Tour de France: Pogacar beats Vingegaard to stage win and reclaims yellow jersey – live reaction | Tour de France 2025
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Key events
That crash: Joao Almeida (UAE Emirates-XRG) and Jack Haig (Bahrain Victorious) seem to have come out worse from the pile-up seven kilometres from home. Early reports suggest that one of Almeida’s tyres came away from its rim, he went down hard and took about 10 other riders with him. Most remoutned and carried on but we’re still waiting to see if Haig and Almeida are OK. Fingers crossed.
The top 10 on GC after stage seven
1. Tadej Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates-XRG) 25hr 58min 04sec 2. Remco Evenepoel (Soudal Quick-Step), +54sec 3. Kévin Vauquelin (Arkéa-B&B Hotels), +1min 11sec 4. Jonas Vingegaard (Visma-Lease a Bike), +1min 17sec 5. Mathieu Van der Poel (Alpecin-Deceuninck), +1min 29sec
6. Matteo Jorgenson (Visma-Lease A Bike) +1min 34sec
1. Tadej Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates-XRG) 2. Jonas Vingegaard (Visma-Lease a Bike) same time. 3. Oscar Onley (Picnic PostNL) +2sec 4. Felix Gall (Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale) same time. 5. Matteo Jorgenson (Visma-Lease a Bike) same time
Oscar Onley: The 22-year-old Scot did indeed finish third behind Pogacar and Vingegaard.
Yellow jersey: Mathieu van der Poel pedals over the line 1min 20sec behind the stage winner, to whom he will relinquish his yellow jersey. Yesterday’s winner Ben Healy, having remounted after the big crash, also finishes the stage.
Tadej Pogacar wins the stage ...
The favourite wins the stage, launching a sprint with about 200 metres to go to beat Jonas Vingegaard by a bike-length. I think Oscar Onley finished third for Scotland.
500m to go: Evenepoel, Pogacar, Vingegaard, Voeckler and Jorgenson keep climbing …
1.1km to go: Evenepoel is in front leading from Pogacar and Vingegaard. There are about 10 riders in the lead group.
1.6km to go: Pogacar takes over the lead from Wellens, with Vingegaard glued to his wheel. Remco Evenepoel is also in the shake-up and goes in front. Onwards and upwards they go.
2km to go: The main GC contenders are all in good positions as we hit the business end of the race. The average gradient is seven per cent but the current one is 15 per cent.
3km to go: Visma-Lease A Bike and Alpecin-Deceuninck are at the front of the bunch as the riders approach the final climb.
A huge crash!!!
7km to go: At the back of the yellow jersey group at least 10 riders hit the deck heavily in a massive tangle of bikes and bodies. Jack Haig, Ben Healy, Enric Mas and Joao Almeida are among the casualties. Quite a few remount and continue but at least two, including Haig, are still sitting on the road.
8km to go: The stage is very much up for grabs but one presumes Tadej Pogacar, Jonas Vingegaard, Mathieu van der Poel and Wout van Aert will all fancy their chances of winning it as the peloton approaches the big dip that leads into the final climb. There are five kilometres to go before the road starts to ramp upwards.
12km to go: After a fine day’s work on his home roads, Ewen Costiou is caught by the bunch, with Marc Soler, Simon Yates and assorted race heavyweights sweeping past him. The green jersey group is seven minutes behind.
14km to go: Wout van Aert attacks on the descent, losing his sunglasses from their perch at the front of his helmet to a gust of wind. They’ll make a nice souvenir for some roadside fan if they don’t get crushed by any of the riders or cars travelling behind him.
15km to go: The young Scot, Oscar Onley, is nicely placed on third wheel in the peloton as they head up Mur de Bretagne for the first time. Ewen Costiou takes the bell at the summit in front of his home fans.
16km to go: Local lad Ewen Costiou is still 25 seconds in front of the chasing pack and should lead them over the top of Mur de Bretagne for the first time.
17km to go: The breakaway reaches the Mur de Bretagne which ramps upwards for the first of two ascents. Costiou is in front and has dropped his riding partners. Simon Yates is leading the peloton up at a ferocious lick.
18km to go: Ewen Costiou (Arkéa-B&B Hotels) takes the single KOM point at the top of the first hill.
20km to go: The escape party hits the first of three climbs towards the end of this stage. “You go up a climb to get to the foot of a climb,” says Robbie McEwan on TNT. The second of those climbs has a gradient of 15 per cent. Back in the bunch. Jonas Vingegaard’s Visma-Lease A Bike team has pointedly made a move towards the front.
21km to go: “Given all this discussion of the meaning of ‘Mûr-de-Bretagne’, I plugged it in to Google Translate, just for grins,” writes Joe Pearson. “The result? ‘Brittany Blackberry’ So there you go.”
24km to go: Geraint Thomas (Ineos Grenadiers), Alex Baudin (EF Education-EasyPost), Ewen Costiou (Arkéa-B&B Hotels) and Ivan Garcia Cortina (Movistar) are resigned to their fate of being caught by the peloton but remain about a minute clear of it.
30km to go: The gap is down to 59 seconds, with the peloton still very much in control of today’s proceedings. A reminder that today’s stage concludes with a double-ascent of Mur de Bretagne. Here’s what Geraint Thomas had to say about the short but stiff climb in an interview with TNT Sports earlier today.
“It’s just tough,” he said."It’s just like … well, we all know it’s only two kilometres but it’s steep, dead straight, there’s always a good atmosphere on there. It’s always rammed with people and … yeah, it’s just easy to underestimate because it’s only two kilometres but it’s a tough little climb. It keeps going as well, which is probably the hard bit. You have that steep bit which keeps dragging all the way to the line. These days, with the punch of the guys, it’s going to be a tough one.”
36km to go: “Hugh Robertson’s correction (at 64km out) of Simon Thomas’s pedantic email (89km to go) is incorrect, according to Ernest Nègre, Toponymie générale de la France,” writes Paul Townend, who is avoiding work in Luxembourg. “He states that the meaning of mur (which has been spelt mur, meur, and mûr over the years) is ‘the wall surrounding a town or stronghold’.”
38km to go: A sizeable contingent of the peloton, including the green jersey, have decided they’re going to keep their powder dry for another day and are now enjoying a leisurely cycle behind the bunch.
The devil’s in the detail. Photograph: Christophe Petit-Tesson/EPA
40km to go: The breakaway is down to four men after dropping Marco Haller (Tudor), who appeared to be suffering from cramp but possibly just decided the whole escape was a waste of his time. Geraint Thomas (Ineos Grenadiers), Alex Baudin (EF Education-EasyPost), Ewen Costiou (Arkéa-B&B Hotels) and Ivan Garcia Cortina (Movistar) are a minute clear of a bunch that has never given them much rein.
43km to go: More on time gaps and it’s getting heated. “Just writing to discuss the time gap in case of non-crash situations,” writes Andrea Parapini. “It has nothing to do with wheel overlap. Quite simply, gaps under three seconds are not considered and assumed to be ‘meme temps’ (ignoring accents). The rule might change to one, two or three seconds depending on the race and situation, but overlap is not considered.”
50km to go: The gap is 1min 06sec and the riders of UAE Emirates-XRG (Tadej Pogacar) and Alpecin Deuceuninck (Mathieu van der Poel) are on the front of the bunch, making sure it doesn’t get any bigger.
57km to go: The sprinters – well, a few of them – have their moment in the sun. In the green jersey, Jonathan Milan takes 10 points, while Binian Girmay gets nine. Anthony Turgis is next over the line and gets eight.
57km to go: The gap continues to hover around the 90-second mark as the breakaway group pass under the intermediate sprint banner without really bothering to contest the points. There’ll be a fair few left for the sprinters in the peloton to contest, with 10 going to the next man under the banner.
64km to go: Hugh Robertson has got in touch to politely point out another error in Simon Thomas’s pedantic email (89km to go). “For the sake of pedantic accuracy, ‘mûr’ does not mean ‘wall’ in French but ‘ripe’,” he says. “‘Mur’ without the accent means ‘wall’. Cordialement.” That’s great work.
68km to go: In the breakaway, Marco Haller drops back to his team car again to pick up another two bidons. He’s also handed a bag of ice, which he stuffs down the back of his shirt. It’s scorchio out there, with an air temperature of 29C which is almost certainly hotter on the road.
69km to go: The gap is 1min 31sec. For anyone just joining us for the business end of the stage, your five-man breakaway is comprised of Geraint Thomas (Ineos Grenadiers), Alex Baudin (EF Education-EasyPost), Marco Haller (Tudor), Ewen Costiou (Arkéa-B&B Hotels) and Ivan Garcia Cortina (Movistar). A Welshman, a Breton, a Frenchman, an Austrian and a Spaniard cycle into a bar …
The same-time rule: “The rule for non-crash situations is that all riders who have wheel overlap with another rider get the same time,” writes Gareth Owen. “So if B overlaps A, and C overlaps B, and D overlaps C etc., and E overlaps D .... all the way down to Z overlapping Y ... then Z will get the same time as A, regardless of how many bike lengths (or seconds) he may be behind when they cross the line. There has to be a clear gap in the field before a new time is used.”
74km to go: UAE Emirates-XRG rider Adam Yates stops with a puncture, gets a new front wheel and is quickly away again. Further up the road, Alexis Renard is standing on the side of the road and appears to be waiting for a replacement bike. The one he started on is leaning against a nearby lamp post.
78km to go: My lunchtime musette has arrived and the contents aren’t particularly healthy. It contains a bidon of sugar-free 7up, a ham, cheese and tomato sandwich, a bag of pickled onion Monster Munch and a handful of jelly babies.
That’s one way to collect souvenirs – give the riders a target! Photograph: Dario Belingheri/Getty Images
86km to go: “Yesterday there was a gap between Tadej and Jonas at the finish line but they were given the same time,” writes Mark. “How big does the gap need to be to get different times?”
I think that unless it’s a flat stage and the three-kilometre or five-kilometre rule is in place, riders who finish within one second (or in some cases three seconds) of each other in a bunch sprint to the line are given the same time. Off the top of my head, I can’t remember how Vingegaard finished yesterday’s stage but if he was somewhere in a group of riders whose lead cyclist finished within one or three seconds of Pogacar, that would explain why he got the same time. I think.
89km to go: “I know you love a pedant, so with reference to your comment at -128 km, you’ll be pleased to know that it’s the town that is called ‘Mûr-de-Bretagne’, not the climb,” writes pedantry’s Simon Thomas. “It’s just a happy co-incidence that Mûr can mean ‘wall’. Could you also let G know please.”
You’re correct, Simon, I do love a pedant and ‘coincidence’ is a word that does not require a hyphen.
93km to go: The breakaway passes La Plage du Val Andre, a beautiful beach nestling next to an azure sea. The gap is 90 seconds and the breakaway seem to be getting fed up with the tightness of the leash on which they are being held by the peloton. They’re not riding particularly hard but keep speeding up and slowing down, presumably just to annoy the chasing posse, which is strung out in a long, long line. You don’t want to be at the back of that.
95 km to go: “I’m not sure why anyone would want to be in the breakaway, other than Celtic pride,” writes Peter Craig. “UAE clearly want the stage and are controlling matters for Pogacar, as the EF sports director knows full well.”
A few minutes ago, in an interview with Jens Voigt, who is out on the course on the back of a mororbike for TNT Sports, the sports directror in question told the German that he thinks the breakaway has a chance of winning today.
Mathieu van der Poel wearing the yellow jersey in the peletom as it passes along the waterfront in Pleneuf-Val-Andre. Photograph: Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP/Getty Images
97km to go: The gap remains steady, at 1min 43sec and up front Marco Haller (Tudor) drops to the back of the five-man group and picks up a couple of very sticky bottles and some food from his team car, getting a nice little tow and some respite during the long and leisurely handovers.
106km to go: The gap is at 1min 45sec and the peloton is being towed along by one UAE Emirates-XRG rider (Marc Soler, probably) followed by the massed ranks of the Alpecin–Deceuninck team. In the yellow jersey, Mathieu van der Poel is on sixth wheel. Tadej Pogacar is about 15 places from the front of the bunch.
114km to go: A reminder that your five-man breakaway is comprised of Geraint Thomas (Ineos Grenadiers), Alex Baudin (EF Education-EasyPost), Marco Haller (Tudor), Ewen Costiou (Arkéa-B&B Hotels) and Ivan Garcia Cortina (Movistar). They currently have a lead of 1min 34sec and are being kept on a very tight rein by the peloton. It’s currently a stand-off between the breakaway group and the bunch.
Over the race radio, the EF Education-EasyPost sporting director has just told Baudin that he’s “got to try to keep calm for now in this move because it’s not on how much you guys push, it’s on what happens behind.”
On TNT Sports, assorted pundits are saying the breakaway group should slow down a bit to create panic in the bunch and get them to slow down too. “It’s counter-intuitive but maybe slowing down gives you a better chance of creating chaos in the bunch and then they’re so scared they let them have a bigger gap and stay away,” says somebody or other whose name I didn’t get. Of course the risk is that if the breakaway slows down and the peloton doesn’t, the five riders in front will get caught and lose any chance they have of winning the stage.
116km to go: The gap is 1min 17sec and while we’re on the subject of lunch asnd feed zones, there’s a bit of a knack to handing over and picking up bottles and musettes. Let the always informative Global Cycling Network explain …
122km to go: While the riders are in Brittany, it would be impractical for them to feast on local delicacies such as cider, bordier butter, Madame Loik cheese, oysters, custard cake and crepes. Here’s the more mundane fare they can expect to find in their musettes.
Global Cycling Network
123km to go: The peloton rolls through a feed zone, where various team soigneurs are standing at the side of the road, dangling musettes full of grub at arm’s length for the riders to grab.
128km to go: Today’s stage finishes with a double-ascent of the Mur de Bretagne (Wall of Brittany) and here’s what Geraint Thomas had to say about it in an interview with TNT Sports before the start of today’s stage. “It’s just tough, it’s just like … well, we all know it’s only two kilometres but it’s steep, dead straight, there’s always a good atmosphere on there. It’s always rammed with people and … yeah, it’s just easy to underestimate because it’s only two kilometres but it’s a tough little climb. It keeps going as well, which is probably the hard bit. You have that steep bit which keeps dragging all the way to the line. These days, with the punch of the guys, it’s going to be a tough one.”