Tour de France 2022

Latest news from the race.

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Tour de france 2022 overview, vingegaard crowned tour de france champion while philipsen wins stage 21.

Tour de France stage 21 - How it happened

Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck) blasted across the finish line on the Champs-Élysées in Paris to take his second stage victory at this year's Tour de France, Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) won the Tour de France after finishing safely in the main field with his Jumbo-Visma teammates .

Results powered by  FirstCycling

Stage 20: Wout van Aert, Vingegaard go one-two in stage 20 time trial of Tour de France / As it happened

Stage 19: Laporte completes Jumbo-Visma domination with Tour de France stage win in Cahors / As it happened

Stage 18: Vingegaard soars to victory on Tour de France stage 18 to Hautacam / As it happened

Stage 17: Pogacar triples up on stage 17 mountain mayhem at Tour de France / As it happened

Stage 16: Hugo Houle wins stage 16 of Tour de France with solo attack in Pyrenees / As it happened

Stage 15: Philipsen blazes to victory in Tour de France stage to Carcassonne / As it happened

Stage 14: Michael Matthews takes solo win in Mende on Tour de France stage 14 / As it happened

Stage 13: Pedersen jumps from breakaway to win sprint on Tour de France stage 13 / As it happened

Stage 12: Pidcock claims sensational L'Alpe d'Huez victory on stage 12 of Tour de France / As it happened

Stage 11:   Vingegaard wins stage 11 of Tour de France as Pogacar cracks on Col du Granon / As it happened

Stage 10 : Cort takes breakaway sprint to win Tour de France stage 10 at Megève / As it happened

Stage 9: Jungels solos to stage 9 Alpine victory in 2022 Tour de France / As it happened

Stage 8: Van Aert surges to stage 8 victory in Lausanne / As it happened

Stage 7: Pogacar snuffs out Vingegaard's attack to win stage 7 / As it happened

Stage 6: Pogacar wins uphill sprint, takes yellow jersey / As it happened

Stage 5: Simon Clarke conquers cobbles to win stage 5 / As it happened

Stage 4: Wout van Aert takes stunning solo win in yellow jersey / As it happened

Stage 3: Groenewegen wins stage 3 sprint in Sønderborg / As it happened

Stage 2: Fabio Jakobsen wins crash-marred sprint stage 2 in Nyborg / As it happened

Stage 1: Lampaert stuns favourites to take yellow jersey / As it happened

Tour de France 2022 teams

  • AG2R Citroen Team
  • Astana Qazaqstan Team
  • Bahrain Victorious
  • Bora-Hansgrohe
  • EF Education-EasyPost
  • Groupama-FDJ
  • Ineos Grenadiers
  • Intermarché-Wanty-Gobert Matériaux
  • Israel-Premier Tech
  • Jumbo-Visma
  • Lotto Soudal
  • Movistar Team
  • QuickStep-AlphaVinyl
  • BikeExchange-Jayco
  • Trek-Segafredo
  • UAE Team Emirates
  • Alpecin-Fenix
  • Arkea-Samsic
  • B&B Hotels-KTM
  • TotalEnergies

Tour de France 2022

  • Tour de France past winners
  • Tour de France 2022 route
  • Tour de France 2022 – The Essential Preview

Stage 1 - Tour de France: Lampaert stuns favourites to take yellow jersey

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JumboVisma teams Danish rider Jonas Vingegaard celebrates on the podium with the overall leaders yellow jersey after winning the 109th edition of the Tour de France cycling race after the 21st and final 1156 km stage between La Defense Arena in Nanterre outside Paris and the ChampsElysees in Paris France on July 24 2022 Photo by Marco BERTORELLO AFP Photo by MARCO BERTORELLOAFP via Getty Images

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Stage 1 | 06/29 Florence > Rimini

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Results and Highlights From the 2022 Tour de France

Stage-by-stage updates, results, and highlights from this year’s race.

cycling fra tdf2022 stage21

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Read below for stage-by-stage updates, results, and highlights of each stage.

Denmark's Jonas Vingegaard won the Tour de France on Sunday, ending the reign of two-time defending champion Tadej Pogacar after a gruelling three weeks and 3,350km of relentless struggle.

The 25-year-old former fish-market worker Vingegaard claimed his first Tour de France a year after his break-out performance when he came second to Pogacar in 2021.

Belgium's Jasper Philipsen won the dash for the line on the cobbled Champs Elysees to take the iconic final stage victory.

The ecstatic Philipsen lifted his bike aloft at the finish line after taking his second win of this Tour, turning the page on his embarrassment at mistakenly celebrating on stage four, when he had in fact finished second.

Vingegaard and his Jumbo-Visma teammates all crossed the line together in a line and cheering wildly.

His Dutch team produced a brilliant collective effort with six stage wins, the green sprint jersey and the red combativity jersey for van Aert and the polka dot mountains jersey for Vingegaard as well as the overall title and yellow jersey.

After a relentless struggle over peaks and plains in a crushing heatwave, Vingegaard assured his win on Saturday's time-trial having taken the lead in the Alps and extended it in the Pyrenees.

Defeated champion Pogacar finished second, won the best under-25s jersey for the third time and leaves this Tour with his reputation intact after attacking Vingegaard to the bitter end.

Geraint Thomas, the 2018 champion, was third after the veteran raced largely at his own pace, silencing doubters who thought that at 36, the affable Welshman was past his best.

Jonas Vingegaard survived a near fall on Saturday's individual time-trial to virtually wrap up the 2022 Tour de France title and now only needs to cross the Champs-Elysees finish line in Paris on Sunday to guarantee the champion's yellow jersey.

Team Jumbo's Vingegaard tops the overall standings 3min 34sec ahead of two-time defending champion Tadej Pogacar, while Geraint Thomas of Ineos Grenadiers, the 2018 winner, stands third at 8min 13sec.

Frenchman David Gaudu of FDJ and Aleksandr Vlasov of Bora round out the top five ahead of Sunday's stage to Paris which is traditionally a ceremonial run.

"I'm still proud of myself, I did what I could, and at least I have the white jersey (best under-25s)," Pogacar said at the line.

Saturday's time-trial was won by Wout van Aert ahead of his Danish teammate Vingegaard, meaning Jumbo have six stage wins, the yellow jersey, the green sprint jersey and the polka dot climb jersey.

Van Aert will also be a favourite to win the final day dash around the Champs-Elysees before the jersey winners are crowned on a podium beneath the Arc de Triomphe.

Two years ago, Pogacar famously overturned a 57-second deficit on the penultimate day time-trial on La Planche des Belles Filles to snatch victory from Primoz Roglic.

But on Saturday, Vingegaard flew down the ramp last of the 139 surviving riders and set a relentlessly high pace through the baking country roads meaning a battle of nerves with Pogacar never really emerged.

He did, however, suffer a late wobble, losing his back wheel which slid over gravel into a gutter, but just managed to right himself.

The Dane was eight seconds faster than his great rival on the day, and Pogacar looked downhearted at the finish line.

His never-say-die attitude gave the 109th edition of the Tour a tense edge all the way to the line.

cycling fra tdf2022 stage19

Christophe Laporte became the first Frenchman to win on this year's Tour de France, taking Stage 19 at Cahors on Friday as Jonas Vingegaard maintained the race lead over Tadej Pogacar with just two days left.

Laporte, of Jumbo Visma, managed to close a gap from the main peloton to a stubborn escape group around 1km from the line before edging ahead to easily win this largely flat stage.

This was a fifth stage win for Jumbo on the 2022 Tour, with Vingegaard and Wout van Aert winning two apiece.

Shortly after leaving the cooler high altitudes of the Pyrenees, an escape crept ahead of a weary peloton as it rolled towards Tarn, with the title pretenders keeping a low profile in the flatlands.

The escape was never allowed to build up a convincing lead, but just as the sprint teams looked to have them in their grasp, Laporte leapt across the divide and van Aert dropped behind.

Laporte then hammered over the final 800 meters, holding the closing sprint pack to a 1sec triumph, as Belgian ace Jasper Philipsen took second.

Vingegaard has a 3 minute, 21 second advantage over Pogacar , who clawed back five seconds Friday, ahead of Saturday’s key 41km individual time-trial, which will finally settle what has been an edge-of-the -seat struggle for the 2022 title.

109th tour de france 2022

Overall leader Jonas Vingegaard tightened his grip on the Tour de France by winning Stage 18 on the Hautacam mountain on Thursday after dropping defending champion Tadej Pogacar 4km from the finish.

The stage win leaves Denmark’s Vingegaard with an advantage that, barring disaster or a bad fall, should see him ride up the Champs Elysees to win the 2022 title on Sunday.

“I don’t want to talk about winning the Tour yet, let’s talk about it in Paris, there are three days to go,” Vingegaard said at the line.

The pair have been shadowing each other the entire race, with Pogacar winning three stages and taking the overall leader’s yellow jersey by Stage 7, before Vingegaard took it off him in the baking heatwave in the Alps.

Since then Pogacar has relentlessly attacked the Dane in a stubborn effort to close the gap. The loss of four of his UAE teammates to positive Covid tests and falls however hurt those chances.

On Thursday, Vingegaard's Jumbo teammate Wout van Aert acted as a sherpa for his team leader on the final climb, and it was at that moment that Pogacar finally cracked.

Earlier and likely equally as damaging, some 28km from home, Pogacar misjudged a corner and Vingegaard cut inside him, spooking the Slovenian who then wobbled and slipped off into a gutter.

The champion swiftly picked himself up, ignoring the gash on his left hand as he hammered the pedal down in pursuit.

Vingegaard, after at first attacking the opportunity, had a change of heart, waiting for his rival, before the two grasped each other's hand as Pogacar drew up alongside.

“We like each other, we get on and we respect each other,” said the Dane.

The gesture will likely serve Vingegaard's reputation well, within the cycling code of honor, and with the wider public. Vingegaard now leads Pogacar by 3 minutes and 26 seconds, while Ineos veteran Geraint Thomas is still third at 8 minutes back exactly.

tour de france

Defending champion Tadej Pogacar won Stage 17 of the Tour de France in the Pyrenees on Wednesday, but was once again shadowed over the line by overall leader in Jumbo-Visma's Jonas Vingegaard.

With the bonus seconds for the win, UAE Team Emirates rider Pogacar now trails the Dane by 2 minutes and 18 seconds. Ineos leader Geraint Thomas dug deep to retain third place, zig-zagging over the final 16 percent incline and extending his lead on fourth-placed Nairo Quintana to almost three minutes.

This year’s Tour has entered its end-game with one mountain stage and one time-trial, the remaining real battle grounds to settle the debate for the yellow jersey.

The relentlessly attack-minded Pogacar, 23, was led up the final climb by his sherpa Brandon McNulty, while willowy 25-year-old Vingegaard remained stone-faced in his slipstream most of the day.

In the battle for third place veteran Thomas, 2018’s champion, again proved doubters wrong has he dug deep after being dropped by the younger leading pair as his teammates Adam Yates and Tom Pidcock dropped away badly.

The top three looks settled, but the order remains to be seen with Thursday's massive mountain slog to Hautacam and Saturday's 41km time-trial likely to wreak damage on someone.

tour de france

Canadian rider Hugo Houle cried after winning Stage 16 of the Tour de France on Tuesday, dedicating the triumph to his brother who was killed a decade ago after being hit by a drunk driver while out running.

Jonas Vingegaard of Jumbo retained the overall lead from defending champion Tadej Pogacar and Geraint Thomas of Ineos as the Tour entered the Pyrenees.

As he had promised, the 23-year-old Slovenian Pogacar attacked relentlessly, but the Dane Vingegaard skipped up and rode on his tailwind every time.

It was a great day for Colombian veteran Nairo Quintana, who climbed to fourth. Conversely French rider Romain Bardet wilted, as did Ineos rider Adam Yates three years after his twin brother won a stage ending at Foix.

Shortly after leaving the baking stone citadel at Carcassonne, the 149 remaining riders from the 172 that embarked from Copenhagen began to climb into cooler territory with the stage reaching an altitude of 1,600m.

A group of eight riders broke away, passing a Canadian Mountie in full dress uniform, boding well for IST rider Houle, who slipped his rivals on the 25km swoop downhill to a baking finish line at Foix on the banks of the Ariege river.

“It sounds incredible, but I know my brother helped me,” said Houle. “I went full gas. I was supposed to open the way for Michael Woods,” he said of his teammate and compatriot.

stage 15

Belgium’s Jasper Philipsen edged a mass bunch sprint to win Stage 15 of the Tour de France on Sunday as Jonas Vingegaard kept hold of the yellow jersey but lost two key teammates.

Vingegaard still leads defending champion Tadej Pogacar by more than two minutes, as Primoz Roglic pulled out of the stage while Steven Kruijswijk fell during the proceedings at the same moment as protesters briefly blocked the road.

Overall leader Jonas Vingegaard tracked Tadej Pogacar’s attack all the way to the Tour de France Stage 14 finish line as the defending champion tried but failed to put time into his Danish rival.

Australia’s Michael Matthews won the stage on a sizzling 192km run from Saint-Etienne after a seesaw struggle with Italian rider Alberto Bettiol up the final hill in the heatwave.

Earlier, Pogacar had tried an attack near the start of the stage before Vingegaard’s Jumbo team reeled the Slovenian UAE rider.

After the peloton settled down as it raced along narrow, roads packed with rowdy fans in otherwise empty countryside, Matthews and 20 other riders broke away.

The first time the 31-year-old Matthews tried to shake off his companions, he was reeled in and overtaken by Bettiol. The Australian rallied and left Bettiol trailing to take a fourth Tour de France stage win.

Some 10 minutes back down the road, Pogacar went again with his trademark kick on a steep climb 5km from the finish, but Vingegaard skipped up behind with ease and held on all the way to the line at the Mende Aerodrome.

Ineos pair Geraint Thomas and Adam Yates both dropped 20 seconds but remain third and fifth respectively. Frenchman Romain Bardet ended the day fourth overall in his home region, where banners bearing his name hung from buildings, walls and trees.

stage 13

Mads Pedersen became the third Dane to win a stage on this year’s Tour de France when an escape group beat the peloton to Saint-Etienne on a baking dash across the Rhone Valley to clinch Stage 13.

His countryman Jonas Vingegaard retained the overall lead, which he claimed by winning Stage 11, while Magnus Cort Nielsen won Stage 10 in a Tour de France that started with three days in Denmark.

A bunch sprint had been expected on this 193km Stage 13 run from the foot of the Alps, but as the heavier built riders, who dominate the sprints, began to struggle in the searing temperatures, a seven-rider break began to dream of a stage win.

Australian sprinter Caleb Ewan fell when he appeared to lose focus and braked hard into a corner, tumbling alone near the head of the peloton. Quick-Step sprinter Fabio Jakobsen was also dropped as the pack chased the escape.

The peloton then gave up the game 25km from Saint-Etienne.

Pedersen is clearly a man for the extremes as he won the 2019 world championship road race in freezing Yorkshire rain. On Friday, he dealt with a heatwave, whipping his rivals Hugo Houle and Fred Wright in the home straight.

Vingegaard, Tadej Pogacar and Geraint Thomas, the top three in the overall standings, all cruised over the line together.

tour de france stage 12

British rookie Tom Pidcock, riding for Ineos, showed world class skills as he won Stage 12 of the Tour de France on the Bastille Day holiday on Thursday.

A daredevil descent lit the fuse for the 22-year-old’s win while an explosive acceleration on the final ascent of the Alpe d’Huez finished the job.

Jonas Vingegaard maintained his overall lead with defending champion Tadej Pogacar on his wheel.

stage 11

Jonas Vingegaard climbed into the Tour de France overall lead in a mountain stage for the ages Wednesday as defending champion Tadej Pogacar wilted and then cracked in the heat and the heights.

Vingegaard, 25, finished 59 seconds ahead of Colombian climber Nairo Quintana as Frenchman Romain Bardet was third atop the Col du Granon, at 2,413 meters in altitude.

An exhausted Pogacar looked broken as he crossed the line seventh, nearly 3 minutes adrift at the summit of the 9.2 percent, 11.5km final climb in the southern Alps.

Vingegaard leads Bardet by 2 minutes, 16 seconds in the overall standings, while UAE Team Emirates’s Pogacar dropped to third at 2 minutes, 22 seconds.

The 2018 champion Geraint Thomas also flew past Pogacar ,and the Welshman is fourth in the overall standings just four seconds off the Slovenian while Quintana is fifth.

Vingegaard began a series of lacerating attacks on two-time defending champion Pogacar on the penultimate mountain Col du Galibier, but it was not until the final ascent that he cracked.

To witness this epic stage there were camper vans galore, flaming barbecues, and countless amateur cyclists who had taken on the legendary ascent in the morning, giving the action packed stage the audience it deserved with the Alps providing a stunning panorama.

stage 10

Magnus Cort Nielsen won Stage 10 of the Tour de France on Tuesday, after a nail-biting cat-and-mouse struggle up the final section of the culminating 20km climb.

Nick Schultz of Bike Exchange was second and Luis Leon Sanchez was third after the 148km run through sinuous Haut Savoie roads that avoided the major mountains in the region.

Nielsen, a Dane who rides for EF, wore the polka dot mountain points jersey for several days after claiming it on stage two.

Tadej Pogacar led the main peloton across the line almost nine minutes later.

German Lennard Kamna leapt from 21st to second after escaping with the breakaway. Although he could not keep up on the final climb, the Bora rider still gained more than eight minutes on the race leaders and is just 11 seconds adrift of Pogacar.

Pogacar earlier lost a second teammate to COVID, while his key lieutenant Rafal Majka also tested positive but was cleared to race by the UCI as he is considered not infectious.

stage 9

Luxembourg’s Bob Jungels powered to victory in Stage 9 of the Tour de France on Sunday, holding off Thibaut Pinot to cross the line alone after a 192km race through Switzerland to the French border.

Slovenian Tadej Pogacar of UAE Team Emirates made a late burst for the line to gain a few seconds on some rivals as the two-time defending champion further tightened his grip on the overall lead with a fifth-place finish.

“This is one of the most beautiful days of my career,” said Jungels a day after one of his AG2R teammates pulled out with COVID-19. “I went down that last hill at top speed, and that made the difference.”

Andy Schleck was the last man from Luxembourg to win a Tour de France stage 11 years ago.

On a hot day with over 40km ascent as the peloton rolled into the Alps, past Charlie Chaplin’s long-time residence at Vevey on the north shore of Lake Geneva, the stage was a prelude for three up-coming mountain slogs.

Jungels raced a full 62km on his own after going solo from an early breakaway as the riders rolled out of Aigle over three relatively challenging climbs.

Some 20km from the finish line at the ski resort of La Port de Soleil on the French border, Frenchman Pinot chased after him, gradually eating into a two-minute lead but never getting closer than 20 seconds adrift before giving up.

Ineos Grenadiers’s Jonathan Castroviejo eventually finished second with Carlos Verona of Movistar third and Pinot fourth.

tour de france

Belgian rider Wout van Aert sprinted to victory in Stage 8 of the Tour de France at Lausanne on Saturday with defending champion Tadej Pogacar holding the leader’s yellow jersey.

Van Aert, of the Jumbo team, won on a late incline ahead of Australia’s prestage favorite Michael Matthews, with Slovenian Pogacar finishing in third position.

This was a second stage win for van Aert, who also came second three times during the opening stages in Denmark, and extends his lead in the sprint points standings.

Already wearing the overall leader’s yellow jersey, defending champion Tadej Pogacar overtook the last of a breakaway and his key rival Jonas Vingegaard in a last gasp burst atop a steep mountain ascent on Friday .

Pogacar punished all his key rivals except Vingegaard, with Geraint Thomas losing 14 seconds and Adam Yates losing 29, as some riders dismounted and pushed up the punishing finale.

Having taken the lead Thursday, Pogacar had warned his adversaries of his intention to win this stage, and the 23-year-old led the peloton in the hunt to reel in the escapees.

The 7km-long, 9-percent gradient up La Super Planche des Belles Filles in the Vosges was the first mountain on the Tour and provided a pulsating finish. Vingegaard attacked first, overtaking Lennard Kamna within 50 meters of the line as Pogacar followed, timing his final kick to perfection.

The finish line was also the scene of Pogacar’s first Tour de France triumph where he beat Primoz Roglic on the final-day time trial.

Pogacar’s family and girlfriend were waiting at the finish line as stewards attended to the exhausted Vingegaard, guiding his bike out of the way of the following riders.

Defending champion Tadej Pogacar of the UAE Emirates team launched a blistering attack on a late climb to win Stage 6 of the Tour de France and reclaim the overall leader’s yellow jersey on Thursday.

Pogacar attacked on a steep climb 500 meters from the finish and was a class above his key rivals Jonas Vingegaard and Adam Yates.

“It feels like the first time I had it, I wasn’t expecting it today, it was a real battle,” Pogacar said.

The Slovenian took the yellow ahead of EF’s American rider Neilson Powless thanks to the 10 bonus seconds on offer for the stage winner. The 23-year-old celebrated by repeatedly punching the air and is in prime position in his bid to win a third consecutive Tour de France.

He beat Australian Michael Matthews into second on the day while David Gaudu of FDJ was third and Briton Tom Pidcock took fourth.

109th tour de france 2022 stage 5

Simon Clarke of Israel Premier Tech won Stage 5 of the Tour de France on Wednesday in a photo finish after a 157km run from Lille to Arenberg featuring 20km of cobbled mining roads.

Belgium's Wout van Aert of Jumbo retained his overall leader’s yellow jersey despite a nasty fall, but his teammate Primoz Roglic lost around two minutes to defending champion and fellow Slovenian Tadej Pogacar.

Clarke used a bike throw on the line in a razor thin victory over Taco van der Hoorn after American Neilson Powless launched a sprint in a bid for the yellow jersey but fell just short.

Van Aert fell early and hurt a shoulder and was almost run over by his own team car, but rallied to cling on to his overall lead by 13 seconds.

Defending champion Pogacar did the best of the pretenders to the 2022 title when he finished seventh, 51 seconds off the lead.

Ineos trio Adam Yates, Tom Pidcock, and Geraint Thomas all hung in and trail Pogacar by 28, 29 and 30 seconds, respectively.

The treacherous stage raced over cobbles that sent clouds of dust billowing making it tough to breath and easy to slip. Eleven cobbled sections totaling almost 20km of bone shaking mining roads caused much of the chaos, but not all of it.

tour de france 2022 stage 4

Belgian Wout van Aert made a late solo break to win Stage 4 of the Tour de France and extend his overall lead on Tuesday.

After coming second on each of the first three stages in Denmark, the Jumbo-Visma rider crossed the finish line in Calais eight seconds ahead of the fast-closing peloton.

Van Aert’s feat was a rare act of brilliance that will live long in the memory, and makes up for the disappointment of his three narrow misses. After 160km dominated by two escapees, Van Aert’s Jumbo team and Adam Yates’s INEOS launched a blistering attack on a short, steep climb.

Van Aert crossed the summit first and then powered over the final 8km at over 55km/h, waving his arms in mock flight at the finish line.

Behind him, Alpecin rider Jasper Philipsen won a bunch sprint for second and celebrated, apparently believing he had won the stage.

Dane Magnus Cort Nielsen showed his ability on the first day in France after he emerged as the hero of the Danish Grand Depart taking the climb points jersey. He again won most of the climbing points and stays top of the King of the Mountains standings.

tour de france stage 3

Dutch sprinter Dylan Groenewegen snatched victory in Stage 3 of the Tour de France on Sunday, edging Wout van Aert on the line—but the Belgian retained the overall race leader’s yellow jersey.

BikeExchange rider Groenewegen ensured Jumbo’s van Aert finished second for the third time after the 182km stage, the last in Denmark before the race returns to France, with large crowds lining the route in the Jutland region.

Sprinter Fabio Jakobsen won stage two of the Tour de France on Saturday, vindicating his Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl team’s decision to select him ahead of Mark Cavendish.

Jakobsen edged Jumbo-Visma's Wout van Aert, who took the overall leader’s yellow jersey after the 202.2km run from Roskilde to Nyborg in Denmark that included a treacherous crossing of the 18km-long Great Belt Bridge.

Dutch rider Jakobsen’s win means Quick-Step have two victories in as many days, after they chose against picking veteran Cavendish , a 34-time stage winner on the race.

Denmark’s Mads Pederson was third to give local fans double reason to celebrate as another Dane, Magnus Cort Nielsen, sporting a handlebar mustache, won the climber’s points jersey along the way.

fantasy tour de france 2022 results

Fans braved the rain and packed downtown Copenhagen as the Tour de France got underway Friday, with Denmark’s Crown Prince Frederik watching from in front of the royal palace as riders set off gingerly on the rain-slick roads.

Belgian Yves Lampaert won the first stage time trial, gate-crashing the opening day in the rain along the 13.2km route in downtown Copenhagen.

Quick-Step rider Lampaert suffered less from the rain with his later start than prerace favorites Wout van Aert and Filippo Ganna, while defending champion Tadej Pogacar produced a technical masterclass timing faster than his overall title rivals.

Lampaert was overwhelmed with emotion when he realized he will wear the overall leader’s yellow jersey on Saturday's second stage.

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Tour de France 2022: Results

Jonas Vingegaard - Tour de France 2022: Results

Top 10 Tour de France 2022 1. Jonas Vingegaard 2. Tadej Pogacar + 2.43 3. Geraint Thomas + 7.22 4. David Gaudu + 13.39 5. Aleksandr Vlasov + 15.46 6. Romain Bardet + 19.11 7. Louis Meintjes + 18.44 8. Alexey Lutsenko + 22.56 9. Adam Yates + 24.52 10. Valentin Madouas + 35.59

Please click on the links in underneath scheme for race results and reports.

Tour de France 2022 – results

More about the tour de france, tour de france 2022: philipsen wins on champs-élysées, vingegaard seals gc triumph.

Jasper Philipsen - Tour de France 2022: Philipsen wins on Champs-Élysées, Vingegaard seals GC triumph

Tour de France 2022: Van Aert wins ITT, Vingegaard seals GC win

Wout van Aert Tour - Tour de France 2022: Van Aert wins ITT, Vingegaard seals GC win

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Tour de France 2022 stage 10 result LIVE: Magnus Cort snatches photo-finish win in Megeve

Stage 10 of the 2022 Tour de France sees the peloton roll over the Alps to the summit finish in Megeve on a 148km route which could open up opportunities for the breakaway, as well as a potential showdown between the general classification contenders.

Following the second rest day, on paper this is a perfect stage for the man in the yellow jersey, Tadej Pogacar. The Slovenian already leads the race by more than half a minute and this kind of profile, where the road kicks up to the finish on a draining category-two ascent, should suit his skillset more than the purer climbers in the pack like the rider second in the overall standings, Jonas Vingegaard.

There are four categorised climbs starting with the Cote de Chevenoz (2.2km, 2.9%) which arrives early in the day and could provide a platform for the break to accelerate clear. Two more climbs follow – the Col de Jambaz (6.7km, 3.8%) and Cote to Chatillon-sur-Cluses (4.5km, 3.9%) – before the ride up to Megeve (19.2km, 4.1%) which may not be too steep but is long enough to hurt strong legs.

Follow all the action from stage 10 of the Tour de France below.

Tour de France 2022 – stage 10

Stage 10 set to begin around 12.30pm BST and conclude around 4pm

Today’s 148km route through the Alps ends with summit finish at Megeve

Tadej Pogacar (UAE Emirates) leads standings from Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma)

Race held up by protestors on the road forcing breakaway to standstill

Magnus Cort sprints to victory in photo finish

Tour de France 2022: Magnus Cort Nielsen wins stage 10

16:19 , Dylan Terry

Magnus Cort Nielsen wins stage 10 on the photo finish! He pipped Nick Schultz on the line in dramatic fashion!

Tour de France 2022: Stage 10

Sanchez opens up the sprint but Schultz and Nielsen come around him and throw their bikes at the line! It’s a photo finish! Neither of them had any idea!

HOW ON EARTH DID THAT GROUP CATCH THE FOUR OUT FRONT?!

16:17 , Dylan Terry

1km to go: Under the Flamme Rouge they go and Van Baarle has made it up to the front three.

Van Baarle immediately attacks! It is uphill to the finish. Deceptively hard. The other three bring the Ineos man back.

And the other members of the break have made it back!

Here is the sprint!

16:15 , Dylan Terry

1km to go: We now have Sanchez, Schultz and Jorgensen at the front - with Van Baarle riding across too!

The rest appear to be out of it. It’s a three or four-up sprint for the stage win.

16:14 , Dylan Terry

2km to go: Schultz makes it up to Jorgensen and the pair look like they are going to make it up to Sanchez here. Wright is finally distanced and looks to be out of contention.

Now Schultz drops Jorgensen and makes it to Sanchez!

The climb is done. It’s flat to the finish.

16:13 , Dylan Terry

2km to go: Fred Wright has undoubtedly been the strongest rider in this breakaway today. He is marshalling every single move! But he is not riding because his teammate Sanchez is up the road.

Jorgensen attacks and gains a significant advantage. He is in pursuit of Sanchez who appears to be struggling!

16:11 , Dylan Terry

3km to go: Everyone watching Kamna as Luis Leon Sanchez extends his lead beyond 20 seconds! This could be the move which wins the day!

Kamna is no longer in the yellow jersey of this race as the peloton are within 8’43 of the Bora-Hansgrohe rider.

16:09 , Dylan Terry

4km to go: Here goes Van Baarle and the Ineos man has dropped Kamna! Jorgensen and Wright have made it onto Van Baarle’s wheel.

Bahrain have two of the four riders at the front of this race, before a couple more breakaway members get back onto the Van Baarle group.

Kamna eventually gets back on but he is struggling.

16:06 , Dylan Terry

5km to go: Magnus Cort Nielsen will be the heavy favourite if he makes it to the line in contention. Kamna needs to try and lose him on these slopes if he is going to win today’s stage.

Luis Leon Sanchez attacks! Wright set it up by pacing the group up the climb and now his Bahrain-Victorious teammate is on the front foot!

16:04 , Dylan Terry

6km to go: Wright paces them up these harder slopes as Bettiol is immediately shelled out of the back of this select group.

The gap back to the peloton is 9’22 so Kamna is currently in the yellow jersey by 40 seconds. That is a wonderful sub-plot to the win of this stage!

16:03 , Dylan Terry

7km to go: Kamna is attached to Simmons’ wheel as we approach the hard section of the climb. Bettiol and Zimmerman swallowed up by the 12-rider chase group.

Simmons tries to get clear but can’t find a gap and the 12 men are all together as we head onto the steep section of this long climb!

16:01 , Dylan Terry

8km to go: A handful more riders join the group behind Bettiol and Zimmerman. Magnus Cort Nielsen is now in the second group on the road and everyone else knows he can outsprint them so they don’t want to work!

Bettiol and Zimmerman being reeled in.

15:59 , Dylan Terry

9km to go: Three groups become one as Bettiol is caught by Wright, Zimmerman and Thomas. Moments later the quartet of Kamna, Jorgenson, Velasco and Van Baarle join them.

Bettiol goes again! Incredible! Don’t know where he has got that energy from but the man who spent the best part of an hour off the front has gone yet again.

Zimmerman tries to follow but Wright and co have stopped riding. This could work perfectly for Bettiol.

15:56 , Dylan Terry

11km to go: Wright and Zimmerman have closed the gap to Bettiol. They are just 15 seconds behind the leader now.

But the remainder of the break - which does include Kamna - have blasted up the last couple of kilometres and now they are about to join Wright and Zimmerman.

15:54 , Dylan Terry

13km to go: The main break are all looking at Kamna now. They know he is the favourite for the stage and also has one eye on the yellow jersey.

Bettiol has nearly a minute on that group now, with Wright and Zimmerman right in the middle.

Ganna and Swift dropped from the main group. The break beginning to shell out of contention any riders not strong enough to win this afternoon.

Tour de France 2022: Protestors on road bring stage 10 to a standstill

15:52 , Dylan Terry

The Tour de France was brought to a standstill on Tuesday as demonstrators blocked the road en route to Megève.

A large breakaway group of riders were leading stage 10 by several minutes when they ran into protestors lined across the road with around 35km of the 148km route remaining.

Two of the activists were sitting back-to-back tied together while others let off red smokebombs, and the breakaway was significantly hindered in its progress towards the finish.

Eurosport’s on-road commentator Bradley Wiggins reported seeing team officials leave their cars to physically remove the demonstrators, describing the conflict as “great scenes”, while police also intervened.

Race director Christian Prudhomme was forced to neutralise the stage and restore the previous time gaps, leaving many riders waiting for around 10 minutes.

Protestors on road bring Tour de France to a standstill

15:51 , Dylan Terry

14km to go: The autobus has already formed on the lower slopes of this climb. The autobus is a group that forms during mountain days which consists of sprinters and domestiques whose sole objective is to complete the stage within the time cut.

There are already between 30 and 40 riders in that group off the back of the peloton.

Meanwhile, Wright is dragging Zimmerman up this climb but they remain 25 seconds adrift of Bettiol.

The main break is 17 seconds behind Wright and Zimmerman.

15:47 , Dylan Terry

16km to go: Bettiol still has 20 seconds on Wright and Zimmerman who are second and third on the road. Van Baarle attacks as he look to bridge up to the pair.

Worth noting that this long climb finishes with two kilometres left of today’s stage.

15:45 , Dylan Terry

17km to go: Fred Wright is flying today! He breezes past a small group who attack off the front of the breakaway and is now trying to bridge up to Alberto Bettiol.

Wright has looked astonishingly strong in this first half of the 2022 Tour.

15:44 , Dylan Terry

The Last Renovation group responsible for the protest which paused the Tour stage today have added to their original statement.

After pictures emerged of the demonstration, they said: “Nonviolent disruption is our last chance to be heard and avoid the worst consequences of global warming.”

15:40 , Dylan Terry

Not really sure that went to plan for the protestors.

15:38 , Dylan Terry

20km to go: Bettiol is going to be caught by the rest of the break - who are working well together now despite a slow start after the race was paused.

Once he is brought back the moves will start again from the front group. Someone is going to pick up a Tour de France stage win today and Lennard Kamna could also be scooping the yellow jersey!

15:34 , Dylan Terry

22km to go: Bettiol takes the intermediate sprint but his gap back to the remainder of the break is heading back towards 20 seconds now.

The split to the peloton goes above nine minutes and Lennard Kamna is in the virtual race lead!

15:33 , Dylan Terry

24km to go: So, this is interesting. Bettiol has 27 seconds over the break. But Lennard Kamna, who is in the breakaway group, has eight minutes and 21 seconds over the peloton. He is just 8’43 off Tadej Pogacar in the general classification.

Kamna will not be considered a threat to the overall win, so will UAE relinquish the jersey to the Bora-Hansgrohe man today?

They may well do.

Last Renovation responsible for protest

15:31 , Dylan Terry

A group called Last Renovation have taken responsibility for the protest at the Tour de France today.

Their statement on social media read: “Today, 9 citizens supporting Last Renovation interrupted the 10th stage of the Tour de France between Morzine and Megève at Magland to stop the mad race towards the annihilation of our society.

“We can no longer remain spectators of the ongoing climate disaster. We have 989 days left to save our future, our humanity.

“The finish line is a ravine and we are calling on our government to turn immediately.

“Our goal is to force legislation to drastically reduce France’s emissions, starting with energy renovation, the area most likely to bring together social and climate justice today.

“This is our last chance to avoid catastrophic and irreversible consequences: deadly heat, extreme weather events, famines, mass migrations, armed conflicts… and this for all the next generations of humans.”

15:27 , Dylan Terry

29km to go: Tadej Pogacar even more calm than when he is on the bike!

15:25 , Dylan Terry

30km to go: A picture of the protestors on the road. This is what caused the race to be paused.

15:24 , Dylan Terry

31km to go: Bettiol will have welcomed that little break before this final push towards the finish. And his gap is now out to 40 seconds!

Hofstetter is back in the main bunch and the breakaway are struggling to haul back the lone man out front, Alberto Bettiol.

15:23 , Dylan Terry

34km to go: Hofstetter has set off in pursuit of Bettiol as the EF rider and the chasing break resume the stage following the pause.

The peloton will have to wait a further seven minutes before resuming as they rolled along while the race was paused.

15:21 , Dylan Terry

The man in the red with the big helmet on is a race regulator. This is him telling the peloton about the race being paused.

But now we are back underway!

15:16 , Dylan Terry

Official confirmation from the Tour de France that the race has been temporarily stopped.

The race has been neutralised due to a protest on the road. La course est neutralisée en raison d'une manifestation sur le parcours. #TDF2022 — Tour de France™ (@LeTour) July 12, 2022

15:14 , Dylan Terry

36km to go: Actually, the peloton has been allowed to roll along but now they have finally come to a stop. Bettiol actually went past the demonstrators and the race was stopped shortly after he flew by.

We should be back underway fairly soon.

15:12 , Dylan Terry

36km to go: We have not seen any shots of the demonstration. The race will not want to show it as that would only encourage others to do it in the future.

Meanwhile, the peloton, breakaway, and front man Alberto Bettiol are all at a standstill! Not often you see this in the Tour de France.

15:09 , Dylan Terry

36km to go: OH MY GOODNESS! The race has been stopped! Seven demonstrators are on the course and as a result the race director has paused the race.

The time gaps will stay as they are and the race should resume shortly.

Incredible.

15:06 , Dylan Terry

Always such a glorious and unique sporting setting, the Tour de France. Never fails to disappoint the fans. So great to have them back for the 2022 edition.

15:03 , Dylan Terry

38km to go: Bettiol stamping on the pedals here. He has 25 seconds advantage and tries to get onto his team radio but nearly crashes into the cameraman’s motorbike in the process! Dear lord, that would have been truly heartbreaking.

The rest of the break need to be wary of this move. They won’t want to let him get too far in front.

15:00 , Dylan Terry

41km to go: Alberto Bettiol goes off the front as the breakaway begins to attack each other. The 25 riders up front are well aware one of them is going to win the stage now as they have more than seven minute over the main bunch.

Bettiol just maintaining a handful of seconds lead ahead of the rest of the chasing group.

14:59 , Dylan Terry

Some shots of the break working hard in the sunshine this afternoon. It’s a hot day and tomorrow is going to be even hotter.

14:54 , Dylan Terry

45km to go: In theory, we are into the final 60 minutes of today’s stage given the average pace which the riders have kept up for the first two and a half hours.

You wouldn’t describe it as a difficult day for the peloton, but it has still been fast and included a very disruptive start.

No such thing as a proper day off in the Tour de France.

14:51 , Dylan Terry

47km to go: Rolland attacks off the front of the break to clinch another point for the polkadot jersey competition. Simon Geschke will keep the jersey for at least another day, though, despite not making the break this afternoon.

Marc Hirschi is back with his UAE teammates at the front of the peloton so Pogacar does have four teammates with him. But not sure he’s going to need them today as the pace has gone out of the main bunch.

14:49 , Dylan Terry

49km to go: Into the final 50 kilometres of the day we go.

A weird moment as the three UAE riders on the front momentarily drift off the front of the peloton as Jumbo-Visma and Ineos Grenadiers wait for Pogacar to join them but he has no intention of doing so! The UAE train eventually comes back to the main bunch, but that was a little tactical mind game from the yellow jersey.

Now, will the breakaway split up on the Cote de Chatillon-sur-Cluses? We are onto it.

14:46 , Dylan Terry

52km to go: The breakaway is about to begin the third climb of the day. It is the Cote de Chatillon-sur-Cluses which is 4.5km at 3.9 per cent.

So, not a savage incline but a tester of the legs. Many of the riders in this big group will want it to break up soon. They will want to get rid of the fast finishers.

Gap to the peloton exceeds six minutes as Van Aert returns to the Jumbo-Visma team car for a chat with his director. Will they try anything today?

14:42 , Dylan Terry

55km to go: We have British interest in today’s breakaway as Bahrain-Victorious’ Fred Wright is a part of the 25-man front group.

The London-born rider went clear of all his other breakaway compatriots on stage eight but was caught inside the final five kilometres. Incredibly, he failed to receive the combativity award for his efforts - which is handed out daily to the most aggressive rider.

Can he produce a similar display today? He will want to go one step further and make it to the finish. He is a fast sprinter too, Wright.

14:37 , Dylan Terry

60km to go: The gap back to the main bunch has just ticked over the five-minute mark. Pogacar’s three UAE domestiques are taking charge at the front of the peloton but it is more of a symbolic gesture than anything else.

Nobody is going to chase down a break of that size today.

14:32 , Dylan Terry

62km to go: That was a close shave! Gilbert goes far too wide on a left-hand turn and almost sweeps straight into the curb! He manages to control his bike in the nick of time and chops back into the road to avoid slamming into the pavement.

A reminder that the riders have to be paying attention 100 per cent of the time in this three-week race.

14:29 , Dylan Terry

65km to go: The breakaway is flying down the descent of this third category climb. At the rate they are going, this stage could be over by 4pm BST!

We are well into the second half of today’s stage and the peloton are enjoying a well-earned break after a frantic first hour.

14:26 , Dylan Terry

70km to go: Lennard Kamna the best-placed rider on GC from today’s 25-rider breakaway. He is 8’43 behind yellow jersey Tadej Pogacar, so we don’t envisage a change in leadership at the end of the stage.

The gap goes above four minutes for the first time as Fred Wright looks to push on and try to trim the size of the break down on the descent.

14:22 , Dylan Terry

The break for today’s lumpy stage as we head into the Alps.

😅 Finally, the breakaway has formed! And it's a big one! Here is the list of riders ⤵ 😅 L'échappée s'est enfin formée ! Et ils sont nombreux à l'avant ! Les voici ⤵ #TDF2022 pic.twitter.com/VelaNW9EUI — Tour de France™ (@LeTour) July 12, 2022

14:19 , Dylan Terry

76km to go: Pierre Rolland takes the two points on offer at the top of the Col de Jambaz. The Frenchman also claims 30 euros as a small prize!

The race has really settled down now as the gap to the break continues to stretch out towards 3’30. The winner of today’s stage will undoubtedly come from this big front group.

14:15 , Dylan Terry

79km to go: Some huge names in that break then. Kamna, Wright, Clarke, Pedersen and Cort Nielsen have all shown already in this race that they have the form to win today’s stage.

UAE Team Emirates one of the few teams to miss the move. But I’m not sure they were hoping to get into the break in the first place. With Hirschi still off the back, Pogacar has just three teammates in the main bunch.

Will Jumbo-Visma or Ineos Grenadiers look to try and isolate the yellow jersey at some stage this afternoon?

One kilometre from the top of the second climb of the day and the break already have three minutes.

14:11 , Dylan Terry

81km to go: That’s the break gone and it’s 25 riders! A huge number in the end as the peloton put on the handbrake and a host of riders stop for a toilet break.

So here are the riders in the break: Lennard Kamna, Luis Leon Sanchez, Benjamin Thomas, Mathias Jorgensen, Nick Schultz, Ion Izaguirre, Alberto Bettiol, Simone Velasco, Edvald Boasson-Hagen, Philippe Gilbert, Dylan van Baarle, Georg Zimmerman, Kristian Sbaragil, Fred Wright, Christophe Laporte, Hugo Hofstetter, Simon Clarke, Pierre Rolland, Jack Bauer, Filippo Ganna, Connor Swift, Mads Pedersen, Magnus Cort Nielsen and Quinn Simmons.

You’re welcome!

14:04 , Dylan Terry

85km to go: Philippe Gilbert accurately summing up the first 60 kilometres of today’s stage with one facial expression.

The two front groups have now come together and we have 12 riders in the break, although they only have a slim advantage. Will bring you all the names in this group as soon as I am sure it is going clear...

14:01 , Dylan Terry

87km to go: The average speed of today’s stage is still well above 50km/h as we approach the halfway stage inside the next 30 minutes or so.

Eight more riders have launched themselves off the front in pursuit of the four men 16 seconds clear of the peloton. Rolland pushes on ahead of Sanchez, Van Baarle and Gilbert.

13:59 , Dylan Terry

89km to go: We are still 10 kilometres away from the official start of the Col de Jambaz. Remarkable really because, in truth, the riders are already climbing - this is by no means flat.

Van Baarle, Sanchez, Rolland and Gilbert have just 12 seconds over the main peloton. Maybe that quartet won’t be the break of the day!

The riders have already completed 60 kilometres today. It has been relentless attacking.

13:54 , Dylan Terry

92 km to go: This is a very old breakaway! Philippe Gilbert celebrated his 40th birthday during the first week of this year’s Tour de France. Luis Leon Sanchez is 38, Pierre Rolland is 35, and Dylan van Baarle is a more modest 30.

Given how young the best riders in the world now are, it’s quite refreshing to see!

13:52 , Dylan Terry

94km to go: Very interesting dynamic here. Pogacar will want the break to go so Hirschi can get back onto the main bunch. By contrast, Jumbo-Visma and Ineos will want these attacks to continue onto the Col de Jambaz.

The climb - which is yet to officially start despite the false flat - is 6.7 kilometres long at 3.8 per cent.

Dylan van Baarle goes onto the attack as Gougeard drops back to the peloton. Is this finally the crucial move? He has been joined by Luis Leon Sanchez, Philippe Gilbert and Pierre Rolland.

What a foursome!

13:48 , Dylan Terry

96km to go: There appears to be a group of 15 riders up front who have managed to eek out a small gap to the rest of the peloton.

Tadej Pogacar and Wout van Aert appear at the very front of the main bunch and look to be marshalling who makes the break.

Meanwhile, Pogacar’s teammate Marc Hirschi has been dropped yet again. The yellow jersey already down to just THREE teammates after George Bennett’s coronavirus positive before today’s stage.

13:43 , Dylan Terry

98km to go: Quinn Simons trying to attack off the front yet again. Gougeard remains the only rider up the road and he will want others to join him in the break. He can’t do today all on his own!

Jakob Fuglsang has gone with Simons in the pursuit but Ineos do not appear to want this to go. This is a major fight to get into the break.

13:41 , Dylan Terry

Stage winners so far:

Stage 1 - Yves Lampaert

Stage 2 - Fabio Jakobsen

Stage 3 - Dylan Groenewegen

Stage 4 - Wout van Aert

Stage 5 - Simon Clarke

Stage 6 - Tadej Pogacar

Stage 7 - Tadej Pogacar

Stage 8 - Wout van Aert

Stage 9 - Bob Jungels

As you can see, it’s been the Pogacar and Van Aert show so far at this year’s Tour de France. Head and shoulders the two best riders in the race.

13:37 , Dylan Terry

102km to go: Gougeard’s lead extends back out to 20 seconds - a very impressive ride given he has been all on his own for more than 10 kilometres today.

A good 30 riders still clambering off the front of the main bunch as they try to slip away and form an established break.

Already 46 kilometres into today’s stage and we do not yet have a front group.

13:35 , Dylan Terry

106km to go: Hitting speeds of 70km/h on this descent as Alexis Gougeard continues to enjoy a 10 second lead off the front but his advantage is coming down all the time.

There is no way a solo rider is getting away today. It is going to have to be a strong group, particularly given it is a short stage.

Bahrain-Victorious’ Matej Mohoric leads the peloton down the climb.

13:33 , Dylan Terry

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13:29 , Dylan Terry

112km to go: The weather in the Alps today is around 27C. So the riders will need to keep themselves cool if they are to avoid overheating and gassing as this short stage goes on.

Water and food must be consumed throughout every stage, with domestiques frequently returning to their team cars to fetch refreshments for themselves and their team leaders.

It is just one of a host of jobs which the less senior riders do to make things as comfortable as possible for their leaders during the three-week race.

Meanwhile at the front of the race, Alexis Gougeard of B&B Hotels has grabbed a 30-second advantage on the peloton.

13:25 , Dylan Terry

115km to go: Benjamin Thomas has been brought back by the peloton as we head down another descent before the third category Col de Jambaz - the second of four categorised climbs on today’s stage.

Ineos Grenadiers rider Dylan van Baarle is on the front keeping things under control. Filippo Ganna was involved in an early move, so it may well be that Ineos want to be a part of the break today.

13:24 , Dylan Terry

Here is how Pierre Latour secured the one point on offer at the top of the Cote de Chevenoz.

⛰ @p_latour attacks from behind and crests the Côte de Chevenoz first. ⛰ @p_latour attaque de derrière et passe la Côte de Chevenoz en tête. #TDF2022 pic.twitter.com/eHpuoXrA9q — Tour de France™ (@LeTour) July 12, 2022

13:20 , Dylan Terry

119km to go: Benjamin Thomas of Cofidis is the man furthest off the front, with Quinn Simons joining Chris Froome but the pair are brought back.

The peloton appear to be in a bit of limbo as to what to do just now. They seem to be contemplating whether or not to let Thomas go.

Still a lot of riders trying to jump away and join the lone leader.

13:17 , Dylan Terry

122km to go: Over the top of the Cote de Chevenoz we go and it is Pierre Latour who sprints to take the one point at the top of the short climb.

And here goes four-time Tour de France winner Chris Froome! The British rider has gone off the front in an attempt to get into today’s breakaway. Great to see!

13:14 , Dylan Terry

124km to go: Already some fine scenery at the beginning of stage 10. The Alps never disappoints when it comes to the aesthetics of each stage.

Bettiol and Cosnefroy have both been caught and we are all back together again after 24 kilometres of racing. We envisage the breakaway attempts will carry on for some time.

13:09 , Dylan Terry

126 km to go: AG2R rider Oliver Naesen is already off the back of this group. Sprinter Caleb Ewan has also been dropped such is the pace at the front.

On such a short stage, with an up and down tempo, that is worrying for those trying to complete the day within the time cut.

A little sub-plot to watch out for, that.

Meanwhile, Bettiol and Benoit Cosnefroy are the two men up the road with a nine-second advantage. You don’t imagine they will be the break of the day.

13:06 , Dylan Terry

128 km to go: We head onto the first climb of the day - the Cote de Chevenoz. It is a 4.2km ascent at just 2.9 per cent.

Still no breakaway yet. Alberto Bettiol has scampered up the road alongside an AG2R rider. They grab 10 seconds or so but the peloton is still setting a relentless pace at the beginning of today’s stage.

No attack from Wout van Aert yet. Shocking.

13:04 , Dylan Terry

132km to go: A frantic start to today’s race as we cover the first 16 kilometres inside the opening 15 minutes.

A reminder that UAE have already lost George Bennett due to a positive Covid test - the team’s second positive of the race.

They actually have three positives but Rafal Majka - Tadej Pogacar’s chief lieutenant - has been allowed to continue despite the positive test as his viral load is sufficiently low.

Not ideal for the race leader ahead of three crucial days in the Alps.

13:01 , Dylan Terry

138km to go: Former world road race champion Philippe Gilbert is the first man to have a dig off the front but his move is swiftly shut down by the peloton.

Mathieu Burgaudeau is the next man to try his luck off the front... yet again the front of the peloton keeps the pace high and snuffs out the move.

Could be a while until the race settles.

12:57 , Dylan Terry

145km to go: There’s a 16-kilometre descent at the start of today’s stage. There have been no attacks out of the bunch just yet. You imagine the breakaway riders may want to wait until we begin climbing to really try and establish an advantage.

Could well be a day for the break, especially given Wednesday and Thursday are expected to be days for the GC guys.

So we may well see yet another frantic battle to get into the front group this afternoon.

12:55 , Dylan Terry

Will Pogacar and his tufts of hair be put under pressure today? On the face of it the stage may not be hard enough to trouble the Slovenian - with Wednesday and Thursday more obvious opportunities for Jumbo-Visma and Ineos Grenadiers to put their foot on the gas.

But every day has to count from here on in if Pogacar is to be blown off course in his pursuit of a third successive Tour de France title.

Tour de France 2022: Stage 10 underway

12:52 , Dylan Terry

148 km to go: Stage 10 is here! We are underway with the first stage after the rest day as the riders kick off a gruelling three days in the Alps.

Another teammate of Pogacar abandons race

12:50 , Dylan Terry

New Zealand’s George Bennett became the second team mate of defending champion Tadej Pogacar to leave the race after a positive Covid-19 test, his UAE Emirates team said on Tuesday.

“On Monday he was tested as per internal protocols of the team and returned a positive result. This was confirmed with a PCR test,” UAE said in a statement.

“Therefore he will not start today,” team doctor Adrian Rotunno said.

Last Saturday, Vegard Stake Laengen also pulled out with Covid-19, which means that Pogacar’s team are now down to six riders going into a gruelling week in the Alps.

Another teammate of reigning champion Tadej Pogacar abandons Tour de France

12:47 , Dylan Terry

We have reached the end of the neutral zone as today’s stage prepares to get underway. Race director Christian Prudhomme is just holding it back for a few moments due to a couple of mishaps during the roll-out.

Should be getting the 148-kilometre stage underway any moment now.

Durbridge out of Tour after Covid positive

12:45 , Dylan Terry

Australian rider Luke Durbridge has also been forced to withdraw from the Tour de France after testing positive for coronavirus.

The Team Bike Exchange rider is the fifth member of the peloton to test positive for Covid since the race began on July 1.

A statement from the team read: “Unfortunately Luke Durbridge has tested positive for COVID-19 this morning. Durbridge has very mild symptoms & will not start today’s stage 10.”

12:36 , Dylan Terry

The riders have rolled out but will still need to complete a few kilometres before they get to the start of the stage proper.

Imagine that? Having to cycle to the START of a 148-kilometre day of racing! You don’t envy these riders.

Tour de France: Week one recap

12:35 , Dylan Terry

A little video recap of the first week of this year’s Tour de France. It’s certainly been entertaining and suitably gruelling for all of the riders.

It promises to be another incredibly arduous fortnight ahead.

𝑷𝒓𝒆𝒗𝒊𝒐𝒖𝒔𝒍𝒚... 😴 As the riders get some well earned rest, relive the #TDF2022 𝕨𝕖𝕖𝕜 1 🎞 😴 Pendant que les coureurs profitent d'un repos bien mérité, revivez la 𝕤𝕖𝕞𝕒𝕚𝕟𝕖 1 du #TDF2022 🎞 pic.twitter.com/ROoIQ5cxH2 — Tour de France™ (@LeTour) July 11, 2022

Jungels reacts to stage nine victory

12:25 , Dylan Terry

Bob Jungels took victory for AG2R on Sunday before the rest day. It was a superb solo win from a large breakaway which stayed clear all afternoon.

Reacting to the win afterwards, he said: “I am just overwhelmed to be honest. This is huge. This is what I came here for. I know this means a lot for the team. After a couple of years struggling and a very tough year last year to take the victory this way, it’s my style of racing so I’m just super happy.

“I saw that my shape was getting better day by day. To do something like this I knew I had to do it from quite far because with the last climb I would not have been able to ride away from the favourites.

“I knew if I was going to make it I could make up some time on the downhill and flat. The last two kilometres were endless. Being in the mix and winning a stage is a big step and today I took all the risks I could and it happened. Thanks to my team and everyone who believed in me over the last years.”

Van Aert the star of the race

12:15 , Dylan Terry

It’s rare that a general classification rider as dominant as Tadej Pogacar is not the first name on everyone’s lips after nine days in the saddle.

But that is the case because of the generational talent that is Wout van Aert. The Belgian finished second in each of the first three stages, before winning the fourth.

He then secured another win on stage eight and has all but secured the green jersey already (he sits 135 points clear of second place Fabio Jakobsen.

He has been described as the most complete rider since Eddy Merckx. A sprinter, time trialist, climber, breakaway specialist, cyclo-cross rider. Truly remarkable stuff.

Pogcar teammate Bennett out with Covid

12:05 , Dylan Terry

A major blow for Tadej Pogacar. A second of his teammates, George Bennett, has been ruled out of the race after testing positive for coronavirus.

A statement from UAE Team Emirates read: “Sadly our rider George Bennett tested positive for Covid-19 and will not continue today in the Tour de France.”

Not ideal for the two-time Tour champion. He is now down to just five domestiques left in this race.

Pogacar on course for third successive Tour title

11:55 , Dylan Terry

Tadej Pogacar stopped short of calling himself a ‘Cannibal’ for stage victories after securing two in the opening week of the race.

Speaking on the rest day, he said: “I mean, who doesn’t want to always win? But I don’t see myself as a Cannibal.

“I think yesterday [Sunday] was about setting the pace that all the riders like in the team. And at a certain point it looked like we were going to go for the stage but the guys in the front were too strong.

“We then kept things under control to the finish line and we sprinted with 350 metres to go. Only Jonas Vingegaard was on my wheel and we gaped the others for three seconds, which is always good.”

Rewind to stage nine

11:45 , Dylan Terry

Here is how the stage played out on Sunday as the breakaway contested the victory.

Bob Jungels clung on to win stage nine of the Tour de France in Chatel as a breakaway was allowed its fun on Sunday.

Jungels went solo off the penultimate categorised climb of the 193-kilometre stage from Aigle to the Portes du Soleil ski station, still with some 64km to go, and held off a spirited late attack from Thibaut Pinot.

The Frenchman, who chose a day spent almost entirely in Switzerland to try to deliver a first home success of this Tour, closed a gap that had stood at around two minutes with a little more than 20km to go and got to within 20 seconds.

But Jungels, who had built his advantage by tackling the descent of the Col de la Croix at speeds nearing 100km an hour, extended his gap on the descent to the short uncategorised climb to the finish to claim his first career Tour stage.

Bob Jungels holds off Thibaut Pinot charge to claim first career Tour stage win

11:35 , Dylan Terry

Four-time Tour de France winner Chris Froome, who sits 37th overall after nine stages of this year’s race, insists he is feeling better as the race is progressing and is looking for opportunities.

He said: "For me personally, I'm feeling better and better. Hoping to have a look around and stay awake for opportunities, really see what opportunities present themselves in the race, and if the legs are good, I'm certainly going to go for it.

"This first period of the race has been tough. I've struggled a little bit with my health this last week, but I'm definitely feeling better getting to this first rest day. I feel especially after that cobbled stage it was just all in my chest coughing up dust for the next couple days.

"I'm certainly hoping the legs will be good going into these mountain stages coming up.”

11:25 , Dylan Terry

Here is the route for the riders today then and as you can see it is not one the sprinters’ legs will be welcoming.

The 148 kilometre stage kicks off with a descent for the first 16km and the up and down nature of the stage continues throughout.

They begin climbing with the category four Cote de Chevenoz, before the third category Col de Jambaz and the fourth category Cote de Chatillon-sur-Cluses.

There is then an intermediate sprint 25km out from the finish (which Van Aert will be hoping he can make and win) before the 19km climb to the finish.

Strenuous day.

11:15 , Dylan Terry

During the rest day, 2018 Tour winner and current third place Geraint Thomas rated Tadej Pogacar above the past champions of the race which he has competed alongside - including the likes of Chris Froome and Alberto Contador.

When asked how he compares with those legends of the sport, Thomas said: “I think he’s just a level above.

“I think Nibali and Contador were great climbers, and Froome could climb and time trial really well. But Pogačar has got everything.

“He’s got the sprint, he can ride the cobbles, he can do everything, really. Phenomenal. I just can’t see how he won’t continue to be the biggest favourite for the next five or six years.”

11:08 , Dylan Terry

The top 10 in the general classification as we head into stage 10:

1. Tadej Pogacar (Slo/UAE Team Emirates) 33hrs 43mins 44secs

2. Jonas Vingegaard (Den/Jumbo-Visma) +39secs

3. Geraint Thomas (GB/Ineos Grenadiers) +1min 17secs

4. Adam Yates (GB/Ineos Grenadiers) +1min 25secs

5. David Gaudu (Fra/Groupama-FDJ) +1min 38secs

6. Romain Bardet (Fra/DSM) +1min 39secs

7. Tom Pidcock (GB/Ineos Grenadiers) +1min 46secs

8. Enric Mas (Spa/Movistar) +1min 50secs

9. Neilson Powless (US/EF Education-EasyPost +1min 55secs

10. Nairo Quintana (Col/Arkea Samsic) +2mins 13secs

11:01 , Dylan Terry

Welcome to The Independent ’s live coverage of stage 10 of the 2022 Tour de France.

Coming off the back of a rest day, we have a big mountain stage to keep you up to date with this afternoon. The riders tackle four climbs throughout the course of the 148 kilometres.

And it finishes with a mammoth 19km climb up to the finish - albeit it at 4 per cent.

Can anyone crack Tadej Pogacar?

09:21 , Lawrence Ostlere

Follow all the latest updates from stage 10 of the Tour de France.

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2022 tour de france final standings, results.

  • OlympicTalk

2022 Tour de France final standings for the yellow jersey, green jersey, white jersey and polka-dot jersey through stage 21 of 21 …

Overall (Yellow Jersey) 1. Jonas Vingegaard (DEN) -- 79:32:29 2. Tadej Pogacar (SLO) -- +2:43 3. Geraint Thomas (GBR) -- +7:22 4. David Gaudu (FRA) -- +13:39 5. Aleksandr Vlasov -- +15:46 6. Nairo Quintana (COL) -- +16:33 7. Romain Bardet (FRA) -- +18:11 8. Louis Meintjes (RSA) -- +18:44 9. Alexey Lutsenko (KAZ) -- +22:56 10. Adam Yates (GBR) -- +24:52 13. Neilson Powless (USA) -- +46:57 18. Sepp Kuss (USA) -- +1:02:29 DNF. Chris Froome (GBR) DNF. Primoz Roglic (SLO)

TOUR DE FRANCE: Broadcast Schedule | Stage by Stage | Cyclists to Watch

Sprinters (Green Jersey)1. Wout van Aert (BEL) -- 480 2. Jasper Philipsen (BEL) -- 286 3. Tadej Pogacar (SLO) -- 250 4. Christophe Laporte (FRA) -- 171 5. Fabio Jakobsen (NED) -- 159

Climbers (Polka-Dot Jersey)1. Jonas Vingegaard (DEN) -- 72 points 2. Simon Geschke (GER) -- 65 3. Giulio Ciccone (ITA) -- 61 4. Tadej Pogacar (SLO) -- 61 5. Wout van Aert (BEL) -- 59

Young Rider (White Jersey)1. Tadej Pogacar (SLO) -- 79:36:03 2. Thomas Pidcock (GBR) -- +57:34 3. Brandon McNulty (USA) -- +1:27:43 4. Matteo Jorgenson (USA) -- +1:31:14 5. Andreas Leknessund (NOR) -- +1:54:48

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American tennis star Sloane Stephens celebrates winning the Open de Rouen title in 2024.

© Tennis Channel/Screengrab

Former U.S. Open Champion Sloane Stephens Wins First WTA Title Since 2022

  • Author: Madison Williams

American tennis star Sloane Stephens won her first WTA title since the 2022 season on Sunday at the Open de Rouen in France.

Stephens, whose stardom rose when she won the 2017 U.S. Open title, beat Poland's Magda Linette in three sets, 6–1, 2–6, 6–2, in just two hours and 10 minutes during the final on Sunday.

The last tournament Stephens brought home a winner's trophy from was Mexico's Abierto Akron Zapopan in Feb. 2022. The Open de Rouen win is her fifth WTA 250 title, but the eighth professional tennis title in her career. At 31 years old, Stephens made her mark back in the winner's circle. Sunday's win also was her first title victory on clay since 2016's Volvo Car Open in Charleston, S.C.

Back in the winner’s circle 💫⁰⁰ @SloaneStephens wins her first WTA title since 2022, defeating Linette 6-1, 2-6, 6-2 in Rouen! #OpenRouen pic.twitter.com/nn6velaU0S — Tennis Channel (@TennisChannel) April 21, 2024

Stephens showed off a huge smile after shaking hands with her opponent. It was clear to see how happy she was to add another title to her list of tennis achievements.

Stephens will likely play in a couple tournaments before competing in the 2024 French Open, which begins May 20 in Paris.

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Sprint | Yssingeaux (50.7 km)

Points at finish, kom sprint (3) côte de saint-just-malmont (14.2 km), kom sprint (3) côte de châtaignier (39.1 km), kom sprint (3) côte de grandrieu (135.3 km), kom sprint (3) côte de la fage (162.1 km), kom sprint (2) côte de la croix neuve (191 km), youth day classification, team day classification, race information.

fantasy tour de france 2022 results

  • Date: 16 July 2022
  • Start time: 12:30
  • Avg. speed winner: 42.638 km/h
  • Race category: ME - Men Elite
  • Distance: 192.5 km
  • Points scale: GT.A.Stage
  • UCI scale: UCI.WR.GT.A.Stage - TM2022
  • Parcours type:
  • ProfileScore: 170
  • Vert. meters: 3441
  • Departure: Saint-Etienne
  • Arrival: Mende
  • Race ranking: 1
  • Startlist quality score: 1551
  • Won how: 1.9 km solo
  • Avg. temperature: 27 °C

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fantasy tour de france 2022 results

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    The Fantasy by Tissot returns for an exciting 2023 edition! Leader, sprinter, climber, backpacker... make the right choices among the 176 riders and lead your team to victory in front of your friends and family throughout the 110th edition of the Grande Boucle. Starting Monday 26 June, you will have to build your team with cyclists registered ...

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  5. Official website of Tour de France 2024

    Tour de France 2024 - Official site of the famed race from the Tour de France. Includes route, riders, teams, and coverage of past Tours ... 2022 Edition Official App ... Fantasy by Tissot Cycling Legends (iOS, Android) - Official Mobile Game Club. 2024 route. 2024 Teams. 2023 Edition ...

  6. Tour de France 2022 Stage 20 (ITT) results

    Stage 20 (ITT) » Lacapelle-Marival › Rocamadour (40.7km) Wout van Aert is the winner of Tour de France 2022 Stage 20 (ITT), before Jonas Vingegaard and Tadej Pogačar. Jonas Vingegaard was leader in GC.

  7. Tour de France Results 2022

    Stage 20. Jonas Vingegaard survived a near fall on Saturday's individual time-trial to virtually wrap up the 2022 Tour de France title and now only needs to cross the Champs-Elysees finish line in ...

  8. Tour de France 2022 final standings: Stage winners, results, route

    The Tour de France reached Paris on Sunday and the 2022 edition concluded with a new champion. Jonas Vingegaard overcame the scare of a near-crash to come in second behind Jumbo-Visma teammate ...

  9. Tour de France final standings 2022: Winners for each stage, results

    The 2022 Tour de France will run a total of 3,349.8 kilometers, or 2,081.47 miles. There will be seven hilly stages, six flat stages, six mountain stages and two individual time trials.

  10. Tour de France 2022 Stage 16 results

    Stage 16 » Carcassonne › Foix (178.5km) Hugo Houle is the winner of Tour de France 2022 Stage 16, before Valentin Madouas and Michael Woods. Jonas Vingegaard was leader in GC.

  11. Tour de France 2022 Stage 7 results

    Tadej Pogačar is the winner of Tour de France 2022 Stage 7, before Jonas Vingegaard and Primož Roglič. Tadej Pogačar was leader in GC.

  12. Tour de France 2022 LIVE result: Tadej Pogacar wins dramatic stage 7

    Tour de France 2022 - stage 7. 15:42, Lawrence Ostlere. 15km to go: Some other teams are now contributing to help UAE Emirates reel in the breakaway, notably Jumbo-Visma, as Wout van Aert's ...

  13. Tour de France Fantasy Games

    Two weeks left to the start of Tour de France! And in a big race like this, there is a big range of games where we try to predict which riders will perform well. One game that we play around here is tropela. The peloton of 176 riders is split into 12 categories, and then, for example, from a group of 3 main favorites - Pogačar, Roglič and ...

  14. Tour de France 2022: Results

    The race started on Friday 1 July 2022 in Copenhagen, Denmark, and finished in Paris on the 24th. Top 10 Tour de France 2022 1. Jonas Vingegaard 2. Tadej Pogacar + 2.43 3. Geraint Thomas + 7.22 4. David Gaudu + 13.39 5. Aleksandr Vlasov + 15.46 6. Romain Bardet + 19.11 7.

  15. Tour de France 2022 stage 10 result LIVE: Magnus Cort snatches photo

    Tour de France 2022: Protestors on road bring stage 10 to a standstill. 15:52, Dylan Terry. ... Fantasy baseball analyst Dalton Del Don highlights some infield draft fades. a month ago.

  16. Emotional Hugo Houle dedicates Tour stage win to late brother: 'He was

    Houle wins stage 16 at the Tour de France! Hugo Houle (Israel-Premier Tech) lands the first win of his long career. In emotional scenes, the 31-year pointed to the sky in remembrance of his ...

  17. Tour de France 2022 Stage 21 results

    Stage 21 (Final) » Paris La Défense › Paris (Champs-Élysées) (115.6km) Jonas Vingegaard is the winner of Tour de France 2022, before Tadej Pogačar and Geraint Thomas. Jasper Philipsen is the winner of the final stage.

  18. 2022 Tour de France results: Final leaderboard as Jonas Vingegaard wins

    The Tour de France is the biggest event in cycling, and 176 riders began the 2022 race on Friday, July 1 to determine the most complete rider in the world.. For 21 stages over 24 days, the best cyclists in the world will pedal over flat roads, climb punishing mountains, and eventually finish in Paris to determine the winner of the yellow jersey.

  19. 2022 Tour de France

    The 2022 Tour de France was the 109th edition of the Tour de France.It started in Copenhagen, Denmark on 1 July 2022 and ended with the final stage on the Champs-Élysées, Paris on 24 July 2022. Denmark's Jonas Vingegaard (Team Jumbo-Visma) won the general classification for the first time. Two-time defending champion Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates) finished in second place, and former ...

  20. Tour de France 2022 Stage 17 results

    Stage 17 » Saint-Gaudens › Peyragudes (129.7km) Tadej Pogačar is the winner of Tour de France 2022 Stage 17, before Jonas Vingegaard and Brandon McNulty. Jonas Vingegaard was leader in GC.

  21. 2022 Tour de France final standings, results

    June 30, 2022 05:39 PM Our analysts break down what makes Tadej Pogacar such a complete rider -- and whether there are any vulnerabilities that could deny him a threepeat at the 2022 Tour de France. 2022 Tour de France final standings for the yellow jersey, green jersey, white jersey and polka-dot jersey through stage 21 of 21 …

  22. Former U.S. Open Champion Sloane Stephens Wins First WTA Title Since 2022

    American tennis star Sloane Stephens won her first WTA title since the 2022 season on Sunday at the Open de Rouen in France. Stephens, whose stardom rose when she won the 2017 U.S. Open title ...

  23. 'Enough is enough': Marcus Rashford hits out at abuse from Manchester

    Fixtures & Results Tables Premier League Champions League ... Tour de France Giro d'Italia Vuelta a Espana Boxing ... Garf, in 2022.

  24. Tour de France 2022 Stage 9 results

    Stage 9 » Aigle › Châtel les portes du Soleil (192.9km) Bob Jungels is the winner of Tour de France 2022 Stage 9, before Jonathan Castroviejo and Carlos Verona. Tadej Pogačar was leader in GC.

  25. Tour de France 2022 Stage 14 results

    Stage 14 » Saint-Etienne › Mende (192.5km) Michael Matthews is the winner of Tour de France 2022 Stage 14, before Alberto Bettiol and Thibaut Pinot. Jonas Vingegaard was leader in GC.