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Pogacar begins final week of 2025 Tour de France in touching distance of legend

Pogacar begins final week of 2025 Tour de France in touching distance of legend

Yahoo4 days ago
Three-time champion Tadej Pogacar will spend Monday's rest day of the 2025 Tour de France savouring his feats in the Pyrenees of southern France that have helped him establish a four-minute lead over his arch rival and two-time victor Jonas Vingegaard.
Pogacar, who is seeking a fourth title that will take him joint fifth on the all-time winner's list, claimed the 12th and 13th stages to open up the gap on Vingegaard.
The wins on Thursday and Friday also furnished him with his 20th and 21st stage victories.
Friday's 10.9 km time trial for the 13th stage was completed in 23 minutes.
'I really wanted to go all out from start to finish, smashing the pedals as much as possible,' said Pogacar. 'I almost blew out in the end but I saw the time on the finish arch and it gave me an extra push because I saw I was going to win.'
Pogacar, the UAE Team Emirates-XRG leader, cemented his grip on the race during Thursday's first big mountain stage on the slopes of Hautacam, where he destroyed the field to reclaim the yellow jersey after it had adorned the back of the Irish rider Ben Healy for two days
'So far, so good,' said Pogacar. "We're just a bit over halfway now and it's still a long way to Paris but if we keep riding like this and don't do any mistakes, then we can be satisfied with this margin."
Vingegaard says he will fight on
Vingegaard, who won cycling's most prestigious race in 2022 and 2023, vowed to keep fighting.
"The Tour is far from over," insisted the 28-year-old Dane. "We have to keep believing we can do something here in the race."
Tim Wellens, Pogacar's teammate took stage 15 on Sunday. The 34-year-old Belgian completed the 169.3km between Muret and Carcassonne in three hours, 34 minutes and nine seconds.
Victor Campenaerts was second and Julien Alaphilippe was third.
"I had the opportunity, I took it, and I had legs to finish it," said Wellens who ended the course 88 seconds ahead of Campenaerts.
'I knew that I had to enjoy the moment,' Wellens added. 'I kept riding until the finish line because I wanted a big gap to fully enjoy it and maybe put my bike in the air after the finish. But I was so happy to win that I forgot to do it.'
The tour resumes on Tuesday with a 171.5km run between Montpellier and Mont Ventoux and concludes on Sunday along the Champs Elysées in Paris.
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Tour de France Stage 18 results: Tadej Pogacar holds off Jonas Vingegaard in French Alps
Tour de France Stage 18 results: Tadej Pogacar holds off Jonas Vingegaard in French Alps

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Tour de France Stage 18 results: Tadej Pogacar holds off Jonas Vingegaard in French Alps

Tadej Pogačar didn't win the hardest stage of the 2025 Tour de France on Thursday, but the defending champion and this year's favorite showed again that there's likely nobody capable of taking the yellow jersey from him. Australian Ben O'Connor won Stage 18 of the Tour de France to vault into the top 10 of the overall standings as riders had to overcome 5,450 meters in climbs up three different summits, including the toughest one to the finish line at Courchevel Col de la Loze. But Pogačar's ability to maintain his sizable lead over chief rival Jonas Vingegaard is leaving little room for drama with just three stages remaining in this year's Tour de France. Vingegaard made several attacks throughout the day to try to shake loose of Pogačar, who he trailed by more than four minutes for the overall lead entering Stage 18. But the three-time Tour de France champion never allowed Vingegaard from his sight, and then left his chief rival behind once again in the final kilometer to take second place in the stage. Here's a look at the complete stage 18 results and 2025 Tour de France standings after Thursday, July 24, as well as what's coming up for cycling's biggest race: 2025 TOUR DE FRANCE: How to watch, schedule and standings for cycling race Stage 18 results Here are the final results of the 171.5-kilometer Stage 18 course from Vif to Courchevel Col de la Loze in the French Alps at the 2025 Tour de France on Thursday, July 24 (with position, rider, team, time): Ben O'Connor, Team Jayco Alula (5 hours, 3 minutes, 47 seconds) Tadej Pogačar, UAE Team Emirates XRG (5:05.32) Jonas Vingegaard, Team Visma | Lease A Bike (5:05.41) Oscar Onley, Team Picnic Postnl (5:05.45) Einer Rubio Reyes, Movistar Team (5:05.47) Felix Gall, Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale Team (5:06.12) Primoz Roglic, Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe (5:06.33) Adam Yates, UAE Team Emirates XRG (5:06.50) Tobias Johannessen, Uno-X Mobility (5:06.56) Sepp Kuss, Team Visma | Lease A Bike (5:07.13) Tour de France 2025 standings Tadej Pogačar, Slovenia: 66 hours, 55 minutes, 42 seconds Jonas Vingegaard, Denmark: 67:00.08 (4 minutes, 26 seconds behind) Florian Lipowitz, Germany: 67:06.43 (11 minutes, 1 second) Oscar Onley, Great Britain: 67:07.05 (11 minutes, 23 seconds) Primoz Roglic, Slovenia: 67:08.31 (12 minutes, 49 seconds) Felix Gall, Austria: 67:11.18 (15 minutes, 36 seconds) Kevin Vauquelin, France: 67:11.57 (16 minutes, 15 seconds) Tobias Johannessen, Norway: 67:14.13 (18 minutes, 31 second) Ben Healy, Ireland: 67:21.23 (25 minutes, 41 seconds) Ben O'Connor, Australia: 67:25.01 (29 minutes, 19 seconds) 2025 Tour de France jersey leaders Yellow (overall race leader): Tadej Pogačar, Slovenia Green (points): Jonathan Milan, Italy Polka dot (mountains): Tadej Pogačar, Slovenia White (young rider): Florian Lipowitz, Germany Who's wearing the rainbow jersey at 2025 Tour de France? In addition to the four traditional colored jerseys at the Tour de France, the reigning world road race champion wears a rainbow-colored jersey. It's white with five colored stripes – blue, red, black, yellow and green (same as the colors of the Olympic rings) – and is currently worn by Tadej Pogačar of Slovenia. 2025 Tour de France next stage Stage 19 of the 2025 Tour de France is a 129.9-kilometer course on mountain terrain from Albertville to La Plagne in the French Alps on Thursday, July 24. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Tour de France standings: Tadej Pogacar's lead grows in French Alps

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