logo
Tour de France: Pogacar triumphs after Montmartre sprint – DW – 07/27/2025

Tour de France: Pogacar triumphs after Montmartre sprint – DW – 07/27/2025

DW27-07-2025
Slovenian star Tadej Pogacar led the peloton on a novel route up Montmartre and past the Sacré-Cœur en route to winning the Tour de France for the fourth time.
Tadej Pogacar entered serenely into Paris on Sunday to wrap up his fourth Tour de France title, while Wout van Aert celebrated a famous final stage win as three circuits of the hill of were added to the traditional finish on the for the first time.
Slovenian star Pogacar entered this year's Tour as clear favorite and lived up to expectations from start to finish, ultimately finishing with a comfortable lead of four minutes and 24 seconds over Denmark's Jonas Vingegaard.
Germany's Florian Lipowitz finished third, some 11 minutes behind Pogacar, riding for team Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe and marking a successful Tour entry for the Austrian energy drink brand.
"I think the second week [of the Tour] was the decisive moment," Pogacar said. "We took more advantage and went more comfortably into the third week."
While Pogacar's lead was never in danger on the final stage – the wearer of the , or yellow jersey, traditionally entering the capital with a flute of champagne – the addition of to the end of the stage was a novelty for the sprinters.
Tour director Christian Prudhomme made no secret of the fact that he had been "jealous" of the spectacle of riders racing around the steep, cobbled streets of Montmartre during the 2024 Paris Olympics, and of his desire to replicate the scenes at the climax of the Tour de France.
But the decision wasn't universally well received in the peloton.
"I don't think it's a good idea," said Vingegaard. "seemed very beautiful at the Olympics, with a great atmosphere. But when the riders arrived there, there were 50 in the peloton. Now there will be 150 of us fighting for position on a very narrow climb. It's going to add more stress than we'd like."
Former German sprinter Marcel Kittel also lamented the move away from the traditional climax, saying: "It hurts my heart as a sprinter."
But Pogacar wasn't complaining. "Everyone celebrates in their own way, I just want peace and some nice weather, not like here today," he said, drenched in Parisian rain. "Now I just to enjoy some quiet days at home."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Fact-check: Trans athlete ban in women's sports, fair or not – DW – 08/05/2025
Fact-check: Trans athlete ban in women's sports, fair or not – DW – 08/05/2025

DW

timea day ago

  • DW

Fact-check: Trans athlete ban in women's sports, fair or not – DW – 08/05/2025

The participation of transgender athletes in women's competitions has been a hotly debated topic for years. Trump and the new IOC presidency have given it new impetus. A look at the facts. The debate about transgender women athletes in competitive sports has been going on for years. In the United States, President Donald Trump recently signed a decree banning trans women athletes from women's sports at the national level. Many federations have already tightened their participation rules. World Aquatics ruled back in 2022 that swimmers who had gone through male puberty could no longer compete in women's competitions, while, in March 2025, World Athletics announced that it would be introducing gender eligibility tests featuring cheek swabs to determine the presence of the "SRY" gene and thus of a Y chromosome. The tests, which could also include dried blood tests to measure testosterone levels, have been criticized by experts on both scientific and moral grounds. Changes could also be on the horizon for the Olympics, with the newly elected IOC President Kirsty Coventry speaking out in favor of stricter restrictions for women's categories. DW Fact check looked at the latest studies and spoke with experts. Read the complete article here.

Tour de France: Pauline Ferrand-Prévot rides to victory – DW – 08/03/2025
Tour de France: Pauline Ferrand-Prévot rides to victory – DW – 08/03/2025

DW

time3 days ago

  • DW

Tour de France: Pauline Ferrand-Prévot rides to victory – DW – 08/03/2025

"PFP" becomes the first Frenchwoman to win the iconic race since the reestablishment of the women's Tour four years ago. Pauline Ferrand-Prévot cycled to victory in the on Sunday, becoming the first Frenchwoman to win the iconic race since the reestablishment of the women's edition four years ago. After nine days of racing, the 33-year-old Olympic cross-country champion finished three minutes and 42 seconds ahead of Demi Vollering of the Netherlands and more than four minutes ahead of last year's winner, Katarzyna Niewiadoma of Poland. "This stage was really difficult," she said of the ninth and final stage in the Alpine region of Haute-Savoie. "But I was determined to win here wearing the yellow jersey. It's a dream come true." After concentrating primarily on cross-country cycling for the past seven years, Ferrand-Prévot – nicknamed "PFP" – shifted her focus to the road this season, winning the prestigious Paris-Roubaix race in northern France in April and also making the podium in the in Belgium (second place) and the in Italy (third). She abandoned the in Spain in May, judging herself to be short of form and wanting to concentrate on the upcoming – a wise decision, as it turned out. "I remember telling my mother that I wanted to be a boy so that I could compete in the ," she said ahead of the start of the race in Vannes on the Atlantic coast in northwestern France two weeks ago. "But now it's possible as a woman. That's why I came back to road racing, just to do ."

Leclerc Ends Ferrari Barren Run With Stunning Pole Ahead Of McLarens
Leclerc Ends Ferrari Barren Run With Stunning Pole Ahead Of McLarens

Int'l Business Times

time4 days ago

  • Int'l Business Times

Leclerc Ends Ferrari Barren Run With Stunning Pole Ahead Of McLarens

Charles Leclerc ended Ferrari's barren qualifying run this year with a stunning late lap on Saturday to beat both McLarens and claim his first pole of the season for the Italian team at the Hungarian Grand Prix. The 27-year-old Monegasque went late in the final minutes of a closely-contested session to clock a best lap in one minute and 15.372 seconds in changing conditions, leaving his rivals frustrated as they failed to improve on their first run times. "I definitely didn't expect that and honestly I just don't have any words for this. It's one of my best poles and the most unexpected," said Leclerc. He took pole by 0.026 seconds ahead of series leader Oscar Piastri and by 0.041sec ahead of the Australian's McLaren team-mate and title rival Lando Norris, with George Russell 0.053sec adrift in a breathtakingly close finish. It was Leclerc's first pole of the year, his first in Budapest and the 27th of his career. It was Ferrari's first pole in Hungary since Sebastian Vettel in 2017. Aston Martin's Fernando Alonso was fifth ahead of team-mate Lance Stroll, the pair enjoying their best qualifying of the season, with Sauber's Gabriel Bortoleto seventh ahead of Red Bull's four-time champion Max Verstappen and the two Racing Bulls rookies Liam Lawson and Isack Hadjar. "Wow, whooaw!, Mama Mia!" exclaimed Leclerc, who had on Thursday described the Hungaroring as his worst track of the season. "Today, I don't understand anything about F1. The whole of qualifying has been so extremely difficult - and I am not exaggerating," he said. Piastri blamed a change of wind direction. "It basically did a 180 degrees from Q1 to Q3. It always seems pathetic, blaming the wind." The Q1 segment began with clouds looming in a sunny sky and hot conditions with temperatures of 31 degrees (air) and 52 (track), falling as it became more overcast. The Williams duo were first out on softs, Alex Albon clocking 1:17.441 to set the pace. Carlos Sainz locked up and returned to the pits as McLaren and Red Bull joined the action, Piastri dipping his left wheels into the gravel at Turn 12 as he went top, three-tenths clear of Norris and Lewis Hamilton's Ferrari. Verstappen was only 13th after the opening runs with Yuki Tsunoda 17th, clear confirmation of Red Bull's struggle for balance and pace while Aston Martin went late, as the track temperature fell 10 degrees, and Alonso went top in 1:15.281. The cooler track brought sharp improvements in a late reshuffle that saw Piastri top in 1:15.211 ahead of Alonso and Racing Bulls' rookie Isack Hadjar. Hamilton was 10th and Verstappen 11th. Tsunoda led the five eliminated ahead of Alpine's Pierre Gasly, Esteban Ocon of Haas, Sauber's Nico Hulkeberg and Alex Albon of Williams. Rain began to fall at Turn Six, sending anxiety up the pit lane as they queued to start Q2. Alonso set the pace before Norris clocked 1:14.890 to go top, with Piastri second, the pair separated by 0.05. The first run left Leclerc 10th and Hamilton 11th, with work to do. Verstappen was eighth as the rain stopped ahead of the final runs and he stayed there, six-tents adrift, while Leclerc secured his passage to Q3 in sixth. Hamilton exited in 12th, his worst-ever qualifying position at the Hungaroring where he has claimed a record nine poles, along with Oliver Bearman of Haas, Sainz, Alpine's Franco Colapinto and Mercedes' rookie Kimi Antonelli. It was cooler still as Q3 began as the McLarens dominated with Piastri ahead of Norris by 0.096 and Russell third while Stroll had his lap deleted for exceeding track limits. Stroll and Alonso went early for their final runs, slotting in fourth and second, the Spaniard just 0.083 behind Piastri's first run before Leclerc snatched pole in the final seconds with his beautifully-judged late lap. Ferrari's British driver Lewis Hamilton had his worst-ever qualifying position in 12th at the Hungaroring where he has claimed a record nine poles AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store