
Tour de France: History maker Tadej Pogacar extends lead in Tour de France yellow jersey
became the youngest rider to reach 21
Tour de France
stage wins as he stretched his advantage in the yellow jersey to more than four minutes in Friday's mountain time trial to Peyragudes.
Pogacar completed the 10.9km route from Loudenvielle – 8km of which was made up of the first category climb to the mountaintop airstrip – in a time of 23 minutes flat, putting another 36 seconds into his rival Jonas Vingegaard as others fell even further back.
It was a fourth stage win of this year's Tour for the 26-year-old, who is now 14 shy of Mark Cavendish's all-time record.
A day after he underlined his dominance so far with a solo win on the Hautacam, Pogacar extended his lead over Vingegaard to four minutes and seven seconds, and barring misfortune, it is hard to see how anyone can stop him winning a fourth title.
READ MORE
'I'm super happy,' said Pogacar. 'This time trial was quite a big question mark already in December for me. I wanted everything to be perfect and the team delivered in the final moments for everything to be on top.
'I had an easy day in the morning, a nice preparation and then I was really targeting to go from the start to the finish all out and try to smash it as much as possible on the pedals.
'I almost blew up in the end but I saw the time on the [finish line screens] and it gave me an extra push because I knew I was going to win.'
After losing more than two minutes to Pogacar on Thursday, Vingegaard was much happier after catching a struggling Remco Evenepoel 50 metres from the line on the 15 per cent gradients at the top of the runway.
'Of course yesterday was really disappointing,' the two-time Tour winner said. 'I hoped for more but in the end I was just a bit empty.
Ben Healy in action during the time trial on Friday between Loudenvielle and Peyragudes. Photograph: Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP via Getty Images
'Yesterday was probably one of my worst performances but today was one of my best so it's nice to come back like this.'
Both Vingegaard and Evenepoel, the world time trial champion, were among a handful of riders that opted to go with adapted time trial bikes, while Pogacar chose a road bike and made the decision pay.
Having shipped more than two minutes to both Pogacar and Vingegaard, Evenepoel barely hung on to third place overall and the best young rider's white jersey, just six seconds ahead of Florian Lipowitz.
The 22-year-old Scot Oscar Onley is also definitely part of that fight, up to fifth overall, eight minutes off yellow but only 47 seconds behind Evenepoel.
'Looking at the times now it looks like we were all suffering a little bit but I did what I could,' Onley said.
'With the steep runway at the end, I just had to hold back a little bit but it was difficult with the rest of the climb just an uncomfortable gradient.'
It was a second-consecutive bad day for Evenepoel, who said he had 'no idea' why he has struggled.
'With a normal feeling I should end up in the top three but I was really bad,' he said.
Ireland's Ben Healy remains in 11th position on general classification after coming home 26th in the time trial in 26:38, over three and a half minutes behind Pogacar.
Hashtags

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

The 42
3 hours ago
- The 42
10-woman Germany defeat France on penalties to reach Euro 2025 semi-finals
TEN-WOMAN GERMANY reached the Women's Euro 2025 semi-finals on Saturday after prevailing 6-5 in a penalty shootout against France following a gruelling match which finished 1-1 after extra time. Alice Sombath missed the decisive penalty for France to hand a last-four clash with Spain to Germany, who will take on the world champions in Zurich on Wednesday. Germany maintained their record of having never lost to France in a major summer tournament after battling back from going a goal and a woman down in the first 15 minutes to win a bruising encounter in Basel. St Jacob's Park was dominated by fierce German support which flocked over the nearby border with Switzerland and roared their team on even after Kathrin Hendrich was sent off and gave away the penalty from which Grace Geyoro opened the scoring. Sjoeke Nuesken — who also missed a penalty in the second half — levelled the scores 10 minutes later and, after a long battle to hold off France, Sombath's mistake sent the majority of the crowd wild. Advertisement Germany came into the match already missing key defenders Giulia Gwinn and Carlotta Wamser, to injury and suspension respectively, while star striker Lea Schueller was also surprisingly left on the bench. And the Germans' task was made even harder in the 13th minute when Hendrich inexplicably pulled Griedge Mbock's hair while defending a free-kick. Germany's Jule Brand against France's Kadidiatou Diani and Selma Bacha. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo But out of nowhere Nuesken drew a huge roar from the fans when she rose, completely unmarked, to glance home Klara Buehl's inswinging corner. From there Germany were content to sit back and hold France off by fair means or foul, and they were saved from being behind at the break by Delphone Cascarino needlessly straying offside before flicking home Kadidiatou Diani's low cross. That was one of the few decent attacks France managed to conjure up with an extra woman, and they continued to struggle after the break. Even when Geyoro had the ball in the net for the second time, lashing home on the rebound after a fine save from Ann-Katrin Berger, the goal was ruled out as Maelle Lakrar impeded the Germany goalkeeper while in an offside position. And Pauline Peyraud-Magnin saved France's skin when she kept out Nuesken's awful penalty in the 69th minute, given for a soft foul on Jule Brand. A simply incredible save from Ann-Katrin Berger to keep France out in extra-time! 📺 Live on RTÉ2/RTÉ Player. — RTÉ Sport (@RTEsport) July 19, 2025 But it was Ann-Katrin Berger who made possibly the save of the tournament 12 minutes into extra time when she somehow clawed out Janina Minge's inadvertant header and stopped Germany going out with an own goal. Berger could only watch as Melvine Malard shook the crossbar with almost the last kick of the game before the shootout, in which Amel Majri and Sombath both had weak efforts saved and allowed Germany to win against all odds. – © AFP 2025

The 42
9 hours ago
- The 42
Ben Healy moves back into GC top 10 as Pogacar extends Tour de France lead
BEN HEALY PRODUCED another fine performance to finish seventh on Saturday's gruelling 14th stage of the Tour de France, breaking back inside the general classification top 10. Defending champion Tadej Pogacar extended his overall race lead in the Pyrenees as Dutch rider Thymen Arensman climbed to victory. Double Olympic champion Remco Evenepoel, who had been third overall, pulled out of the race on the day's first climb of the daunting 2180m altitude Tourmalet. The Belgian Soudal Quick-Step rider appeared exhausted after Friday's uphill time trial. Advertisement Arensman attacked on the third of four mountains on a colossal climb day while Slovenian Pogacar outsprinted Jonas Vingegaard for second just over a minute behind the winner. Healy — who held the yellow jersey for two days this week — finished 2:46 behind Arensman, and now sits ninth in the GC. Crossing the line in the mist at 1840m altitude, Arensman flung himself to the ground exhausted after taking a first win on this Tour for British team Ineos. The 25-year-old produced a virtuoso climb amidst suffocating packs of near hysterical fans who had waited all day for the peloton to pass. Behind him Pogacar fought off a string of attacks from his arch rival Vingegaard on a day the Slovenian never looked like attacking for the win. Winner of the past two stages Pogacar pounced for the line from 50 metres with his trademark kick gaining another six seconds on the Dane. Pogacar, overall race winner in 2020, 2021 and 2024, now leads Vingegaard by 4min 13sec with Florian Lipowitz moving into third place at 7min 53sec. German Lipovitz of Red Bull rode on Pogacar's wheel until Dane Vingegaard, who won back-to-back Tour titles in 2022 and 2023, had attacked late on. After three days in the Pyrenees the riders next have a hilly stage 15 over 169.3km from Muret to the medieval fortified town of Carcassonne. – © AFP 2025

The 42
11 hours ago
- The 42
Olympic champion Evenepoel pulls out of Tour de France
BELGIAN RIDER REMCO Evenepoel pulled out of the Tour de France during Saturday's stage 14, a gruelling climb of the Tourmalet mountain in the Pyrenees. The double Olympic champion was third in the overall standings and had won stage five in the 21-stage race, but appeared exhausted after Friday's uphill time trial. The Soudal Quick-Step rider won both the Olympic road race and time trial gold in Paris, shortly after finishing third at the 2024 Tour de France and claimed the best young rider's white jersey. Advertisement But an accident in Brussels in December involving a postal delivery van scuppered the 25-year-old's preparation for this year's Tour. The opening stages were contested near the Belgian border, but Evenepoel lost a minute of the first day after being caught in a cross wind split. This tactical error deprived him of a golden chance of taking the leader's yellow jersey in the first week, where he would pulverise the field on a 33km time trial. The team will now base its attention around fellow Belgian rider Tim Merlier, who has already won two sprint stages on this Tour. – © AFP 2025