logo
Thymen Arensman holds off Tadej Pogacar and Jonas Vingegaard onslaught to win shortened stage 19

Thymen Arensman holds off Tadej Pogacar and Jonas Vingegaard onslaught to win shortened stage 19

Yahoo26-07-2025
The expected general classification fireworks did not materialise on stage 19 of the Tour de France, as Thymen Arensman won the final Alpine stage of this punishing race in La Plagne.
Tadej Pogacar followed Jonas Vingegaard over the line just behind Arensman, a fourth overall crown now looking safe with his lead at four minutes 24 seconds over Vingegaard, who took back a couple of bonus seconds but nothing more on this final opportunity to make major changes to the standings.
But Oscar Onley saw his podium dream at the Tour de France fade as, having started the day 22 seconds behind third-placed Florian Lipowitz, he faded towards the summit of La Plagne to concede 41 seconds and stay fourth overall.
It was a second stage win of his debut Tour for Arensman, who had scored a much-needed victory for the Ineos Grenadiers on stage 14 on Superbagneres.
UAE Team Emirates-XRG had looked determined to set up Pogacar for what would have been an a fifth stage victory of this race on the final climb, but Arensman tried a number of attacks and when he went clear with 13km of the climb remaining, he managed to open a gap.
His advantage over Pogacar, Vingegaard, Onley and Lipowitz hovered at around 30 seconds, and the fatigue in everyone's legs perhaps told as the anticipated attack from behind never really materialised. Pogacar said afterwards he opted to set a 'defensive rhythm' on the hors-categorie climb.
It was only when Onley began to struggle that Lipowitz saw his opportunity to finish off the Scot, moving to the front and upping the pace. But even so, Arensman hung on to win by just two seconds over the accelerating Vingegaard.
'I feel absolutely destroyed,' Arensman said. 'I can't believe it. Already to win one stage in the Tour was unbelievable from a breakaway, but now to do it against the GC group, against the strongest riders in the world, it feels like I'm dreaming. I don't know what I just did.'
The discovery of a contagious disease amongst cattle in the area had forced changes to the route, which was shortened from 129.9 kilometres to 95km, removing two climbs but leaving the main tests of the Col du Pre and the finish to La Plagne, still with 3,250m of climbing packed in.
Primoz Roglic had been immediately on the attack in an all-or-nothing attempt to move up from fifth overall, but he was caught before the final climb and quickly distanced, losing more than 12 minutes and slipping to eighth in the general classification.
With a hilly but not mountainous stage from Nantua to Pontarlier on the menu for Saturday before Sunday's run into Paris - which this year includes the Montmartre climb - there could still be some changes at the sharp end of the general classification but it is difficult to see the podium changing.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Joao Palhinha set for Tottenham medical as loan deal agreed with Bayern
Joao Palhinha set for Tottenham medical as loan deal agreed with Bayern

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Joao Palhinha set for Tottenham medical as loan deal agreed with Bayern

Tottenham have agreed a deal with Bayern Munich to sign Joao Palhinha on loan with an option to buy. The former Fulham midfielder will undergo a medical before putting pen to paper on a season-long who had interest from elsewhere, made his intention to join Spurs clear once he heard of their interest in him. Spurs will cover Palhinha's full wages and have an option to make the move more permanent next season, reportedly for £26million (€30m). Palhinha joined Bayern for an initial £43.2m fee last summer, representing a club-record player sale for Fulham. But the defensive midfielder made just six starts in the Bundesliga last season as it became clear he was not part of manager Vincent Kompany's plans. During two seasons with Fulham, who he joined for £17m, Palhinha became one of the Premier League's standout stars. In the 2023-24 season, he ranked top among all top-flight players for total tackles made, as well as for tackles made in the defensive third of the pitch and also in the middle third. Tottenham believe the Portuguse international's arrival will bolster their strength in central midfield ahead of their first season under new head coach Thomas Frank, who tasted victory in his first north London derby in Thursday's pre-season friendly victory over Arsenal in Hong Kong. Should the deal be completed swiftly, Palhinha could make his Spurs against his parent club, with Spurs and Bayern to meet in a friendly at the Allianz Arena next Thursday as England captain Harry Kane faces his former club.

'Struggling' Marchand targets second gold at swimming worlds
'Struggling' Marchand targets second gold at swimming worlds

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

'Struggling' Marchand targets second gold at swimming worlds

Leon Marchand admitted he was "struggling" on the final day of the world championships on Sunday after qualifying for the 400m individual medley final with an uncharacteristically sluggish swim. The French superstar broke the world record and won gold in the 200m individual medley earlier this week in Singapore but he was seventh fastest in the 400m medley heats with a time of 4min 13.19sec. Marchand, who broke Michael Phelps's 400m individual medley world record at the world championships in Japan two years ago, said his performance "worries" him ahead of Sunday night's final. "I would have preferred to set the best time this morning and it didn't go as planned, I was struggling a bit," said the 23-year-old. "Strange, because I slept well, I felt fine this morning, but that's swimming -- sometimes you dive in and you don't feel good." Japan's Tomoyuki Matsushita set the fastest time in 4:10.39, almost three seconds quicker than Marchand. Marchand is swimming a lighter programme than usual in Singapore, competing only in the individual medley and relay events. His heat on Sunday morning was only his fifth swim of the championships. "It worries me, but I have a lane tonight so in the end it's OK," said the Frenchman. Summer McIntosh was fastest in the women's 400m individual medley heats, the morning after her epic battle with American great Katie Ledecky in the 800m freestyle final. McIntosh saw her bid to join Phelps as the only swimmers to win five individual golds at a single world championships end after finishing third behind Ledecky and Australia's Lani Pallister. McIntosh said she "got all of my thoughts and emotions out last night", before coming through the 400m individual medley heats in 4:35.56. "I'm really just focusing on the 400 IM and putting a good time down and touching the wall first," said the 18-year-old Canadian, who has already won three golds in Singapore. "There's more reflection that I can do from what happened last night in the 800 but I think that's reflection that will be happening at the start of next season." Chinese 12-year-old Yu Zidi also qualified for the final in a third-fastest time of 4:36.49, less than a second behind McIntosh. Yu won her heat and will be appearing in her third individual final in Singapore. She finished fourth in both the 200m individual medley and 200m butterfly and picked up a bronze medal as a member of China's 4x200m women's freestyle relay team. Yu became the youngest swimmer in history to win a world championships medal. amk/jfx

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store