2025 Tour de France: Tadej Pogačar wins race for 2nd consecutive year as Wout van Aert wins Stage 21
Wout van Aert won the final day of the race, finishing first through a difficult Stage 21 that was paused with 50 kilometers to go and the times frozen due to dangerously slippery road conditions as the cyclists navigated the Butte Montmartre. That took any suspense or competitive element out of the final stage's last stretch, but provided another demonstration at what a difficult ordeal completing this race is.
"Great from the organisers to neutralise the GC times so nobody had to risk anything," Pogačar said from the winner's podium, via The Guardian. "But I gave it a go. Wout was incredibly strong at the top of the climb and he deserves this big, big win."
Pogačar had a comfortable lead of 4 minutes, 24 seconds over Denmark's Jonas Vingegaard, who won the 2022 and 2023 races. He had to cross the finish line to officially be declared the winner of the 112th Tour de France, but still raced as if he could lose the race toward the end, finishing among the last six.
With four Tour de France championships, Pogačar ties British cyclist Chris Froome for second among all-time wins. Jacques Anquetil, Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault and Miguel Indurain have each won the race five times.
Here are the final standings with the top 10 finishers for the 112th racing of the Tour de France:
Tadej Pogačar, Slovenia: 76 hours, 0 minutes, 32 seconds
Jonas Vingegaard, Denmark: 76:04.56 (4 minutes, 24 seconds behind)
Florian Lipowitz, Germany: 76:11.32 (11 minutes behind)
Oscar Onley, Great Britain: 76:12.44 (12 minutes, 12 seconds behind)
Felix Gall, Austria: 76:17.44 (17 minutes, 12 seconds behind)
Tobias Johannessen, Norway: 76:20.46 (20 minutes, 14 seconds behind)
Kevin Vauquelin, France: 76:23.07 (22 minutes, 35 seconds behind)
Primoz Roglic, Slovenia: 76:26.02 (25 minutes, 30 seconds behind)
Ben Healy, Ireland: 76:28.34 (28 minutes, 2 seconds behind)
Jordan Jégat, France: 76:33.14 (32 minutes, 32 seconds behind)
The victory for Pogačar, 26, was his fourth Tour de France championship. He also earned consecutive Coupe Omnisports trophies in 2020 and 2021, prior to Vingegaard's two straight wins.
Last year's Tour de France victory made him only the third male cyclist in history to win the Triple Crown of Cycling, also finishing first in the Giro and the World Championships during the same year.
Hashtags

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


Fox Sports
10 minutes ago
- Fox Sports
Vollering to keep racing at Tour de France after crash
Associated Press SAUMUR, France (AP) — Former champion Demi Vollering will continue racing at the women's Tour de France despite a heavy crash that left her bruised. Her FDJ-Suez team said on Tuesday that Vollering underwent medical tests that have excluded a risk of a concussion after she hit the ground during Monday's Stage 3. Her team said Vollering, who lagged 19 seconds behind race leader Marianne Vos in the general classification, is 'determined to take the start' of Tuesday's stage from Saumur to Poitiers. Vollering fell less than four kilometers from the finish line in Angers in a crash that involved several riders. Examinations carried out by the team doctor revealed that she had suffered multiple contusions but she did not go to hospital 'given the non-urgent nature of her condition,' FDJ-Suez said. Vollering is one of the most decorated cyclists of her generation. She won the Tour de France in 2023. The nine-stage race ends Aug. 3. ___ AP sports: in this topic
Yahoo
38 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Els launches new Portuguese golf club alongside Montgomerie and Duval
By Phil Campbell Ernie Els was delighted to see his new Portuguese golf club launched in style alongside two all-time greats of the game and an array of sporting royalty. The four-time major champion played a nine-hole exhibition to open the Els Club Vilamoura with Scottish legend Colin Montgomerie and 2001 Open Champion David Duval. Els Club Vilamoura, is a championship-standard 18-hole golf course, designed by Els, that features a luxury clubhouse and signature amenities such as the 261 Bar, and was built on the previous Victoria course, which hosted the Portugal Masters from 2007 to 2022. Els, who won the US Open in 1994 and 1997 and two Open crowns in 2002 and 2012, invited Montgomerie and Duval to play the course, as well as Portuguese Champions League winner Luis Figo and former England striker Peter Crouch. Els said of his new club: 'I've been coming to Vilamoura for many years, I've spent many summers with my family here and we just love Portugal. 'Golf is in a pretty sweet spot at the moment and [creating this course] has been a really nice venture. 'We want the conditions to be absolutely perfect and for people to have a great experience and good food.' Els Club, Vilamoura has been built in partnership with English investment fund Arrow Global and management company DETAILS and is the first private-members club in the Algarve. Membership is extended only to those proposed by founder members or those invited by the club. During a press conference on the morning of the Els Club launch, it was also announced the course would host the new PGA Champions Tour event, the Portugal Invitational after signing a five-year deal. The first edition of the event is set to be held between 31 July to 2 August 2026 and has been brought about through the work of The PGA Tour Champions, Arrow Global Group and Turismo de Portugal and Turismo de Algarve. A field of 78 players will be welcomed to the new track with the likes of Bernhard Langer and Miguel Ángel Jimenez set to compete at the event that boasts a whopping prize purse of £2.23million ($3m). PGA Tour Champions President Miller Brady said: 'This Tour is a global showcase of the game's legendary players, and we know the great golf fans in Portugal and throughout Europe will welcome the opportunity to watch them compete in person at The Els Club Vilamoura.' Els added: 'It's wonderful to see those plans now coming to fruition and we're grateful to PGA TOUR Champions President Miller Brady, the team at Arrow Global Group and Turismo de Portugal and Turismo de Algarve, for sharing in our vision and bringing this exciting new tournament here.' Vilamoura is just a 25-minute drive from Faro airport, which boasts connections to 90 airports worldwide, and is also just a two-hour drive from Lisbon. The resort is rich in culture, gastronomy and outdoor activities and is home to its famous marina which is a multiple winner of the Yacht Harbour Association's Best International Marina award. Montgomerie said: 'The golf course is superb, and the clubhouse is fantastic. It's not just a course for the present; it's a course for the future as well,' while Duval added: 'It'll be much anticipated for everybody on the Champions Tour, and I struggle to see how it won't be a huge success a year from now.'
Yahoo
38 minutes ago
- Yahoo
He's the 'Clark Kent of pommel horse': Stephen Nedoroscik on Rubik's Cube, math videos and his nightly 700-calorie ice cream bowls
'I love a challenge.' The glasses. The contemplative breaks with his eyes closed. The one-armed spins. There's a reason why U.S. gymnast Stephen Nedoroscik emerged from the 2024 Paris Olympics with two bronze medals and a new nickname: 'Clark Kent of pommel horse.' Nedoroscik parlayed his popularity into a stint competing on Dancing With the Stars, in which he placed fourth. Touring with the show hasn't given his body much of a break, he says during our conversation for Yahoo's OT Diaries. 'As gymnasts, we always say that if you take a week off, it's going to take a month to get back in shape,' Nedoroscik tells me. 'So, taking nine months off was quite a hurdle for me. I was scared of taking that time off.' This, after all, is a guy who likes to keep his body and brain busy — the latter with math videos and Rubik's Cubes. But as he gears up for gymnastics competitions again, the bespectacled breakout star of Paris is feeling pretty good. Here's what he says about dancing, keeping his mind sharp and using ice cream to keep his weight up. What a whirlwind of a year it's been for you! After getting bronze in the Olympics, you finished fourth on . Why was that show something you wanted to pursue? It was a sort of victory lap for my success at the Olympics. So I thought to myself, I've earned this time off to dance and travel the country. One of the things that Dancing With the Stars did for me was show me that I can be confident and comfortable in environments that are not meant to be comfortable. Being able to dance in front of millions of people, a sport that I have never done before, really raised my confidence level. Not only from a viewership standpoint of people watching me while I'm working on this craft, but also from the standpoint of competition: being in the zone, staying present and being able to execute certain things that are hard for me. So I do think that it has definitely increased my confidence, and I'm hoping to be able to show that off [in gymnastics] on the world stage soon. The training is notoriously pretty rigorous. What impact would you say it had on your body? Dancing With the Stars demands a lot out of your body, and we were dancing every day for a minimum of four hours. Toward the end, we were doing eight-hour days of dance, so throughout the whole process, I stayed in shape. Not only was I working cardio, but with the lifts that we were doing, I actually gained muscle mass in my arms and legs, which was amazing to me. One of the best things about dancing was that I didn't have to support too much on my elbows or wrists. On the pommel horse, that's where we get injured. So being able to let those body parts relax a little bit was awesome. After dancing for nine months, my wrists are feeling great, and my elbows are feeling a little bit better. Were you keeping up any other fitness routines during that time? I don't usually do a whole lot of running or weightlifting or anything like that. In fact, the only thing that I really did during the Dancing With the Stars tour to stay in gymnastic shape was during our stretching sessions. I would do a few flairs, hit a couple of planches, do my minute hold of a handstand … just making sure that I was hitting those gymnastics basic conditioning elements. So that way, when I came back to the sport, I'd be feeling pretty good. I've returned to [gymnastics] training as of [May], and now that I'm back to the sport, I'm realizing that maybe the stigma around taking time off isn't true. Maybe we can take a little more time off for our bodies. Honestly, my body's feeling a lot better than it was a year ago. I'm training five days a week, slowly getting back all the skills that I was training a year ago. In fact, I'm actually pretty far ahead of where I estimated myself to be. I'll be competing this summer in August at the U.S. Championships. Gymnastics also seems to be a very mental sport. Did the time away from it feel like a reset for your mind? A year ago, I was struggling in the gym as I was chasing that Olympic dream. So over these last nine months, I've just processed a lot of feelings that I've had regarding the Olympics and the whole process leading up to it. I'm reframing it in my head and trying to keep a positive mentality, so that I can gear up for the competition this summer and hopefully the world championships in the fall. As if that wasn't enough, you've also been competing in chess and Rubik's Cube… I'm kind of like a mouse running around on that thing that spins. I feel like I can't stop. So even when I'm not doing gymnastics, I move on to my other hobbies, like Rubik's Cube or chess or video games. I always have hobbies and things that take a really long time to get better at. That's kind of what I love. Pommel horse is the same way. Chasing those marginal gains and taking years to see the progress. That's just the type of guy I am; I love a challenge. They all take a lot of focus, right? In all my hobbies, there's this aspect of staying focused and locked in to what you're doing. It's one of those skills that's transferable in almost everything, and it's gotten me a lot throughout my life. Do you have a specific approach to fueling your body or resting that allows you to stay on top of all of these physical and mental challenges? For the most part, I'm very relaxed when it comes to nutrition. … I need to make sure to get enough calories, but I never really concern myself with where those calories come from. It's kind of well-known that I eat a lot of ice cream, because I struggle to get enough in me throughout the day to not lose weight. So every night I have a 700-calorie bowl of ice cream. Sleep is another thing that I struggle with. Like I said, I keep spinning, I keep moving, and that is a problem for me when I'm trying to settle down for bed — especially when I wake up at 7 a.m. every morning for my workout. After the tour, I had to do a whole readjustment to what my schedule looked like so that I could sleep on time. I would say right now I'm averaging around seven hours of sleep a night, which isn't where I want to be. But I'm slowly chipping away at getting to bed closer and closer to the time that I'm projected to. Is there ever a time when you're doing nothing? What does an actual day off from training, dancing or cubing look like for you? I'm a pretty calm, laid-back dude. I love to just stay at home, whether that's watching a TV show or playing a video game with [my girlfriend] Tess or one of my best friends. It's kind of the day that I take for myself to sort of just charge back up for this next upcoming week. That's good to hear! Let's wrap up with a round of rapid-fire questions … Who is your No. 1 call when you have good news? That's always going to be my mom. Every time. What is your comfort watch? I love The Office. What is your guilty pleasure? It's not a guilty pleasure; it's a proud pleasure of mine: my big bowl of ice cream every night. What gives you the ick? Honestly, not a lot of things give me the ick. Actually, nothing comes to mind. Even if something is weird, I always think, Oh, that was different and kind of cool, I guess. What is something that you eat or drink every day? If I could eat a food for the rest of my life and guarantee my survival, it's going to be mint chocolate chip ice cream. One thing apart from ice cream that I always have is a lot of water. I drink, minimally, a gallon of water a day. What is your internet rabbit hole? Math videos on YouTube. It's my favorite thing ever. People will upload hour-and-a-half-long videos, and I can't wait to get home and watch the whole thing. I'll rewind it so I understand it, so sometimes it takes me three hours to get through. What is one go-to item that never leaves your bag? My inhaler because I have asthma. It's the one thing I will always triple-check I have. What song or album is your personal soundtrack right now? I've been rotating the Beatles a lot recently. What is a wellness trend that you swear by? I don't know any wellness trends. But I do snore, so maybe I should try mouth taping. Gymnastics aside, what are you best at? Cubing. I actually just broke my record last week, 7.86 seconds. What is a skill or hobby that you're trying to get good at? One of the video games I play, Rocket League. I have a lot of hours and experience and years in it. I want to get better at it, and overall, I just want to rank higher. This conversation has been edited for length and clarity. Solve the daily Crossword