
Tadej Pogacar explains reason behind pulling out of Vuelta a Espana after Tour de France victory
Pogacar - who equalled Chris Froome 's four titles in Paris on Sunday - has cut a more downbeat figure than usual at points during this Tour de France, saying 'I can't wait for the Tour to be over' during the tough final week in the Alps, and admitting afterwards that it was the hardest edition of the race he has contested. This year's route featured five hors-categorie summit finishes and a punchy, Classics-style opening week before gruelling stints in the Pyrenees and Alps, and a full-throttle finish taking in several steep climbs up Montmartre in Paris.
So it is not a huge surprise that the 26-year-old has opted out of racing the Vuelta a Espana, which starts on 23 August in Torino, Italy.
'After such a demanding Tour, we decided it was best to take a break,' Pogacar said through his team on Tuesday. 'The Vuelta is, of course, a race I would dearly love to return to. I have fantastic memories there from 2019, but now the body is telling me to rest.'
He added that his race calendar for the second half of the year will include the Grands Prix in Canada in September, and that a major target will be the World Championships, held at altitude in Kigali, Rwanda.
'I'm excited to go back to Canada; the races are tough but beautiful, and they fit my style well. I'll be aiming to be back racing well again for that part of the season and for the World Championships especially,' he said.
Pogacar would have been a heavy favourite for the Vuelta, which he has not ridden since his breakout year in 2019, when he made his Grand Tour debut there. The Slovenian, then aged 20, won three stages and the best young rider classification en route to a third-place finish overall.
In his absence two-time Tour de France champion Jonas Vingegaard, who finished second behind Pogacar in Paris, is the favourite to win the maillot rojo. His Visma-Lease a Bike squad have not confirmed their final lineup for the Vuelta.
Pogacar's UAE Team Emirates-XRG team have named their eight-man squad for the race, which was won by Pogacar's compatriot Primoz Roglic of Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe last year.
Portuguese climber Joao Almeida, who crashed heavily early in the Tour and abandoned with a broken rib, is set to be a co-leader along with Spanish rider Juan Ayuso at his home race.
Ivo Oliveira, Domen Novak, Mikkel Bjerg, Jay Vine, Marc Soler, and Felix Grossschartner complete the lineup.
Hashtags

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


BBC News
4 hours ago
- BBC News
Tour de France Scot Oscar Onley hailed a hero in Kelso
The cyclist who equalled the best ever Tour de France finish by a Scot at the weekend has been hailed as a hero in his Onley - who grew up in Kelso in the Borders - finished fourth overall in the gruelling three-week chairman of the Kelso Wheelers Cycling Club, where Oscar first showed his prowess, said they had been watching him every pedal of the Ure said they had been "shocked and surprised" by how well he had performed but also knew the talent the 22-year-old possessed. "I think from 10 years old, when that young lad first jumped on a bike, you could see that if ever there was natural talent Oscar was brimming with it," he said."We do 100 mile rides at the start of the season and at the end of the season and Oscar was always there and wanted to take part in them."He would sit on that wheel for 100 miles and then try to jump me for the sprint." However, Rob said the top four finish had exceeded their wildest expectations for the local talent."Even finishing the Tour de France is a massive achievement," he he hopes the "Onley effect" could inspire the next generation."I am really hoping that the young kids are seeing this and going - well, if it can happen to him, it can happen to me and jump on their bikes again," he said."We definitely have seen a downturn in kids participating and I am hoping this gives us that massive push again for kids to get back out on their bikes." 'Started his journey' Scottish Borders Council's deputy leader Scott Hamilton said he had no doubt Onley's performance could help the next generation of riders from the region."The Tour de France starts in Edinburgh in 2027, so this is an amazing time for Scottish cycling, and Oscar coming to the fore will undoubtedly inspire many young people to take up cycling," he said."With a number of cycling clubs around the Borders, including Kelso Wheelers where Oscar started his journey - and the support of our sports development team - there are lots of opportunities to get into cycling in the Scottish Borders."


Daily Mail
5 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Revealed: Woman at centre of Christian Horner scandal leaves Red Bull for a new role in motorsport
The woman at the centre of the scandal that almost brought down Christian Horner last year has left Red Bull and now has a new role in motorsport. The 'female employee', as she was usually referred to in media reports, made accusations of inappropriate and coercive behaviour of a sexual nature against then Red Bull team principal Horner. She has not been named by Mail Sport for legal reasons, and her identity remains a secret from the public. Horner, husband of former Spice Girl Geri Halliwell, was cleared of misconduct by two separate investigations led by KCs. Earlier this month, the 51-year-old executive effectively left Red Bull after 20 years in charge, during which time he led them to 14 world titles. He was not given an explanation for being 'released from operational duties' three weeks ago on Tuesday. A severance package worth up to £60million to settle his contract has yet to be agreed. Despite having her claims rejected, the woman remained on Red Bull's payroll for many months afterwards, suspended on full pay, though that arrangement is believed to have stopped some time ago. It has now emerged that she has taken up a new position. The paddock was electrified in Bahrain last March when an anonymous email, containing a slew of racy text messages purporting to be between Horner and the employee, was sent to F1's leading figures and media. Horner was absent from the F1 paddock at the Belgian Grand Prix for the first time since 2004, instead watching avidly from home as Oscar Piastri won, with Red Bull's defending champion Max Verstappen fourth.


The Guardian
5 hours ago
- The Guardian
Tour de France Femmes: Wiebes strikes again as Vollering admits post-crash anxieties
Lorena Wiebes secured her second stage win in the 2025 Tour de France Femmes on the Avenue John Kennedy in Poitiers, after again fending off her Dutch compatriot Marianne Vos in an uphill sprint. Wiebes, who also won the Italian classic Milan-San Remo and the the points classification in the Giro d'Italia, described 2025 as her 'best season to date'. She has also won five Giro stages between from 2021-2025. 'I have tried to have more of a free mindset, like I had in the Giro,' Wiebes, of Team SD Worx-Protime, said. 'This season has already been really good, even if I hadn't won in the Tour de France. It doesn't feel like we have a lot of pressure from the team.' While Wiebes celebrated another sprint success, the pre-race favourite Demi Vollering was just happy to get through the day after a heavy crash close to the finish of stage three almost ended her race. Vollering, winner of the 2023 Tour de France Femmes, finished the stage in the main group, a feat which had looked unlikely before the start in Saumur, when she winced her way through a pre-race warm-up and was visibly in pain. 'It was a big relief to feel good and that I was able to ride and to keep my head up,' she said. 'That's the biggest relief. From now on we will see, day by day. I was a bit anxious for the final because it was kind of similar to yesterday, so you feel tension. A crash like that takes its toll on you. Again, no time loss, and now I think the shock is over.' Vollering admitted she had ridden at the front of the peloton 'mostly to stay safe … It's better to spend energy in the front of the peloton than be behind. My team did a very good job with keeping me in front of the bunch. When I was a bit anxious they were always next to me'. The Dutch professional is the most high-value rider in the women's peloton and her €1m transfer to the French team FDJ-Suez was built around her winning this year's Tour. However, some rival teams were dismissive of comments by the FDJ-Suez team manager, Stephen Delcourt, about a lack of respect shown towards Vollering by others in the peloton, in the aftermath of her crash. 'What he's saying is ridiculous,' Jos van Emden, the team director at Visma-Lease a bike, told Dutch media. 'Apparently he wants a peloton of eight riders, with Demi in it, to ride in a gilded cage. He's simply been influenced by Demi, by Demi's posturing.' This was Vollering's second high‑speed crash in the Tour, following her very similar fall in the race last year, six kilometres from the finish of stage four to Amnéville, while wearing the yellow jersey. 'When I was on the ground I had some throwback of last year,' she said, 'but luckily this time it was in the five-kilometre rule [meaning she did not lose any time].' However, she still blames her rivals for not honouring the tradition of waiting for the race leader when they are down, and her former teammates at SD Worx for racing ahead and abandoning her to her fate. This time, though, with Vollering's committed FDJ-Suez team around her, things were different. But it will still be a tall order for her to be fully recovered from what she described as a 'hard impact' for Wednesday's longest stage of the race, from Chasseneuil-du-Poitou Futuroscope to Guéret, which includes three categorised climbs in the final 35km.