Tadej Pogačar claims 4th Tour title
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Quinn Simmons rode 2,075 miles over the past three weeks in the Tour de France, which finished Sunday. And on the last day in Paris, he pulled off perhaps the biggest feat of his
Dutchwoman Lorena Wiebes claimed the third stage of the 2025 women's Tour de France on Monday. The 26-year-old completed the 163.5km course between La Gacilly and Angers in western France in three hours, 41 minutes and 47 seconds. Compatriot Marianne Vos was second and New Zealand's Ally Wollaston was third.
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American Tour de France Rider Quinn Simmons ‘Distracted’ By Marriage Proposal During Final Stage
Most riders would be happy to just finish the grueling cycling crucible that is the Tour de France. Only a few riders have won the Tour, and many don't even make it to the end of the more-than-2,000-mile multi-stage race.
A bout of bronchitis during the Alpine stages limited Matteo Jorgenson at his fourth Tour de France, where he finished 19th overall Sunday and helped lead his Dutch squad to the team title. But the Boise High grad spent plenty of time in the headlines while feuding with eventual four-time Tour winner Tadej Pogačar.
Every year the Tour is a slice of a French summer – these are some of the most evocative images from the 2025 edition
Lorena Wiebes prevailed in a chaotic sprint to claim victory in the third stage of the Tour de France Femmes on Monday, edging fellow Dutch rider Marianne Vos who took the overall lead after a 163.5km ride from La Gacilly to Angers.
Last year’s Tour concluded outside Paris for the first time since 1905 because of a scheduling conflict with the Olympics, with the final stage held in Nice. The Champs-Élysées returned this year for the conclusion of the 3,320-kilometer (2,060-mile) race.
The 33-year-old is the second GC competitor to drop out of the 2025 Tour de France Femmes with stomach issues after Marlen Reusser.
Mavi Garcia has become the oldest rider to win a stage at the women’s Tour de France. The 41-year-old Spaniard clinched the second stage on Sunday with a solo breakaway.
By its final week, the 2025 Tour de France had devolved into a meander through Whine Country—this edition was too long, too hard, too wet, too unlucky with injuries and illnesses to be compelling in the way the sport’s grandest competition habitually was.