
UAE Team Emirates-XRG strengthens grip on Tour de France
DUBAI (WAM) UAE Team Emirates-XRG's Tadej Pogačar tightened his grip on the Yellow Jersey during stage 18 of the Tour de France, finishing second behind Ben O'Connor (Jayco AlUla) and gaining 11 seconds, including bonus time, on rival Jonas Vingegaard (Visma-Lease a Bike) in the final 350 metres of the gruelling Queen stage.The Slovenian leads the general classification by nearly four and a half minutes with just three stages remaining. The 182.6km route featured over 5,000 metres of climbing, including the Col du Glandon, Col de la Madeleine, and the summit finish on the Col de la Loze.Despite Visma-Lease a Bike's efforts to put Pogačar under pressure, UAE Team Emirates-XRG proved resilient. Teammates Jhonatan Narváez and Adam Yates were instrumental, especially in the final climb, guiding Pogačar through key moments and neutralising attacks.A key turning point came when Vingegaard attacked with 6km to go, but Pogačar responded strongly. As the race reached the final climb, Narváez and Yates took over, setting a fierce pace that dropped key contenders. Pogačar launched a decisive move 350 metres from the line to gain time on Vingegaard and Oscar Onley (Picnic-PostNL), although O'Connor, from an earlier breakaway, held on for the stage win.Pogačar said, 'I wanted the stage win, but the priority is the Yellow Jersey. Visma went hard on the Madeleine and downhill, but we kept our composure. There was no cooperation in the valley, so I waited for my teammates. On the final climb, Ben was strong, but I had good legs and held on to Yellow.'
With two key mountain stages left before Paris, Pogačar added, 'Today was the Queen stage, and tomorrow is another big one. Three more to go, then vacation.'

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


Khaleej Times
8 minutes ago
- Khaleej Times
Pogacar credits 'great atmosphere' at UAE Team Emirates for Tour de France triumph
Moments after becoming a four-time Tour de France champion, Tadej Pogacar celebrated the incredible achievement with his UAE Team Emirates-XRG teammates in Paris. The Slovenian rider acknowledged that everyone in team played a big role in his triumph. For Pogacar, his fourth Tour success has perhaps been his most resounding yet, with the Slovenian not losing a single second on the road to any of the top five in the general classification between stages 1-20. He becomes only the second rider in Tour de France history, after Maurice Garin in 1903, to do so. Along the way, Pogacar has taken four memorable stage victories and held his great rival Jonas Vingegaard (Visma-Lease a Bike) at arm's length. The Danish two-time Tour champion left no stone unturned in his bid to dethrone Pogacar in the Grand Boucle, including an all-or-nothing siege on stage 18, but was unable to repeat his victories of 2022 and 2023. For his efforts, Vingegaard was rewarded with second place in the overall, as Red Bull-BORA-hansgrohe's Florian Lipowitz rounded out the podium in third. For UAE Team Emirates-XRG, Pogacar led the line in style but did so with the unwavering support of his teammates, from Lille to Paris via the Pyrenees and the Alps. The Emirati squad ends its ninth Tour de France with five stage victories, including four from Pogacar and Tim Wellens' superb stage 15 win from the breakaway. It takes UAE Team Emirates-XRG to 26 stage wins on the sport's grandest stage. Sporting the hallowed yellow jersey through 13 stages and on the final podium in Paris, Pogacar also vanquishes the polka dot jersey as the winner of the King of the Mountains classification. It is the third time that the Slovenian has won both classifications in his career, and comes courtesy of his dominant displays in mountain stages. 'I am just speechless. To win a fourth Tour de France and finish six years in a row on the podium, this one feels especially amazing. I am super proud that I can wear this yellow jersey," Pogacar said. 'I think it all started with how we started to ride with the team. We had a great atmosphere, great team, great spirit. We went fighting from day one, and then after stage 5 and Mûr-de-Bretagne, I knew that I had good legs to compete for the victory. 'We just kept on fighting, and then I think the second week was the decisive moment. We took the advantage and we went more comfortably into the third week.' He also praised Vingegaard's fierce competitive nature as a cyclist. 'Myself and Jonas [Vingegaard] talked in the neutral zone about how much has changed in the last five years of us racing against each other," Pogacar said. "We raised the level of each other much higher, and we push ourselves to the limit to try to beat each other. I must say that battling against Jonas was again a tough experience, but I must say respect to him, and a big congratulations for his fight. 'It was an incredible race. Now it's time to celebrate.' To celebrate his achievements, Pogacar rode aboard an all-yellow Colnago Y1Rs on stage 21, with a matching helmet and sunglasses from MET and Scicon, respectively. His teammates, meanwhile, sported custom-designed, yellow-infused kits from the historic Italian brand, Pissei. After three weeks of from-the-gun racing around France, Sunday offered a welcome moment of celebration for those who had worked tirelessly to land the top step in Paris. Pogacar now draws level with Chris Froome on four Tour de France victories, and at just 26 years of age, his eyes will slowly turn to the record holders Jacques Anquetil, Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault and Miguel Indurain — all of whom ended their careers with five Tour wins. Moving to over 100 career victories during this year's race, Pogacar continues to define sporting excellence, and UAE Team Emirates-XRG remains at his side all the way.


Dubai Eye
41 minutes ago
- Dubai Eye
UAE Team Emirates-XRG: Pogačar clinches fourth Tour de France title
Tadej Pogačar won his fourth Tour de France title finishing fourth on the final stage into Paris, leading the UAE Team Emirates-XRG to its fourth Tour victory in six years. The Slovenian rider secured the overall win with a total time of 76:00:32, finishing 4 minutes 24 seconds ahead of Jonas Vingegaard (Visma–Lease a Bike) and 11 minutes ahead of Florian Lipowitz (Red Bull–BORA–hansgrohe). From stages 1 through 20, Pogačar didn't lose a single second to any of the other top five riders in the general classification — a feat matched only once before, by Maurice Garin in 1903. He won four stages and also claimed the King of the Mountains classification for the third time in his career. UAE Team Emirates-XRG took five stage wins overall, with Tim Wellens adding a solo victory on Stage 15. The team supported Pogačar from the opening stage in Lille through the Alps and Pyrenees to Paris, despite losing a rider before the first rest day. Jonas Vingegaard, winner in 2022 and 2023, mounted a serious challenge, especially with an all-in attack on Stage 18, but couldn't close the gap. He finished second overall. Lipowitz completed the podium in third. This is Pogačar's fourth Tour win, putting him alongside Jacques Anquetil, Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault and Miguel Induráin, all of whom have five. At 26, Pogačar is on track to challenge that record.


Gulf Today
an hour ago
- Gulf Today
UAE Team Emirates-XRG's Pogacar claims fourth Tour de France title
Tadej Pogacar claimed his fourth Tour de France title on Sunday, 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, 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 50 kilometres 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 U-25 rider. 'This was one of the hardest Tours I've ever been in,' Pogacar said. On Sunday, celebrations turned tense when the final stage featured three climbs up Montmartre. Times had been neutralised some 50 km 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. Meanwhile, Mavi Garcia became the oldest rider to win a stage at the women's Tour de France on Sunday. The 41-year-old Spaniard clinched the second stage with a solo breakaway. She looked back twice before realizing she would not be caught and then raised her arms aloft at the finish line. Dutch rider Annemiek van Vleuten was 39 when she won a mountain stage on the 2022 women's Tour, organizers said. Garcia attacked with about 11 kilometers (6.8 miles) left on the 110.4-kilometer hilly stage through Brittany and ending in Quimper. She looked like being caught near the end as the peloton loomed large behind her, but she kicked in and won by three seconds. 'I've been racing for a long time and I hadn't been having my best year, but this win really gives me a massive boost of energy,' Garcia said. 'I really didn't believe I was going to win at the end. I've tried many times like that and it never worked out, so I just couldn't believe it until I was five meters from the line.' Dutchwoman Lorena Wiebes was second and Kim Le Court of Mauritius took third place in a sprint to the line. Le Court did just enough to take the race leader's yellow jersey from cycling great Marianne Vos, who won Saturday's opening stage in a close finish and placed fifth on Sunday. Le Court and Vos have the same overall time after two stages, but Le Court now leads overall courtesy of her better combined stage finishes over the first two days. Stage 3 on Monday is a flat stage for sprinters, ending in the western city of Angers. The nine-stage race ends on Aug. 3. Agencies