In short:
Julien Bernard was fined 200 Swiss Francs for waving to the crowd and stopping to kiss his wife during the time trial.
World time trial champion Remco Evenepoel won his first Tour de France stage and consolidated his spot in second place overall with victory on stage seven.
What's next?
Saturday's stage eight will take the peloton on a hilly ride to Colombey-les-Deux-Églises, the home and final resting place of former French president Charles de Gaulle.
French rider Julien Bernard looked to be having the time of his life during the Tour de France time trial on stage seven.
The 32-year-old 10-year World Tour veteran was greeted by an army of supporters on the only climb of the 25.3km course, soaking up their adoration as he waved and smiled.
"It was a crazy stage, I had been waiting for it for months," Bernard, who was born less than 200km to the west of where the stage took place, told media at the finish.
"In modern cycling, it's not easy to stop and see your family, but here, with a time trial, it was perfect because I could take the time to savour it. And I savoured it.
"In a sports career, that's something."
He even found time to stop and kiss his wife, who was roadside with his son.
"The kiss to my wife? Of course it was intentional. That moment will only happen once in my life, so I wanted to enjoy it as much as possible," continued the Lidl-Trek rider. "She's the one who organised everything, we have to pay tribute to her for that."
Despite the Tour de France official X feed basking in the reflected joy Bernard's supporters showered upon him, the Tour commissaires did not see the funny side, slapping the Lidl-Trek rider with a 200 Swiss Franc ($330.50) fine.
Not that Bernard cared.
"Sorry @UCI_cycling for having damaged the image of the sport," he wrote in French on X with a screenshot of his misdemeanour.
"But I want to pay 200CHF [Swiss francs] every day and relive this moment."
Bernard, who sits in 39th place overall, 20 minutes and 41 seconds behind race leader Tadej Pogačar, recorded the 61st-fastest time on the stage, averaging 47.3kph even with his momentary stop.
Remco races hard to claim victory
Race-against-the-clock specialist Remco Evenepoel displayed impressive power and precision in winning the Tour de France's first time trial on Friday.
In his slipstream was every other contender for the yellow jersey, including holder Tadej Pogačar.
Despite a small problem with his bike close to the finish that cost him a few seconds, the Tour debutant mastered the 25-kilometre stage in the Burgundy Grand Crus wine country to dominate his first win at cycling's biggest race.
Evenepoel clocked 28 minutes, 52 seconds to beat Pogačar by 12 seconds. Primož Roglič was third, 34 seconds behind.
World time trial champion Evenepoel, clad in the white jersey for the best young rider in the race instead of the rainbow jersey, has now won stages at all three grand tours — the Giro d'Italia, Tour and Vuelta.
Evenepoel, who was first at all intermediate checkpoints, stayed in second place in the general classification, 33 seconds behind Pogačar. Two-time defending champion Jonas Vingegaard was third overall, 1:15 behind.
Pogačar added 25 seconds on Vingegaard, taking his revenge from last year's time trial in Combloux where the Slovenian was at the receiving end of a sobering beating by the Dane. Vingegaard, however, did not lose too much time and the gap between them was not that big with more than two weeks of hard racing remaining.
"I gained time on Primož and on Jonas and the other guys, I can be really happy," Pogačar said.
"I need to keep an eye on Remco now, he is a bit closer. They can show good legs in the next mountain stages. Still a long way to go."
Pogačar collected his 26th yellow jersey. One more and he'll join Vingegaard in 15th spot on the all-time ranking for the most days at the top of the general classification.
There was a big question mark over Vingegaard's form before the start following the crash that wreaked havoc with his season. Vingegaard was hospitalised for nearly two weeks in Spain in April following a high-speed crash in the Tour of the Basque Country. He sustained a broken collarbone and ribs and a collapsed lung.
Evenepoel has been regarded as a cycling prodigy for years. A versatile rider, he has won the 2022 Vuelta and classics after recovering from a horrific crash during a race in Italy in 2020.
He won the world time trial last year and the road race in Wollongong in 2022. He needed surgery this season after breaking a collarbone and shoulder blade in the same crash that hampered Vingegaard at the Tour of Basque Country.
The two-time world champion will lead Belgium's men's team in road cycling at the Paris Olympics.
"As for the rest of the Tour de France, I believe Tadej is going to be unreachable," Evenepoel said.
"But this is cycling, you never know what can happen. The further into the race we go, the better I will feel, so I'll focus more on the podium because I feel I have the legs for it."
The stage took riders on forest roads and through vineyards on a mostly flat terrain. The short climb of the Côte de Curtil-Vergy after 12 kilometres added a dose of pain on the way to the finish in Gevrey-Chambertin.
Tucked in a perfect aerodynamic position, Evenepoel went all out in the descent, reaching an impressive speed of 87.3 kph, according to the NTT Data trackers.
"The climb was pretty tough, because I wanted to start fast but I wanted to keep something," Evenepoel said. "The descent was technical and fast, you have to do it well. I enjoyed every metre of this TT."
He slowed with about 2.5 kilometres left, thinking he had a puncture, but quickly realised everything was fine and rekindled his effort.
"Maybe somebody from the public dropped a glass or hit a fence, it made the same sound as a puncture," he added. "I was a bit scared, but after few metres I knew nothing was wrong. I kept pushing even with the scare, fearing that maybe it was a slow puncture."
There will be a second time trial on the final day of the race on July 21, a 34-kilometre trek between Monaco and Nice — the first final stage time trial since 1989 when American Greg LeMond overhauled a 50-second deficit to Frenchman Laurent Fignon to win the overall prize by just eight seconds, the tightest winning margin in history.
Saturday's Stage 8 will take the peloton on a hilly ride to Colombey-les-Deux-Églises, the home and final resting place of former French president Charles de Gaulle.
AP/ABC
Sports content to make you think... or allow you not to. A newsletter delivered each Saturday.