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Pogacar underlines greatness with fourth Tour triumph
Pogacar underlines greatness with fourth Tour triumph

Perth Now

time3 days ago

  • Sport
  • Perth Now

Pogacar underlines greatness with fourth Tour triumph

Tadej Pogacar has claimed his fourth Tour de France title, cementing his status as the most dominant rider of his generation and joining Britain's Chris Froome on the all-time winners' list. The 26-year-old Slovenian, who previously triumphed in 2020, 2021 and 2024, delivered a near-flawless performance over three weeks, excelling in every department, and even coming close to prevailing on a spectacular final stage on the Champs Elysees after an epic duel with Belgian Wout van Aert. Pogacar attacked relentlessly in the ascents of the Butte Montmartre but eventually suffered a brutal counterpunch from Van Aert, who went solo to win the 21st stage. The competitive element was largely neutralised on Sunday after organisers decided to freeze the times with about 50km left in the stage due to hazardous road conditions in driving rain. It did not prevent Pogacar from going for it, but Van Aert proved to be the best on the day, beating Italian Davide Ballerini and third-placed Matej Mohoric. Pogacar took fourth place. The world champion effectively sealed his victory in the Pyrenees, with a brutal attack on the climb to Hautacam and a commanding victory in the uphill individual time trial, leaving chief rival Jonas Vingegaard more than four minutes behind before controlling the race. German Florian Lipowitz finished third on his Tour debut and won the white jersey for the best under-25 rider. "This was one of the hardest Tours I've ever been in," Pogacar said. Celebrations turned tense when the final stage featured three climbs up Montmartre. Times had been neutralised some 50km from the finish due to slippery roads, but a fierce fight for the stage win still unfolded. With his latest triumph, Pogacar equals Froome (2013, 2015-17) and now only trails cycling greats Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault, Jacques Anquetil and Miguel Indurain, who share the record with five titles. Pogacar also secured the polka-dot jersey for the mountains classification, underlining his all-round dominance, while Italy's Jonathan Milan clinched the green jersey for the points competition. For Ineos Grenadiers, the once all-conquering team that ruled the 2010s with victories by Bradley Wiggins, Froome and Geraint Thomas, there was little to celebrate beyond two stage wins by Thymen Arensman. Thomas, a former champion, rode his last Tour in virtual anonymity, as the British outfit continues to face questions amid doping allegations reported in recent weeks. As tradition dictates, riders entered Paris in a celebratory mood, but the finale proved anything but routine with the Montmartre climbs spicing up the closing laps. Australia's Ben O'Connor, of Team Jayco-AlUla, was 11th in the final general classification, with compatriot Callum Scotson 33rd. Harrison Sweeny was two places further back with Michael Storer 42nd. Kaden Groves, a dramatic winner of the penultimate stage on Saturday, came in 86th.

Pogacar underlines greatness with fourth Tour triumph
Pogacar underlines greatness with fourth Tour triumph

West Australian

time3 days ago

  • Sport
  • West Australian

Pogacar underlines greatness with fourth Tour triumph

Tadej Pogacar has claimed his fourth Tour de France title, cementing his status as the most dominant rider of his generation and joining Britain's Chris Froome on the all-time winners' list. The 26-year-old Slovenian, who previously triumphed in 2020, 2021 and 2024, delivered a near-flawless performance over three weeks, excelling in every department, and even coming close to prevailing on a spectacular final stage on the Champs Elysees after an epic duel with Belgian Wout van Aert. Pogacar attacked relentlessly in the ascents of the Butte Montmartre but eventually suffered a brutal counterpunch from Van Aert, who went solo to win the 21st stage. The competitive element was largely neutralised on Sunday after organisers decided to freeze the times with about 50km left in the stage due to hazardous road conditions in driving rain. It did not prevent Pogacar from going for it, but Van Aert proved to be the best on the day, beating Italian Davide Ballerini and third-placed Matej Mohoric. Pogacar took fourth place. The world champion effectively sealed his victory in the Pyrenees, with a brutal attack on the climb to Hautacam and a commanding victory in the uphill individual time trial, leaving chief rival Jonas Vingegaard more than four minutes behind before controlling the race. German Florian Lipowitz finished third on his Tour debut and won the white jersey for the best under-25 rider. "This was one of the hardest Tours I've ever been in," Pogacar said. Celebrations turned tense when the final stage featured three climbs up Montmartre. Times had been neutralised some 50km from the finish due to slippery roads, but a fierce fight for the stage win still unfolded. With his latest triumph, Pogacar equals Froome (2013, 2015-17) and now only trails cycling greats Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault, Jacques Anquetil and Miguel Indurain, who share the record with five titles. Pogacar also secured the polka-dot jersey for the mountains classification, underlining his all-round dominance, while Italy's Jonathan Milan clinched the green jersey for the points competition. For Ineos Grenadiers, the once all-conquering team that ruled the 2010s with victories by Bradley Wiggins, Froome and Geraint Thomas, there was little to celebrate beyond two stage wins by Thymen Arensman. Thomas, a former champion, rode his last Tour in virtual anonymity, as the British outfit continues to face questions amid doping allegations reported in recent weeks. As tradition dictates, riders entered Paris in a celebratory mood, but the finale proved anything but routine with the Montmartre climbs spicing up the closing laps. Australia's Ben O'Connor, of Team Jayco-AlUla, was 11th in the final general classification, with compatriot Callum Scotson 33rd. Harrison Sweeny was two places further back with Michael Storer 42nd. Kaden Groves, a dramatic winner of the penultimate stage on Saturday, came in 86th.

Crash scuppers Healy and Dunbar hopes, Tadej Pogacar prevails
Crash scuppers Healy and Dunbar hopes, Tadej Pogacar prevails

RTÉ News​

time11-07-2025

  • Sport
  • RTÉ News​

Crash scuppers Healy and Dunbar hopes, Tadej Pogacar prevails

Irish pair Eddie Dunbar and Ben Healy were caught up in a crash with just under 6km to go in Friday's seventh stage of the Tour de France. Yesterday, Healy (EF Education-EasyPost) claimed a memorable stage win, while Dunbar (Team Jayco-AlUla) also enjoyed an excellent stage, crossing the line in fourth. However, they did not get the rub of the green on the 197km ride from Saint-Malo to Mur-de-Bretagne today. Travelling in the front group, a crash sent 11 riders tumbling. Dunbar and Healy were both at the back of the group, the former falling more heavily than his compatriot. Though Healy quickly remounted his bike, Dunbar took a little longer to resume the stage, his jersey torn from the fall. Healy eventually finished 26th, 1'45 behind stage winner and new leader Tadej Pogacar, and is 11th (down from eighth) in the general classification, 3'55 behind overall. Dunbar finished almost six minutes later in 73rd, and sits in 33rd overall, now 16'29 back. UAE's Joao Almeida, who was seventh in the GC standings before today, and Jack Haig of Bahrain Victorious appeared to come out of the incident the worst. Defending champion Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates) is back in the yellow jersey after the Slovenian fought off Dane Jonas Vingegaard (Visma-Lease a Bike) to win the stage. Pogacar, three-times winner, claimed his second stage of this year's Tour, outsprinting Vingegaard at the summit finish, with Britain's Oscar Onley taking third place. Mathieu van der Poel began the day with a one-second lead over Pogacar but the Dutchman finished 22nd on the stage and slipped to fifth overall, with Belgian Remco Evenepoel now in second place and 54 seconds behind the Slovenian.

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