
Tour de France 2025: Arensman pips Pogacar and Vingegaard to win stage 19 on La Plagne
Date: 2025-07-25T19:04:13.000Z
Title: Stage 19 report:
Content: Thymen Arensman clinched his second stage win while Tadej Pogacar comfortably defended his GC lead
Luke McLaughlin
Fri 25 Jul 2025 18.31 CEST
First published on Fri 25 Jul 2025 12.30 CEST
6.26pm CEST
18:26
And there you have it. Pogacar keeps his commanding GC lead, Onley looks to have sewn up fourth, which is a remarkable performance over three weeks, and Arensman now has two Tour stage wins to go with his two Vuelta wins from 2022. Jonathan Milan is odds-on to seal the points classification and Florian Lipowitz will be the best young rider.
Pogacar tops the KOM classification with 117pts, Vingegaard is second with 104, Martinez third with 97. Arensman, after today's win, went fourth with 85pts. Thanks for reading and I'll see you soon.
Updated
at 6.31pm CEST
6.25pm CEST
18:25
Pogacar speaks: 'We did a really good job until the last climb. Then some teams, some riders, think they can sprint 19km of the climb. The pace was incredibly high at the start. I was thinking maybe Jonas wanted to win a stage, but then he was just holding on to my wheel.
'Arensman went on a good attack. I decided not to follow, set my rhythm. A defensive rhythm that I feel comfortable with. And yeah, in the end, it was like this. I am just happy it's over, and two more days to Paris.
'I had to pull the whole climb in the end. Of course I came quite tired to the finish line. But also, it was tough, the last three days for me. I'm happy that today is over. We go tomorrow.
'You never know. It's Tour de France. We keep concentrated, and yeah, let's go.'
6.16pm CEST
18:16
1) Milan 352pts
2) Pogacar 272pts
3) Girmay 213pts
4) Vingegaard 182pts
5) Turgis 169pts
6.13pm CEST
18:13
The sprinters have rolled in with five minutes to spare.
Hence, Jonathan Milan is looking very good for the points classification.
Updated
at 6.14pm CEST
6.11pm CEST
18:11
'It's a game,' Gasparotto says of Red Bull-Bora's tactics. 'If you want to win big, you have to risk a little bit, otherwise you don't win big.
'We did a lot of analysis of Lipo's performance [yesterday]. We were quite confident, staying on the wheel of Onley, that Lipo could be superior in the final.'
Updated
at 6.12pm CEST
6.09pm CEST
18:09
Enrico Gasparotto of Red Bull-Bora Hansgrohe speaks to Hannah Walker on TNT Sports and is asked about their tactics:
'I would say it was clear yesterday that Primoz really wanted to win a stage. He knew our team goal was to finish on the podium, but for himself, he badly wanted to win a stage. At the end, this is what he did, he tried yesterday … at the end he missed the opportunity. Today was the last opportunity, he wanted to go flat out from the start. For us, for Lipo, it could work also for him. This is what he did. At the end, it's a tactic we agreed on.'
Updated
at 6.16pm CEST
5.57pm CEST
17:57
Roglic has dropped to eighth in GC, 25min 30sec down on the leader. A spectacular drop after his stage-winning attempts earlier.
Updated
at 6.02pm CEST
5.50pm CEST
17:50
Arensman, the stage winner, has a chat: 'I'm absolutely destroyed. I can't believe it. To win one stage, from a break … now against the GC group, the strongest riders in the world, it feels like I'm dreaming. I don't know what I just did.
'After the descent to La Plagne, we were talking in the radio … I said to the DS in the radio, today is the last mountain stage, I have no GC to ride for, but I will try to hang on for a few kilometres in the climb, and see how the legs feel. Tobias [Foss], I told him straight away swing off, then tomorrow is your day.
'I started the climb, I thought, I have no GC [aims]: maybe they will look at each other? You know what, I'll just try it. I just don't take no for an answer.
'Everyone knows Tadej and Jonas are the strongest in the world, almost aliens. Then just as a human, I still want to try to beat them. I just can't believe I beat them today.
'I tried to not look behind, just go as fast as I could, and it was enough. It's crazy. I was the first two weeks in the Giro, it was really good for me, the first two weeks, but then I got sick and someone crashed into me, and my knee was hurting a lot. I got to Rome … but to get to the Tour, to get two stage victories. It's just crazy. I don't know!'
Updated
at 6.18pm CEST
5.44pm CEST
17:44
1) Tadej Pogacar 69hr 41min 46sec
2) Jonas Vingegaard +4min 24sec
3) Florian Lipowitz +11min 09sec
4) Oscar Onley +12min 12sec
5) Felix Gall +17min 12sec
6) Tobias Johannessen +20min 14sec
7) Kevin Vauquelin (+22min 35sec)
8) Primoz Roglic (+25min 30sec)
9) Ben Healy (28 min 02sec)
10) Ben O'Connor (+34min 34sec)
So Onley is 1min 03sec behind Lipowitz now.
Updated
at 5.59pm CEST
5.42pm CEST
17:42
The worst-case scenario for Red Bull-Bora Hansgrohe, after Roglic's kamikaze attack for the stage win, was for Onley to skip away from Lipowitz on the final climb. But ultimately the German was much stronger.
Updated
at 5.45pm CEST
5.40pm CEST
17:40
1) Thymen Arensman 2hr 46min 06sec
2) Jonas Vingegaard +2sec
3) Tadej Pogacar +2sec
4) Florian Lipowitz +6sec
5) Oscar Onley +47sec
6) Felix Gall +1min 34sec
7) Tobias Johannessen +1min 41sec
8) Ben Healy +2min 19sec
9) Valentin Paret-Peintre +3min 47sec
10) Simon Yates +3min 54sec
5.36pm CEST
17:36
Vingegaard came in second, two seconds behind the winner.
5.35pm CEST
17:35
Now here comes Ben Healy. What a race he's had for EF Education–EasyPost, by the way.
Arensman collapses with exhaustion near the finish line. He appears to be weeping with joy. And why not?
Updated
at 5.35pm CEST
5.34pm CEST
17:34
Pogacar appeared to collide with a member of staff at the line, but it was a minor knock. Onley comes in 45sec behind Arensman. The other three were nothing more than three, four seconds behind the stage winner.
5.33pm CEST
17:33
A second stage win of the race for the Ineos Grenadiers rider. He clings on, but only just. What a brave victory.
Updated
at 5.45pm CEST
5.32pm CEST
17:32
200m to go: Arensman is going to cling on!
5.31pm CEST
17:31
500m to go: Arensman kicks! He's got six seconds!
5.31pm CEST
17:31
600m to go: Only 8sec for Arensman!
5.30pm CEST
17:30
800m to go: Lipowitz is setting the pace for the chasers. Onley battles on back down the road but he will not get back in touch.
5.30pm CEST
17:30
1km to go: Flamme rouge for Arensman! But he has only 15sec! I think they might just catch him …
5.29pm CEST
17:29
1.3km to go: Lipowitz leads Pogacar. Vingegaard is there, but has again been helpless to make any inroads into Pogacar's lead.
5.28pm CEST
17:28
1.5km to go: Onley is now distanced slightly and Lipowitz, sensing weakness, ups the pace.
Onley's chance of the podium looks to be gone unless he can make up time tomorrow or on Sunday.
Updated
at 8.50pm CEST
5.28pm CEST
17:28
2km to go: Onley is suffering. He drops off the back of Lipowitz's wheel for a few seconds.
Pogacar looks happy simply to mark Vingegaard and let Arensman have the stage.
5.27pm CEST
17:27
2.5km to go: It's now or never for Pogacar? And indeed now or never for Onley to try and make up that 22sec.
5.26pm CEST
17:26
3km to go: The crowds are huge and noisy now. Arensman makes his way through a large, screaming group of fans. The group of four, the top four in GC at the Tour de France, follow 19sec later.
Is Pogacar happy to let Arensman have the stage win?
Updated
at 8.51pm CEST
5.24pm CEST
17:24
3.5km to go: Vauquelin is in a group of six, five minutes down on the leaders now. A tough day for the Frenchman who will be overhauled in the GC and certainly be knocked down to eighth, at least.
Updated
at 8.51pm CEST
5.23pm CEST
17:23
4km to go: Onley sits third wheel. Lipowitz remains glued (not literally) to the 22-year-old Scot's back wheel.
5.22pm CEST
17:22
4.5km to go: It's a 25sec lead for Arensman. Pogacar has clearly upped things a bit behind, but it looks like Arensman has responded.
Gall and Johannessen are now alone, third group on the road, having dropped the former yellow jersey-wearer Ben Healy.
Updated
at 8.51pm CEST
5.20pm CEST
17:20
5km to go: Arensman stands up and dances on his pedals, maintaining a strong rhythm. He still has 24sec. La Plagne's ski chalets dot the sides of the road.
Updated
at 8.52pm CEST
5.19pm CEST
17:19
5.5km to go: Pogacar continues to control the pace in this group of four. The gap shrinks to 25sec, between them and Arensman. Neither Onley nor Lipowitz look to have the legs to attack at this stage. But of course they are riding their own head-to-head race, like Pogacar and Vingegaard, above them in GC.
Updated
at 8.52pm CEST
5.17pm CEST
17:17
6km to go: Arensman looks a tiny bit ragged but is still putting plenty of power into the pedals. He knows a second stage win of the race is in reach … But he also knows there is a big threat in yellow back down the road.
5.16pm CEST
17:16
6.5km to go: Pogacar, Vingegaard, Onley, Lipowitz, in that order, in this second group on the road. Arensman, grinding it out up front, has 31sec.
5.15pm CEST
17:15
6.5km to go: Pogacar attacks! Vingegaard follows, and Onley too, and momentarily a gap opens up to Lipowitz! But the German manages to get back on.
5.14pm CEST
17:14
7km to go: Arensman has 35sec. Is Pogacar waiting for the steepest slopes? Is Lipowitz going to try and attack?
5.12pm CEST
17:12
7.5km to go: Vauquelin is over 4min down now and has slipped to eighth in virtual GC. Pogacar rides on at the front of the group, apparently playing at being a domestique. Maybe his own domestique?
Updated
at 5.13pm CEST
5.11pm CEST
17:11
8km to go: Arensman has 36sec now. He and his team will be starting to dream …
Updated
at 5.12pm CEST
5.10pm CEST
17:10
8.5km to go: Pogacar sits first wheel in that group of seven now. He looks in total control, barely out of breath. He stands up on the pedals and ups the pace a bit, but it's not a concerted attack. He glances back at his rivals, gauging if they are in pain, calculating if and when to launch the attack that might win him the stage.
Updated
at 8.53pm CEST
5.08pm CEST
17:08
9km to go: Arensman powers on alone. The pain is etched on his face. But he knows, from recent experience, what it feels like to win a Tour de France stage. And he wants some more of it. Pain is merely temporary, after all.
Updated
at 5.09pm CEST
5.07pm CEST
17:07
9.5km to go: It's wet on the road. There are lots of fans, although not yet the kind of crowds we've seen on other mountains. Slovenian flags are out in force.
5.06pm CEST
17:06
10km to go: A group of seven now, second on the road, half a minute behind Arensman: Pogacar, Vingegaard, Healy, Lipowitz, Gall, Onley, Johannessen.
Roglic has indeed collapsed and is 4min 19sec behind the leaders. Ouch.
Updated
at 5.06pm CEST
5.04pm CEST
17:04
10.5km to go: Arensman, out front on his own, has 28sec. He won last Saturday so is in flying form:
Updated
at 5.05pm CEST
5.03pm CEST
17:03
11km to go: Gall, Onley, Lipowitz and co have rejoined 'Pogi' and Vingegaard.
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Times
37 minutes ago
- Times
Jonas Vingegaard has lost belief he can beat Tadej Pogacar
Hindsight allows us to see with greater clarity. As a contest, the Tour de France ended on the day it was meant to begin. That was the first truly mountainous race to Hautacam, the 12th of 21 stages. It was the moment Tadej Pogacar chose to remind his adversaries they were wasting their time. He will clinch his fourth Tour de France on the Champs-Élysées at tea-time on Sunday but the outcome was known for ten days. Pogacar is the greatest rider of this generation and there are good reasons for considering him the best of all time. When he races, things happen. He has, after all, won 21 stages of the Tour de France and yet the victory at Hautacam ten days ago was still exceptional. For months this was the stage he had targeted, believing it would give him the Yellow Jersey and with the help of his team, they would keep it. Unexpected things happen in the Tour and the day before Hautacam Pogacar crashed close to the finish in Toulouse. It was a high-speed fall where for a frightening second, it seemed his head was about to collide with a 9in roadside kerb. Luckily he instinctively got his head up and just missed the kerb. Still it was a heavy fall and he felt beaten up. Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager. That was purely physical. 'Tadej is mentally very strong,' UAE doctor Adrian Rotunno said at the Base Camp Lodge Hotel in Albertville on Friday night. 'We were worried about the impact of that fall. He wasn't.' Hautacam is a 13.5-kilometre climb at an average gradient of 7.8 per cent. This puts it up there with the toughest ascents. They had barely hit Hautacam when Pogacar got team-mates Tim Wellens and Jhonatan Narváez to increase the tempo. They knew the plan because both — Narváez especially — went so fast it seemed they had lost their minds. Only Pogacar and his forever rival, Jonas Vingegaard, could follow Narváez's infernal pace. Of course he could not keep it up for long and when he pulled to one side, Pogacar went even faster. Vingegaard tried to stay with him and for a kilometre or so, he stayed at ten and 12 seconds back. Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager. The problem for any rider chasing Pogacar is that if the Slovenian wants to gain time, he does not let up. Takes a short breather and he goes again. He extends his lead, another breather and goes again. No relenting until he has crossed the line and there is no more time to be taken. At Hautacam he arrived 2min 10sec before Vingegaard, the first time in their five-year rivalry that he had taken more than two minutes on the Dane in a stage of the Tour. That gave him an overall lead of 3:31. He tagged on another 36 seconds in the next day's mountain time trial and then, truly, the race was over. This is not a bike rider who loses a lead of four minutes in the Tour. Something else died on Hautacam; namely, the intense rivalry between Pogacar and Vingegaard. Again with the benefit of hindsight we could argue this had happened at the previous month's Critérium du Dauphiné. On three mountain stages Pogacar toyed with his rival. And if there were any doubts about his superiority after the Critérium, they were banished on Hautacam. This led to a certain desperation about Visma-Lease a Bike's approach to the Tour. They set out to upset Pogacar, to do whatever they could to get under his skin. Their difficulty was finding a way. Their leader Vingegaard rode aggressively from the start which was unusual because the hilly stages of the first week did not play to his strengths. It was clear though that Vingegaard was riding strongly, perhaps as well as he has ever done. But on the short, sharp hills into Boulogne, Rouen, Vire-Normandie and Mûr-de-Bretagne, he could not hurt Pogacar. On every stage that Vingegaard finished alongside or just behind Pogacar, he was visibly pleased. That suggested he was content to just hang in there. His team sought to play with Pogacar's head. Their riders attacked not to break away but merely to provoke a reaction from him. He did react and when he realised what they were doing, he thought it ridiculous. Matteo Jorgenson got in his way at a feed zone on the seventh stage and that led to a little pushing match. On Friday's stage to La Plagne, Vingegaard refused to work with Pogacar to rein in the breakaway Thymen Arensman and that infuriated Pogacar. He ended up letting Arensman take the stage because he was not going to tow Vingegaard up to the breakaway. He also squandered his own chance of winning that stage. Visma wanted to get inside his head and they succeeded. At what cost to themselves? The operation was a success but the patient died. From this Tour, we learned why Pogacar loves racing against Mathieu van der Poel and why he chooses to ride the one-day Classics: Flanders, Roubaix, Strade Bianche, Flèche Wallonne and Liège–Bastogne–Liège. In these races, there is not the time or indeed the inclination to play what Pogacar sees as silly games. Visma have some soul-searching to do. They started the Tour protesting total allegiance to Vingegaard only to start looking for stage victories as soon as they thought their man was not going to beat Pogacar. What is certain is that Vingegaard no longer believes he can beat his rival. In this year's Tour, he has performed better than when beating Pogacar in 2022 and 2023. Last year was dispiriting for him. This year was worse. There were moments in the race when, sitting right behind Pogacar after he had attacked Vingegaard looked to check on those directly behind him. He is now as concerned by the riders creeping up on him as he is by one riding away from him. He knows that in a year's time, the German Florian Lipowitz (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) and the Scot Oscar Onley (Picnic PostNL) will believe they can challenge Pogacar. Lipowitz and Onley battled for the third step on the podium and even though the German got there, Onley will not be discouraged. At 22, he is two years younger than his rival and he showed he belongs at this level. From a promising third place in last month's Tour de Suisse to fourth in the Tour de France with eight top-ten finishes is some leap. The penultimate stage from Nantua to Pontarlier sent the peloton through the Jura, a 184-kilometre route that had four not overly severe climbs but the weather was horrible and the race difficult. An early break got a gap and they had the day to themselves. Jake Stewart, a British rider with Israel Premier Tech, was there and when the French rider Romain Grégoire and the Spaniard Iván Romeo crashed heavily 21 kilometres from the finish, Stewart found himself with just the Australian Kaden Groves and the Dutch rider Frank van den Broek at the front of the race. Hope did not last long as 16 kilometres from Portarlier, Groves attacked out of the group of three and went steadily clear all the way to the finish. It was a fine performance from the Alpecin-Deceuninck rider. Stewart finished sixth on the stage, his best result so far and now he will finish his first Tour de France. On his way to a fourth Tour victory, Pogacar was asked how this one compared to the others: 'Every year we say, 'This is the hardest Tour ever, the hardest I've ever done' but honestly, this year's Tour was something on another level,' he said. 'I think there was one day where we went a bit easier. Even today, we were almost all out from start to finish. Even though it was the hardest Tour, one of the toughest races I've ever done, I enjoyed it because I had good shape and good legs. But I am really looking forward to the last day in Paris.' Pogacar plans to take Monday off but says he will be back on his bike on Tuesday. There was some joy for Visma-Lease a Bike on Saturday as their veteran Dutch rider Marianne Vos won the opening stage of the Tour de France Femmes with a brilliant late attack. The 38-year-old overtook her team-mate Pauline Ferrand-Prévot approaching the line in Plumelec, and then held off Mauritian rider Kim Le Court in the closing metres of a gruelling uphill finish. Ferrand-Prévot looked set to win the 78.8km stage, but the Frenchwoman attacked too early and could not withstand the late surge from Vos.


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