Description
May 3, 2026
79th Tour de Romandie 2026 🇨🇭 (2.UWT) ME – Stage 5 – Lucens – Leysin : 178,2 km
Tour de Romandie is a UCI WorldTour classification that traverses the dramatic landscapes of French-speaking Switzerland,
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May 3, 2026
79th Tour de Romandie 2026 🇨🇭 (2.UWT) ME – Stage 5 – Lucens – Leysin : 178,2 km
Tour de Romandie is a UCI WorldTour classification that traverses the dramatic landscapes of French-speaking Switzerland, where the roads wind through alpine valleys, past shimmering lakes, and up into the clouds, their surfaces a mix of pristine tarmac and rougher, high-altitude stretches that test both machine and rider. The terrain is a relentless blend of long, grinding climbs and fast, technical descents, with ascents that stretch for kilometers, their gradients steady and unforgiving, often topping out above 1,500 meters where the air grows thin and the wind howls across the passes. The climbs are punctuated by short, punchy ramps that force repeated accelerations, while the descents twist through hairpin bends and narrow lanes, their surfaces slick with meltwater or loose gravel, demanding precision and nerve. Between the mountains, the route flattens briefly, but the roads remain exposed, the wind funneled through the valleys, turning even the straightaways into a battle for position. The race typically begins with a prologue or short opening stage, setting the tone for the days ahead, but it is in the mountains where the peloton is truly tested, the attacks growing more audacious as the race unfolds. The finish often arrives after a final, lung-searing ascent or a fast descent into a valley town, where a reduced bunch sprints for victory, or a lone rider who has timed their move to perfection holds off the chasing pack by a handful of seconds, the snow-capped peaks standing sentinel over the race’s climax.
Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates-XRG) sealed the Tour de Romandie title in style on Sunday, winning his fourth stage on the final day of the six-day race.
The World Champion defused the inevitable attacks from second-placed Florian Lipowitz (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) on the summit finish at Leysin – even itching his nose as he responded to the German’s opening salvo – before out-sprinting him in sight of the line.
Such was Pogačar’s superiority, he opened a three-second gap over Lipowitz in the short sprint for the line, with Lipowitz’s teammate Primož Roglič summoning a late charge to take third place on the stage.
“On the climb Florian attacked first and did a really good job but luckily I could survive in his wheel. He launched pretty early in the final and it was a fight to the finish line,” Pogačar said.
The climb to Leysin – 13.9km at an average gradient of 6% – was the only major obstacle on the route, and the stage appeared to be set for a Lenny Martinez attack after his Bahrain Victorious team had worked all day and raised the pace on the final climb.
However, that fizzled out, and it was Lipowitz – 35 seconds down and the only rider within two minutes of Pogačar’s overall lead – who struck out just over 3km to the top.
Pogačar responded with ease to the German’s opening two accelerations, the second sending them clear of the other GC candidates once again. Pogačar launched one small acceleration of his own, and even offered up a few turns to Lipowitz, such is his irrepressible energy.
But inside the final kilometre the pace slowed to the point where Roglič, who wasn’t even among the initial cluster of chasers, came roaring back with a late attempt to fly over the top. Just as his teammate was making contact, though, Lipowitz opened the taps for a long-range sprint, which drew Pogačar out into his final race-winning acceleration.
Pogačar tops the final general classification by 42 seconds over Lipowitz, with Martinez taking the final spot on the GC podium at 2:44.
Pogačar takes his 2026 victory tally to 10, winning the Tour de Romandie for the first time on his first appearance to collect the 19th stage race success of his career.
How it unfolded
The final stage of the 2026 Tour de Romandie measured 178.2km from Lucens to Leysin, featuring a couple of categorized climbs on a lumpy route towards the final climb to Leysin (13.9km at 6%).
The day’s breakaway was sparked by Jakob Söderqvist (Lidl-Trek) and Lorenzo Germani (Groupama-FDJ United), and they were soon joined by six more: Marco Schrettl (XDS Astana), Gil Gelders (Soudal-QuickStep), Robbe Dhondt (Picnic-PostNL), Asbjørn Hellemose (Jayco-AlUla), and the Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe duo of Jan Tratnik and Finn-Fisher Black.
Tratnik claimed maximum points at both of the two minor climbs, at Sottens (5.8km at 3.9%) after 80km and at Vulliens (4km at 4.4%) after 95km.
After that, it was over to Gelders, who helped himself to maximum points at the two intermediate sprints, the first at Chardonne with 50km to go and the second in Aigle at the foot of the final climb.
The breakaway’s advantage never grew much beyond three minutes as UAE Team Emirates-XRG found assistance from Bahrain Victorious in controlling the pace in the bunch.
As they hit the final climb to Leysin with 14km to go, the gap was down to 30 seconds, and it was soon game over for the break. The likes of Gelders, Germani, and Söderqvist quickly dropped off the back before, a kilometer or so in, Fisher-Black accelerated and went solo in the break.
The New Zealander found 30 seconds with 10km to go but was caught around 7.5km from the top.
Bahrain Victorious then took over in earnest, with Antonio Tiberi producing a long turn before handing over to Damiano Caruso. However, when Caruso pulled aside with 3.7km to go, Martinez did not budge. Instead, Felix Großschartner took it up for UAE amid the anti-climax, and it was a few hundred meters before Lipowitz finally opened the race.
Pogačar wiped his nose as he responded to the first acceleration, and after Jorgen Nordhagen (Visma-Lease a Bike) attempted to take advantage of a lull, he followed Lipowitz’s second acceleration with just as much ease.
This time, the pair were clear of the rest. As Pogačar sat in the wheel, Lipowitz flicked his elbow and asked for a turn. What he got was an attack, though he responded well to it. Lipowitz launched one more attack with 2.5km to go but then settled into a more sedate pace, with Pogačar rolling through on occasion to keep the move going to the line.
Roglič almost threw a spanner in the works with his comeback show but Lipowitz soon opened the sprint on the final kicker, where Pogačar simply underlined his superiority.
Results :
Final General Classification :













