QF Clash DIJON, France -- Dutch champion Dylan Groenewegen won the sixth stage of the Tour de France after a mass sprint that was decided in a photo finish on Thursday. Tadej Pogacar kept the yellow jersey after a nervous day on the bike amid crosswinds. Groenewegen earned a sixth career stage victory at cycling's biggest race ahead of Biniam Girmay, the Stage 3 winner, and Fernando Gaviria, the Stage 3 runner-up. Jasper Philipsen was initially the runner-up for a second straight stage but was relegated for an irregular sprint. "I actually don't know what happened but I was first," Groenewegen said. There was no change among the overall leaders, with Pogacar staying 45 seconds ahead of Remco Evenepoel. Two-time defending champion Jonas Vingegaard remained in third place, 50 seconds off the pace. After Matthieu Van der Poel opened the sprint in the city of Dijon with an excellent lead-out for his teammate Philipsen, Groenewegen timed his effort perfectly and used his great power to prevail by just a few inches. The fight between the main contenders for the yellow jersey is expected to resume on Friday during the race's first time trial. The 25-kilometer (16-mile) race against the clock features a climb with an average gradient of 6.1% that will put riders to the test in the final section. Thursday's relatively short stage of 163.5 kilometers (102 miles) started from Macon, taking the peloton through the Burgundy vineyards. Early into the stage, riders rode past a giant drawing of France striker Antoine Griezmann, who was born in Macon. Jonas Abrahamsen ignited the first move of the day to claim points in the classification for the polka-dot jersey of best climber, at the top of a short climb and went on a breakaway with Axel Zingle. The duo was caught soon after. On long sections of roads exposed to wind, the peloton rode at a steady pace, with riders careful not to get caught in a split. About 85 kilometers (53 miles) from the finish, Vingegaard's teammates Wout van Aert and Christophe Laporte moved to the front to speed up the pace and harden the race. The peloton lined out and split in two but all the main contenders managed to stay in the first group, although Pogacar found himself isolated. It was just a scare for the UAE Team Emirates leader as the second group with his teammates managed to bridge the gap in the end. The sprinters' teams took control with four kilometers left as the fastest men of the peloton got ready for their final, brutal effort. Groenewegen was not immediately sure he won and waited to be 100% sure before he let his joy explode with staff members of the Team Jayco AlUla. "It was so close I couldn't celebrate on the finish line," Groenewegen said. "In the end, we grabbed it." RF 23 3 4249164 Orig Maxresdefault New Employment And Poverty Chart 1435331261 GettyImages 180216272 Photo Of Woman Sitting 3347949 How Common Poverty 2 1SU2Q9 Preview FPL 2023 1280x888 Poverty Guidelines Equations 2023 768x263 Poverty 1024x576 A449b0d8862f89bc Maxresdefault 9992368339223 Poverty Rate Varies By Age Groups Figure 3 California Poverty 1 ?w=1280 Dgg 768x546 Us1 Story O 12mag Poverty VideoSixteenByNine3000 Fig 1 USOfficial Poverty Rate 2 Scaled 1 Poverty Data Thumbnail No Poverty 02 Poverty Rate By State Homeless Poverty Flag Reuters Poverty Guidelines 1536x864 Figure A1.4 Impacts Of Lockdowns And Policy Response On Household Cashflow 1024x446 Poverty In America Trends In Monthly Poverty Rates Among Children LA Times 12 5 22 Cropped Pexels Timur Weber 9533102 Poverty 1 2023 Reduced Fare Table