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And here's a story on Roglic. We'll have quotes from him soon. 

Primoz Roglic loses Paris-Nice after crashing twice on final stage

Here's our report page

Max Schachmann overhauls Primoz Roglic on final stage of Paris-Nice

"It's a perfect way to finish. I couldn't be happier," says Cort. 

"It was a very intense stage. It was hard to predict, with many possible outcomes for breakaway, and Primoz crashed twice today. In the end it came down to a sprint and I was still there, so I'm very  happy.

"It was a hectic last few kilometres because there were no trains to keep the speed up and everyone in position. It was really about elbows and I did a bit of my own lead-out. I saw the finish on the previous laps and I knew it was quick, with a small corner with 150 metres to go. I thought if I was first through that corner, no one could pass me, and I succeeded in that."

Team Jumbo rider Slovenias Primoz Roglic wearing the overall leaders yellow jersey crosses the finish line of the 8th stage of the 79th Paris Nice cycling race 93 km between Le PlanDuVar and Levens on March 14 2021 Photo by AnneChristine POUJOULAT AFP Photo by ANNECHRISTINE POUJOULATAFP via Getty Images

(Image credit: Getty Images Sport)

LEVENS FRANCE MARCH 14 Sprint Arrival Magnus Cort Nielsen of Denmark and Team EF Education Nippo Christophe Laporte of France and Team Cofidis Pierre Latour of France and Team Total Direct Energie Dylan Teuns of Belgium and Team Bahrain Victorious Dylan Van Baarle of Netherlands and Team INEOS Grenadiers during the 79th Paris Nice 2021 Stage 8 a 927km stage from Le PlanduVar to Levens 518m Stage itinerary redesigned due to COVID19 lockdown imposed in the city of Nice ParisNice on March 14 2021 in Levens France Photo by Bas CzerwinskiGetty Images

(Image credit: Getty Images Sport)

Magnus Cort confirms in his flash interview that Roglic crashed twice.

Final overall standings


1 Maximilian Schachmann (Ger) Bora-Hansgrohe 28:49:51
2 Aleksandr Vlasov (Rus) Astana-Premier Tech 00:00:19
3 Ion Izagirre Insausti (Spa) Astana-Premier Tech 00:00:23
4 Lucas Hamilton (Aus) Team BikeExchange 00:00:41
5 Tiesj Benoot (Bel) Team DSM 00:00:42
6 Guillaume Martin (Fra) Cofidis 00:01:14
7 Jack Haig (Aus) Bahrain Victorious 00:01:18
8 Matteo Jorgenson (USA) Movistar Team 00:01:29
9 Aurélien Paret Peintre (Fra) AG2R Citroën Team 00:01:31
10 Gino Mäder (Swi) Bahrain Victorious 00:01:32

Top 10

1 Magnus Cort (Den) EF Education-Nippo 02:16:58
2 Christophe Laporte (Fra) Cofidis
3 Pierre Latour (Fra) Total Direct Energie
4 Dylan Teuns (Bel) Bahrain Victorious
5 Warren Barguil (Fra) Team Arkea-Samsic
6 Dylan van Baarle (Ned) Ineos Grenadiers
7 Ion Izagirre Insausti (Spa) Astana-Premier Tech
8 Matteo Jorgenson (USA) Movistar Team
9 Yves Lampaert (Bel) Deceuninck-QuickStep
10 Maximilian Schachmann (Ger) Bora-Hansgrohe

Does Schachmann have anything to apologise for?

That will be a major talking point here. We still don't know exactly what happened with Roglic when he was caught behind. It seemed to be a crash. Some will feel that you shouldn't attack the yellow jersey when they crash, but others will argue that it's absolutely fair game.

Roglic doesn't seem to have any grievances anyway.

Roglic rides up to Schachmann and offers him a fist bump. What a gesture that is.

Schachmann raises his hand almost in apology

Roglic crosses the line 3:08 down. He's out of the top 15.

Roglic is still riding alone to the finish

Max Schachmann (Bora-Hansgrohe) wins the 2021 Paris-Nice

Magnus Cort (EF-Nippo) wins stage 8 of Paris-Nice

Cort gets it! Just...

But here comes Laporte! 

Magnus Cort for EF opens up...

Schachmann bumps shoulders with an EF rider. Really nervy moment. 

Flamme rouge. We're into the final kilometre and it looks like it's going to be a sprint from a heavily reduced bunch. 

An AG2R rider takes it up now as we head towards the final kilometre.

The trio are caught. DSM take it up with Hindley.

2km to go

2km to go and still around 20 riders in this GC group. 

The trio is about to be caught, and Mader goes again

If these three stay away, they'll eat up the bonus seconds, which Astana really need.

3.5km to go

Just 3500m to go and the trio have 10 seconds in hand.

Neilands, Mader, and Martin have established a gap. 

Roglic at 2:30 now. He's slipping out of the top 10.

A lull behind, but now Izaguirre responds to an AG2R move.

Martin attacks too. Gino Mader is there too.

Neilands is the next to attack. 

Roglic almost crashes again!!

He's following Declercq downhill, and the Belgian goes off the road. Roglic brakes just in time and stays upright.

Izaguirre goes again

A lull, but now Henao attacks

The Spaniard goes as soon as the gradients picks up. Geschke is toast. Schachmann responds.

Izaguirre attacks!

Geschke leads the heavily reduced bunch down the short descent. The road will soon head uphill to the finish, where we should see fresh action from Astana.

Roglic reaches the top of the Duranus 2:05 in arrears. 

7.5km to go

Roglic continues to breeze past dropped riders. He has 7.5 miserable kilometres to ride here.

The Roglic incident wasn't caught on camera. It seems he crashed for a second time, but we can't be certain about what caused that split. There could be a bit of controversy to come....

Geschke is on the front now for Cofidis, his fellow German in tow. Cofidis have Guillaume Martin 7th overall but he's some way down.

2 minutes now for Roglic with 9km to go. It's all over, surely.

Schachmann hunts it down. But Izaguirre is on his wheel and Astana are trying to double up on the German.

But now Vlasov attacks!

Van Baarle attacks. Izaguirre goes with it!

Roglic is burning through riders dropped from the bunch but he's only losing more ground. 1:45 now.

Rohan Dennis hits the front of the bunch now. Ok then...

The Astana-led bunch catches the break. 

11km to go

Astana and Bora had a common interest in distancing Roglic but Bora now become the enemy as Astana look to overhaul Schachmann. We're nearing the climb proper. 

Astana, we remind you, have Vlasov third overall and Izaguirre fourth. They were at 1:11 and 1:15 from Roglic respectively. That's 19 seconds and 23 seconds behind Schachmann, who is now the virtual race leader.

Astana chip in once more to help keep Roglic at bay.

Bernard attacks from the break. Rutsch is dropped.

1:20 now is Roglic's deficit. Surely he can't come back from this.

The road is rising but the official climb of the Duranus is yet to start. We'll do that, then a short descent, then the haul to the line at Levens.

Roglic has found another unlikely ally. It’s Victor Campenaerts (Qhubeka Assos). That’s the Hour Record holder, so a decent engine

14km to go

14km to go now and the peloton is just 22 seconds behind the leading four. Roglic is 1:10 behind that bunch. 

Bouhanni gives Roglic one last turn before the race leader goes solo. 

Roglic lost the Tour de France at the death last year, and it's happening again. Extraordinary.

Politt drives this on for Bora, and they're riding Schachmann to a second successive Paris-Nice title

One minute now for Roglic!

He's losing the race here. 

The chase group has been caught by the advancing peloton.

Schachmann started the day 52 seconds down on Roglic….

40 seconds now is Roglic's deficit! Wow!!!

Barguil, Bystrom, Bernard and Rutsch have gone clear up the road. They're 40 seconds ahead of the bunch.

17km to go

Cofidis and Astana are working with Bora here to distance Roglic.

Roglic is losing time here! 30 seconds now!

Amid all this drama, the break has been breaking up. 

Somehow, Nacer Bouhanni is pacing Roglic back to the peloton.

Roglic has burned all his teammates in the chase and now he's launched a solo mission to get back to the bunch. 

Roglic is alone now!

Roglic has another tear in his shorts - this time on the right hip. That could well be another crash.

Roglic is 20 seconds behind the peloton!

George Bennett is back and helping with the chase.

Fraile has been called back from the break. 

Qhubeka lend Bora a hand in the front bunch.

Intermarche are also working in the Roglic bunch.

Bora are putting the hammer down in the front peloton.

Roglic has Kruijswijk chasing with him.

The lead group and the chase group have come together to create a large breakaway. The peloton is still split.

The gap is growing!

FDJ are working with Roglic here. Their leader Gaudu has already gone home...

We didn't see how that happened but George Bennett is dropped and Roglic is leading a second peloton on his own!

Split in the peloton and Roglic is caught out!

Theuns and Barguil are arguing over workload in the lead group.

26km to go

We hit the flat again, and the chase group can see the lead group. 

The riders are on the descent again, and the gaps have stabilised. 

And now Jumbo bring the peloton across at 1:10

Sanchez leads the chase group across at 30 seconds

There are bonus seconds on the line but none of these riders are in the GC picture. 

36.2km to go

The lead group is coming to the finish now for the second time. And there's the bell.

Here's the composition of that chase group

Luis Leon Sanchez (Astana), Krists Neilands (Israel Start-Up Nation), Michael Matthews (BikeExchange), Omar Fraile (Astana), Matteo Trentin (UAE), Julien Bernard (Trek-Segafredo), Damien Touzé (AG2R-Citroen), Dylan Theuns (Bahrain)  

The Sanchez and Trentin group moves clear now. Eight in there 

Trentin gets involved now. The peloton is still close at hand.

Neilands is with Sanchez. Others set off to join.

Sanchez attacks again!

The gap rises to 50 seconds as Jumbo control the peloton.

We've also got racing at Tirreno-Adriatico. Huge drama over there. We've got live coverage of that one as well.

We're on the descent again now and George Bennett has taken control of the peloton. The gap to the lead group goes back out to 30 seconds.

44.5km to go

Those accelerations have brought the gap down to just 15 seconds at the top of the climb. 

They're going nowhere but the bunch is really strung out now as we continue uphill.

Sanchez kicks again. He draws out a Total Direct Energie rider.

Luis Leon Sanchez (Astana) attacks now.

De Plus is already across to the break!

Laurens De Plus (Ineos) attacks from the bunch. 

47.5km to go

The chase group catches the leaders to make it a front group of 7. They're on the Côte de Duranus again now.

A touch of wheels sends Lutsenko into the high rocks on the roadside. 

Another crash. It's Lutsenko, who's holding his back. 

Jacobs has been dropped from the chase group. He's caught by the bunch.

And here's Gaudu, who has abandoned.

David Gaudu

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Here's a shot of the effects of Roglic's crash

See more

Roglic's Jumbo-Visma team are also contributing to the pace setting in the peloton. The gap is up to 38 seconds.

The Barguil group is 20 seconds behind the leading quartet. 

Bora-Hansgrohe are leading the bunch now, 30 seconds from the front four. 

Barguil has Cees Bol (DSM), Stefano Oldani (Lotto Soudal), and Johan Jacobs (Movistar) for company. 

Warren Barguil (Arkea-Samsic) launches a counter attack. A few others get involved. 

57km to go

We have four riders in the lead now:

Tim Declercq (Deceuninck-QuickStep)

Jonas Rutsch (EF-Nippo)

Sven Bystrom (UAE Team Emirates)

Edward Theuns (Trek-Segafredo)

Gaudu has abandoned after his crash. Not a great week for the Frenchman.

Roglic has a huge road rash on his left hip.

Another breakaway attempt comes now, with three riders going clear. Reactions, behind, though.

The riders reach the foot of the descent and now the road tilts uphill again.

A shot of an earlier breakaway attempt. That's Connor Swift on the front, who we've spoken to about riding the Classics this year before supporting Nairo Quintana again at the Tour de France. Here's the link if you're interested.

Connor Swift

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Pascal Ackermann (Bora-Hansgrohe) has abandoned.

Roglic looks fine and is now back in the peloton, which slowed to allow him back in. He had teammates to guide him back but no one sought to take advantage there.

Correction, the final bonus second went to Lucas Hamilton (BikeExchange) - not Schachmann. Hamilton was 6th overall and that second takes him into 5th above Tiesj Benoot (DSM).

Roglic has crashed as well!

David Gaudu crashes. The Groupama-FDJ rider's overall hopes were already dented by that mid-race crash with Geoghegan Hart.

Aurélien Paret-Peintre (AG2R), 12th overall, is first at the sprint, followed by Krists Neilands (Israel Start-Up Nation), and then Schachmann, who reduces his deficit to Roglic to 51 seconds.

The riders cross the finish line for the first time, where it's doubling up as an intermediate sprint, with bonus seconds (3-2-1) up for grabs.

Jorgenson's attack is quickly snuffed out. 

Jorgenson attacks! The Movistar man is 10th overall.

Those six are caught now. Plenty of riders have been distanced from this bunch. 

78km to go

Those four riders have clipped away with two others, giving us a lead group of six. 

Dylan van Baarle (Ineos Grenadiers)

Dylan Teuns (Bahrain Victorious)

Sergio Henao (Qhubeka Assos)

Quentin Pacher (B&B Hotels)

Dorion Godon (AG2R Citroën)

Louis Meintjes (Intermarché-Wanty-Gobert)

Over the top of the Duranus we go, and this is the order they reached the KOM point.

1. Dylan Van Baarle (Ineos) 5 points
2. Dylan Teuns (Bahrain Victorious) 3 points
3. Sergio Henao (Qhubeka Assos) 2 points
4. Quentin Pacher (B&B Hotels) 1 point

It has indeed been a fast and furious start. The peloton is splitting into several groups on this climb.

Schachmann is back in the bunch.

Another group of seven is taken back now. We're hitting the categorised climb of the Côte de Duranas for the first time, although it's been uphill from the start.

Another group - Swift, Amador, Sutterlin, Bernard and Touzé - gets a gap before being brought back.

A reminder of the GC ahead of today's stage

1 Primoz Roglic (Slo) Jumbo-Visma 26:32:01

2 Maximilian Schachmann (Ger) Bora-Hansgrohe 0:00:52

3 Aleksandr Vlasov (Rus) Astana-Premier Tech 0:01:11

4 Ion Izagirre Insausti (Spa) Astana-Premier Tech 0:01:15

5 Tiesj Benoot (Bel) Team DSM 0:01:34

6 Lucas Hamilton (Aus) Team BikeExchange

7 Guillaume Martin (Fra) Cofidis 0:02:06

8 Steven Kruijswijk (Ned) Jumbo-Visma 0:02:07

9 Jack Haig (Aus) Bahrain Victorious 0:02:10

10 Matteo Jorgenson (USA) Movistar Team 0:02:21

Mechanical problem for Max Schachmann (Bora-Hansgrohe), who's second overall. 

The next breakaway attempt comes from Julien Bernard (Trek-Segafredo) and Remi Cavagna (Deceuninck-Quick Step) but they, too, are brought to heel.

Sam Bennett (Deceuninck-QuickStep) had an impressive ride in the break yesterday, and he's at it again here. His group is pegged back, though.

We're off!

The flag has dropped and we're underway. On such a short stage, it's sure to be fast from the start.

Like yesterday, today's stage has been altered due to the coronavirus situation in Nice. Restrictions have been eased and the mayor didn't want the famous seafront Promenade des Anglais shut off to the public all day.

The stage was always going to be short, at 110km, but now it's even shorter, at 92.7km. It's also significantly less hilly. There were six hefty climbs on the original menu, but now it's just three (although there is some uncategorised uphill stuff). It's a small circuit based on the relatively gentle Côte de Duranus (3.9km at 3.7%), which is tackled three times before the uphill finish at Levens. 

If Roglic is to be unseated, it's going to take some ambush.

The riders roll out into the neutral zone.

Before we get going, if you need a re-cap, now's the time, because this stage is set to be short but intense. Full report and standings after yesterday's stage 7 can be found at the link below. 

Paris-Nice: Roglic wins stage 7 atop La Colmiane

The riders have all signed on and we're just a few minutes away from the roll-out. The race proper is set to begin at 14:30 local time. 

See more

Hello there and welcome along to our live coverage of the final day of Paris-Nice. Primoz Roglic (Jumbo-Visma) looks unflappable in the race lead, with three stage wins already under his belt, but this race has thrown up plenty of last-minute drama in the past...

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