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2025 Tour de France: How to watch, schedule and standings for cycling race

2025 Tour de France: How to watch, schedule and standings for cycling race

USA Today08-07-2025
The Tour de France 2025 kicked off just a few days ago. We've already experience the first four stages, but with cycling's main event being a month-long affair, fans still have 17 more stages to enjoy before the winner is declared.
Some favorites have already established themselves with stars Mathieu van der Poel and Tadej Pogačar currently leading the field, with nearly a full minute separating them from seventh-place. Those two are on a tear to begin the event. However, with the much shorter individual time trial races still to come, there's a chance that anyone near the top could suffer a massive fall from just one bad stage.
Here's the full upcoming schedule for the remainder of the Tour de France.
2025 Tour de France full schedule, results
Distance, characteristics with scheduled start times.
Tour de France 2025 standings
*- times listed are in hours (h), minutes ('), seconds ('')
How to watch the 2025 Tour de France
All 21 stages will be available to stream on Peacock. NBC will have live coverage of stages 1 and 20, and will also air highlights of stages 2, 15, 20 and 21.
Stream the 2025 Tour de France on Peacock
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Cattle cull forces change to Tour de France stage route
Cattle cull forces change to Tour de France stage route

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timean hour ago

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Cattle cull forces change to Tour de France stage route

Changes have been made to Friday's stage 19 of the Tour de France due to the culling of cows taking place in the Col des Saisies area. The discovery of a contagious disease amongst cattle has meant the route will be shortened from 129.9 kilometres to just 95km with two climbs – the 11.3km Cote d'Hery-sur-Ugine and the 13.7km Col des Saisies – removed. An outbreak of nodular dermatitis meant the affected herd has needed to be culled and race organisers have taken the decision to divert the route in light of 'distress' amongst those farmers concerned. In a statement ahead of the Albertville-La Plagne stage, the Tour said: 'The discovery of an outbreak of contagious nodular dermatitis affecting cattle in a herd located specifically in the Col des Saisies has necessitated the culling of the animals. 'In light of the distress experienced by the affected farmers and in order to preserve the smooth running of the race, it has been decided, in agreement with the relevant authorities, to modify the route of Stage 19 (Albertville–La Plagne) and to avoid the ascent to the Col des Saisies. 'The ceremonial start will take place as planned at the exit of Albertville. After a 7km parade, riders will head towards the D925, where the official start will be given. 'The race will then rejoin the original route shortly before Beaufort (at km 52.4 on the original schedule). 'Due to this change, which notably bypasses the Col des Saisies, the stage will now cover a total distance of 95km instead of the originally planned 129.9km.' During Thursday's stage 18, Tadej Pogacar conquered his demons on the Col de la Loze to stretch his advantage in yellow amidst a hailstorm, as Ben O'Connor wrapped up the stage win. On the mountain where Pogacar famously cracked in 2023 as Jonas Vingegaard rode away to his second Tour crown, Pogacar was the one gaining time two years later as a late dig at the summit saw him add 11 seconds to an overall lead that now stands at four minutes 26 seconds over Vingegaard.

Why Oscar Onley could be the Tour de France's most surprising podium finisher for years
Why Oscar Onley could be the Tour de France's most surprising podium finisher for years

New York Times

time4 hours ago

  • New York Times

Why Oscar Onley could be the Tour de France's most surprising podium finisher for years

Oscar Onley is slumped with his back against the barriers, his whole upper body tremoring as it seeks air. His breath fogs and mingles with the summit mist. His eyes are wide as if he needs to inhale oxygen through them as well. With three stages of the Tour de France remaining, the 22-year-old Scot is just 22 seconds off third place in the general classification (GC). Advertisement A podium, should he overhaul Florian Lipowitz, would be the most surprising top-three finish since Jean-Christophe Péraud in 2014. It has been an explosive entrance into the sport's consciousness for a rider who only won his first professional race at the Tour Down Under last year. After finishing fourth on the sharp lift into Rouen on stage four, Onley had to log into ProCyclingStats to check where he finished, scrolling through it on his warm-down bike. 'I didn't know if Romain (Gregoire) had got past me,' he said. 'I was pretty cross-eyed.' But the only names above him were of the true elite — Tadej Pogačar, Mathieu van der Poel, and Jonas Vingegaard. 'Some of my team-mates and staff say to me, 'You are one of these guys',' Onley said before that stage. 'I don't really see it like that yet.' There is a visible naivety to Onley after these big results, a sense of confusion over why the attention on him is so fierce, so quickly. At the top of the Col de la Loze, after Thursday's stage, it was as if he had not quite registered how close he was to third. 'Yeah, that's…' he began. 'I don't know. That's not much. So we'll give it everything tomorrow.' We're all signing up to OnleyFans 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿#TDF2025 — ITV Cycling (@itvcycling) July 19, 2025 But this flies in the face of the assuredness with which he rides his bike. Lipowitz is two years older, but rides more rashly. While Lipowitz spent virtually all of stage 18 in the wind, Onley paced his efforts, remained protected, and was ultimately the only man who could follow Pogacar and Vingegaard in the final kilometres. He has now erased a two-minute gap to the podium down to the width of a wildflower's stem. His answer to the storm has been to climb faster. At the start of the Tour, Picnic–PostNL's hopes for Onley were cautiously optimistic. Curiosity is probably the most accurate emotion, with his team desperate to see what a rider who fractured his collarbone three times between August 2023 and April 2024 could really do. He rode the Tour last year, finishing 39th. There were small signs of promise, such as finishing fifth on the climb to SuperDévoluy, but nothing of this magnitude. Advertisement Though he had performed well in last month's Tour de Suisse, placing third overall and winning stage five, the field was not as strong as the loaded Critérium du Dauphiné. 'The first 10 days, we're just gonna keep him safe in the race,' Matt Winston, the team's directeur sportif, told The Athletic before the Tour started. 'We'll probably lose some time, need to find the right moment to get in the breakaway — and then when you get caught, you might be able to hang onto GC. So we just want to play it a little bit open, a bit relaxed, and see how far we can come.' Leaving it all out there 🥵 You can be proud of that ride @OscarOnley 🙌🏻#KeepChallenging #TDF2025 — Team Picnic PostNL (@picnicpostnl) July 24, 2025 An undercurrent behind Onley's performance has been his team's predicament. Picnic–PostNL appeared favourites for relegation to the ProTour just a few months ago — but Onley's points have fired them above Cofidis towards safety. But this meant they were targeting stage victories over GC — a top 10 would have been seen as an excellent result. 'I've had lots of top-fives and -10s in one-week races, but that's very different to doing it in a Grand Tour,' he told Cycling Weekly back in March. 'That's another step, and to be honest, I don't know if I am capable of it yet. The focus is on stages.' Top five? One-week races? How about top three over the three weeks of the Tour de France? Onley's superpower has been consistency. There has been no need for him to dive into breakaways — finishing fourth on the ramps of Rouen, third on the Mûr-de-Bretagne, fifth on the Hautacam, sixth to Superbagnères, and fourth up the Col de la Loze. Even his time trialing, seen as a major weakness entering the race, has developed significantly. A common cycling phrase is that a rider has diamonds in their legs — Onley's feel more like granite. The boy from Kelso, in the Scottish Borders, has come a long way. He grew up right next to a steep climb used by his local club, the Kelso Wheelers, but focused instead on cross-country running while growing up. His father, a black cab driver, split his time between Kelso and London, but regularly took Onley out in the hills. His mother was visible at this year's grand départ (start of the Tour), cheering on her son as he stood on the rostrum in Lille's central square. Advertisement He was never a particularly dominant junior, telling Rouleur last year that: 'I'm still quite small now, but as an under-14 and an under-16, I was really tiny, so the track and the criterium courses we did, they didn't suit me very well. I never really got any results.' Nevertheless, he made his way into the junior Scotland team. Winston signed him for Picnic in 2020, amid the Covid-19 pandemic, without seeing him race in person. Instead, he relied on data — an approach that has worked for several elite riders, including Vingegaard — having been flagged by Scottish cycling coaches Gary Coltman and Mark McKay. 'Mark came to me and said, 'Look, there's a rider who I believe will be a future Tour winner and I want to take him in a junior team to a race in the Alps',' Coltman told British newspaper The Times last week. 'So we agreed to do it. There was some kind of mountain time-trial and Oscar just blew them all away. Two teams wanted to sign him. There was an offer from the AG2R La Mondiale amateur team and as soon as the possibility of joining a French team arose, this 16-year-old kid from Kelso started learning French. 'He was very level-headed, very committed and very driven. What struck was the way he took control of his career.' Onley is now taking control of this race. He is still only midway through a five-year development plan crafted for him by Picnic. At the end of those five years? Who knows. Oscar Onley has no idea either. That's why he is so exciting.

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Derek Fisher is joining the new broadcast team for the NBA on NBC

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