
Tadej Pogacar wins fourth Tour de France title as Wout van Aert takes last stage
Pogacar looked keen to take what could prove to be a unique opportunity to win in yellow in Paris as the introduction of three ascents of the climb to Montmartre reshaped the usual final day procession, but Van Aert broke clear on the last time up to take the glory.
Advertisement
Although the general classification times had been neutralised in the soggy conditions, Pogacar still had to finish to secure his title yet was willing to risk it all on the greasy cobbles in pursuit of a fifth stage win of this Tour.
The Slovenian attacked each time up the narrow climb to whittle down a leading group to just a handful of riders, but had no response when Van Aert made his move 400 metres from the summit of the final ascent, winning solo by 19 seconds from Davide Ballerini.
'It was a special day out,' said Van Aert, who took his 10th career stage win and first since 2022. 'It is really special to win here on the Champs-Elysees once again and on the first occasion we climbed to Montmartre.
'The rain made it quite sketchy but I managed to stay upright. I had the full support of my team and I really have to thank them, to keep believing in me over and over again…
Advertisement
'Going into the last climb, to leave it all out there was our plan and it worked.'
Pogacar sat up to safely bring home the yellow jersey and beat his rival Jonas Vingegaard by a final margin of four minutes and 24 seconds, moving level with Chris Froome on four titles, one shy of the record jointly held by Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault, Miguel Indurain and Jacques Anquetil.
'I'm just speechless to win a fourth Tour de France, six years in a row on the podium,' the 26-year-old Pogacar said. 'This one feels especially amazing and I'm super proud I can wear this yellow jersey.
'I found myself in the front even though I didn't really have the energy to motivate myself to race today. I was really happy they neutralised the times in the GC, then it was more relaxed to race. I found myself in the front but hats off to Wout, he was incredibly strong.'
Advertisement
German Florian Lipowitz finished third overall, some 11 minutes down on Pogacar and one minute 12 seconds ahead of 22-year-old Scot Oscar Onley who has enjoyed a breakout Tour.
On the 50th anniversary of the first Champs-Elysees finish, the Tour returned to the French capital after last year's enforced absence due to the Olympics. Race organisers had been inspired by those Games to add the climb to this day and were rewarded with a dramatic finish.
Hashtags

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


The Independent
28 minutes ago
- The Independent
Pauline Ferrand-Prevot wins final stage to become first French winner of Tour de France Femmes
Olympic champion Pauline Ferrand-Prevot became the first Frenchwoman to win the Tour de France Femmes on Sunday, pushing through three punishing climbs to clinch the final stage ahead of 2023 champion Demi Vollering, who finished second overall. The 33-year-old of team Visma-Lease a Bike - who only returned to road racing this year after a seven-year hiatus - held steady through the 124.1km ride from Praz-sur-Arly to Chatel, before countering a move by Vollering and launching a decisive attack in the last seven kilometres. She fell to the ground in tears after crossing the finish line and celebrated with her parents, while compatriot Jeannie Longo - a three-time winner of a previous incarnation of the Tour, in the 1980s, and the last French champion - made an appearance at the roadside on a great day for the host nation. 'I'm so, so happy,' Ferrand-Prevot told reporters. 'I was a bit scared with the pressure of this jersey... I had to stick to the front and just stay there.' Vollering, of FDJ-Suez, stayed in a group with Ferrand-Prevot for the majority of the ninth stage, but could not break away to make up her deficit of more than three minutes coming into the final day. The Dutch rider finished second in the race for the second year in a row, and secured a podium spot for the fourth year running, losing out on the yellow jersey by three minutes and 42 seconds. Defending champion Katarzyna Niewiadoma-Phinney (Canyon-SRAM) finished third overall, four minutes and nine seconds back. Ferrand-Prevot, who won gold in the cross-country mountain biking at last year's Paris Games, had taken the yellow jersey from Kimberley Le Court on Saturday. Australia's Sarah Gigante, who was second overall coming into the final stage, tried to get ahead of Ferrand-Prevot on the hors-categorie Col de Joux Plane, but the Frenchwoman stayed on her wheels. Gigante's poor descending cost her in the latter stages of the race. She fell behind as Ferrand-Prevot and her rivals caught up with the lone breakway rider Anna van der Breggen (SD Worx-Protime) on the way to Col du Corbier, the final major climb of the 1,168.6km race, and slipped to sixth overall, losing four minutes. The exhausted leading group was unable to keep up when Ferrand-Prevot launched her final attack and crossed the finish line 20 seconds before Vollering to huge applause from the crowd in Chatel. Lorena Wiebes (SD Worx-Protime), who has led the points classification since stage three, cemented her position to deny Dutch compatriot Marianne Vos (Visma-Lease a Bike) a third green jersey. Vollering's teammate Elise Chabbey won the Queen of the Mountains jersey and 21-year-old Dutchwoman Nienke Vinke secured the best young rider award.


Daily Mail
29 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Tottenham officially confirm loan signing of Joao Palhinha from Bayern Munich
Tottenham have confirmed the signing of Joao Palhinha from Bayern Munich. The 30-year-old midfielder has joined on loan until the end of the season and an option to turn the deal permanent next summer has been included. More to follow.


BBC News
29 minutes ago
- BBC News
Ferrand-Prevot wins Tour de France Femmes
Pauline Ferrand-Prevot became the first French winner of the Tour de France Femmes for 36 years as she triumphed on stage emotional and exhausted Ferrand-Prevot lay on the floor after crossing the finish line in Chatel as the magnitude of her achievement began to sink Olympic mountain bike champion returned to road racing after seven seasons away with the goal of winning the yellow moved top of the general classification by winning Saturday's queen stage atop the Col de la Madeleine, Visma-Lease a Bike rider Ferrand-Prevot burst clear with six kilometres to go on Sunday to claim victory in Longo was the most recent winner of the race in 1989, when it was known as the Tour de France Feminin. No Frenchman was won the Tour de France since Bernard Hinault in who led by two minutes 37 seconds before the final stage, bided her time on the 124.1km route from Praz-sur-Arly - featuring more than 2,800m of ascent - before launching her decisive had time to lap up the crowd's support in the closing stages as she crossed the line 20 seconds clear of 2023 champion Demi ended the race with a cushion of 3mins 42secs over FDJ-Suez rider Vollering, who climbed to second as Sarah Gigante dropped out of the podium places on the final year's winner Katarzyna Niewiadoma-Phinney, riding for Canyon-Sram-ZondaCrypto, was third overall after finishing third on the stage."I came back on the road after my Olympic title and I said I will try to win the Tour de France in the next three years," said Ferrand-Prevot. "So here I am - the first one."My team-mates worked super hard for me all week long. I just want to say thank you and congrats to them, to my entire team."Lorena Wiebes won the green jersey for topping the points classification, Elise Chabbey claimed the polka dot jersey as the best climber, and Nienke Vinke took the white jersey for best young rider. Stage nine results Pauline Ferrand-Prevot (Fra/Visma-Lease a Bike) 3hrs 38mins 23secsDemi Vollering (Ned/FDJ-Suez) +20secsKatarzyna Niewiadoma-Phinney (Pol/Canyon-Sram-ZondaCrypto) +23secsNiamh Fisher-black (Nzl/Lidl-Trek) same timeDominika Wlodarczyk (Pol/UAE Team ADQ) +33secsJuliette Labous (Fra/FDJ-Suez) +1min 49secsSarah Gigante (Aus/AG Insurance-Soudal) +3mins 53secsCedrine Kerbaol (Fra/EF Education-Oatly) +9mins 22secsPauliena Rooijakkers (Ned/Fenix-Deceuninck) +9mins 23secsNadia Gontova (Can/Winspace Orange Seal) +9mins 26secs General classification after stage nine Pauline Ferrand-Prevot (Fra/Visma-Lease a Bike) 29hrs 54mins 24secsDemi Vollering (Ned/FDJ-Suez) +3mins 42secsKatarzyna Niewiadoma-Phinney (Pol/Canyon-Sram-ZondaCrypto) +4mins 9secsDominika Wlodarczyk (Pol/UAE Team ADQ) +5mins 45secsNiamh Fisher-black (Nzl/Lidl-Trek) +6mins 25secsSarah Gigante (Aus/AG Insurance-Soudal) +6mins 40secsJuliette Labous (Fra/FDJ-Suez) +9mins 13secsCedrine Kerbaol (Fra/EF Education-Oatly) +13mins 43secsPauliena Rooijakkers (Ned/Fenix-Deceuninck) +13mins 59secsEvita Muzic (Fra/FDJ-Suez) +15mins 50secs