
Pogacar leads peloton into Paris for Tour de France climax
But for the first time organisers are sending the race through the narrow cobbled lanes of the north Parisian neighbourhood of Montmartre, in a nod to the route used to much fanfare for the 2024 Paris Olympics.
The detour could well provoke a long-range attack and champion-in-waiting Pogacar said he may target the stage win from there.
"We'll see what happens and how the legs are," the Slovenian said after Saturday's stage.
The 21st and final stage, a 132km ride from Mantes-la-Ville to the Champs-Elysees, features three ascents of Montmartre where droves of fans are expected to crown a vintage edition of the sport's most prestigious cycling stage race.
Barring a final-day fall, the top three places on this Tour were fixed on two ascents to Alpine ski resorts, where Pogacar shook off any final resistance from Danish rival Jonas Vingegaard, who put up a brave challenge before fading to second for Team Visma.
But this Tour has not just been about the rivalry between Pogacar, a Tour winner in 2020, 2021 and 2024, and Vingegaard, victor in 2022 and 2023.
Emerging stars
A barnstorming first week of racing unveiled a raft of emerging stars.
Florian Lipowitz, 24, sits in third place to put Germany back on the map as Red Bull's arrival in the world of professional cycling immediately impacted the Tour.
Lipowitz was given a run for his money by 22-year-old Scot Oscar Onley, whose steady ride propelled him to fourth overall. Five of his Picnic–PostNL teammates hail from the same youth team.
Ireland's Ben Healy bagged a stage win and a two-day stint in the yellow jersey.
A heroic near miss on Mont Ventoux should be enough to earn Healy the publicly voted-for prize for combativity.
The return of Dave Brailsford from Manchester United to Ineos Grenadiers was overshadowed by Italian powerhouse Filippo Ganna falling early on stage one and being withdrawn due to concussion.
Having previously masterminded seven Tour de France wins, Brailsford dug in and the team's Dutch climber Thymen Arensman pulled off heists in the Pyrenees and the Alps with well-executed attacks.
Another Dutch rider, Mathieu van der Poel, lit up the first week, sealing a stage two win and twice wearing the yellow jersey.
France's sole and unexpected stage win came on the lunar-like summit of Mont Ventoux thanks to Valentin Paret-Peintre.
The 2025 Tour, however, will be remembered mainly for Pogacar's all-round dominance.
He won stages on rolling runs in the north and west at Rouen and the Mur de Bretagne in the first week, then on the mountain slopes of the Pyrenees on the Hautacam and Peyragudes in week two.
As the Tour entered its end game Pogacar unexpectedly switched his attacking default setting to nurse his lead through the Alps.
Vingegaard had two off days, first on a long time trial and secondly at the Hautacam slog. It was enough for Pogacar to assert himself and never look back.
© 2025 AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

LeMonde
13 minutes ago
- LeMonde
Tadej Pogacar, a Tour de France champion weary of his own dominance
Tadej Pogacar ruled over the 2025 Tour de France unchallenged, to the point of letting boredom creep in. Supremacy, when it faces no opposition, quickly becomes routine. During the final stage of this 112 th edition, between Mantes-la-Ville and Paris on Sunday, July 27, one rival, Wout van Aert (Visma-Lease a Bike), finally managed to crack this undisputed reign. The Slovenian could have ended these three weeks of racing with another victory. He could have become the first yellow jersey since Bernard Hinault in 1982 to raise his arms in triumph on the Champs-Elysées. But the 30-year-old Belgian took a solo win, pulling away on the steepest gradients of Rue Lepic, under pouring rain and on slippery cobblestones. "He was incredibly strong," acknowledged the leader of UAE Team Emirates-XRG, who ultimately finished fourth, 19 seconds behind the day's winner. Sunday made clear that a champion only truly fulfills himself when threatened. All it took was a day with little at stake – in which the general classification times were frozen 50.3 kilometers from the finish due to rain – for something resembling a battle to finally emerge, after a week in which Pogacar seemed to have lost his appetite for victory.


France 24
2 hours ago
- France 24
China's Pan puzzled after shock 200m free exit at swimming worlds
Pan, the 100m freestyle Olympic champion and world record holder, finished only 22nd fastest in 1min 47.46sec to miss out on the top 16 who qualify for the semi-finals. "I felt OK yesterday but today's swim felt completely different," said Pan, whose time was way outside his 200m best of 1:44.65. "I'll have to keep working hard and make adjustments, I'm not sure what happened and I'm not happy with this time." Romania's David Popovici, the 200m Olympic champion, cruised through fastest in 1:45.43 ahead of American Luke Hobson (1:45.61) and Britain's Matthew Richards (1:45.66). Pan said it would not knock his confidence for the 100m. "The 200m and 100m are two different events," he said. American legend Katie Ledecky breezed through fastest in the 1500m freestyle, an event where she holds the best 23 times in history. A day after taking bronze behind Canada's Summer McIntosh in the 400m freestyle, Ledecky touched in 15:36.68, more than 10 seconds quicker than Australia's Lani Pallister and Italy's Simona Quadarella who were second and third. Australian backstroke great Kaylee McKeown eased through the 100m heats third fastest in 58.27sec. She said she was determined to enjoy herself after getting "way too caught up" in the occasion at last year's Paris Games. The four-time world champion McKeown swept the women's backstroke events at the last two Olympics and, now 24, vowed to do things on her own terms. "I'm the happiest I've ever been and coming into this championships I just want to enjoy myself," she said. "I got way too caught up in Paris with the pressure and the nerves, and sort of let that overtake the enjoyment that comes with swimming. "This year I'm just taking a step back and doing what I want to do for once and not doing what everyone else wants me to do." Regan Smith was the fastest qualifier in 58.20 to be quickest, followed by American team-mate Katharine Berkoff in 58.55. McKeown said she was mindful of her physical condition after injuring a shoulder before a recent training camp as she looks towards competing at the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles. "I have a few little injuries as well so I've just got to really manage myself so I can make it to LA," she said. France's Yohann Ndoye-Brouard was fastest in the men's 100m backstroke in 52.30, followed by Russian Kliment Kolesnikov (52.27) and Hungary's Hubert Kos (52.60). Ireland's Mona McSharry topped the timesheets in the women's 100m breaststroke in 1:05.99, just 0.02 ahead of Germany's Anna Elendt with Japan's Satomi Suzuki a further 0.12 back.


France 24
4 hours ago
- France 24
Tadej Pogacar wins a fourth Tour de France, Wout van Aert takes the final stage
It was a historic day in the Women's Tour de France with Mavi Garcia's victory. At 41 years old, the Spaniard became the oldest rider ever to win a stage in the Tour. History was also made by Mauritian rider Kimberley Le Court, who became the first African woman to wear the yellow jersey. England remains the queen of Europe! The Lionesses retained their European title by defeating Spain in the final in a dramatic penalty shootout (1-1, 3-1 on penalties). In Formula 1, Oscar Piastri returned to winning ways with victory at the rain-hit Belgian Grand Prix, finishing ahead of his teammate Lando Norris.