Description
July 24, 2025
112th Tour de France 2025 🇫🇷 (2.UWT) ME – Stage 18 – Vif – Courchevel (Col de la Loze) : 171,5 km
The 2025 Tour de France is the 112th edition of the Tour de France.
Show more...
July 24, 2025
112th Tour de France 2025 🇫🇷 (2.UWT) ME – Stage 18 – Vif – Courchevel (Col de la Loze) : 171,5 km
The 2025 Tour de France is the 112th edition of the Tour de France. It will start in Lille on 5 July, and will finish with the final stage at Champs-Élysées, Paris, on 27 July.
Ben O’Connor (Jayco-AlUla) cancelled the pain and disappointment of the first two weeks of his 2025 Tour de France with a perfectly executed stage victory in the Alps to Col de la Loze.
The Australian joined the break of the day and then attacked at the right moment, before the 26.5km climb to the finish, giving him the time to hold off the GC group.
Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates-XRG), Jonas Vingegaard (Visma-Lease a Bike) and their respective teammates fought out a tactical battle on the three Hors Category climbs of the queen stage of the Tour but neither tried or was able to to crack the other.
Vingegaard surged with two kilometres to go but Pogačar responded and then attacked him in the final 500 metres. He caught and passed Einer Rubio (Movistar), who was on the attack with O’Connor, to take second on the stage and the six-second time bonus.
Pogačar extended his lead on Vingegaard to 4:26 before Friday’s second Alpine stage to La Plagne.
Oscar Onley (Picnic-PostNL) was fourth on the stage just behind Pogačar and Vingegaard and so closed the gap to third-placed Florian Lipowitz (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) to just 22 seconds.
Lipowitz is third at 11:01 but now faces a battle with the Scot for the final podium spot in Paris.
O’Connor crashed during stage 1 and suffered and lost time several times in the first half of the Tour. He showed his character to fight back in the final week.
“It’s a rough race. It’s the biggest race in the world, but it’s for sure, the cruelest,” O’Connor said.
“I’ve wanted to have another victory for so many years. I’ve been fighting with thirds and fourths and been so close, so now I couldn’t be proud. I couldn’t be more proud of myself and the boys that back me every single day of this whole race, even throughout the pretty rough times. Thanks to everyone at Jayco-AlUla. It’s what the team needed and it’s what I needed.”
O’Connor explained his stage winning tactics.
“The valley was just a perfect opportunity to get time. You’re going to get smoked by Tadej and Jonas if you stay there.
“It was worth a shot. On the final climb it was about just waiting for the steepest part, just before we entered Couchevel. Then it was just all about pacing and keeping on the speed, just typical time trial stuff. It’s what I do best.
“Once Rubio was gone, I just didn’t want to get rolled by the yellow jersey coming at me in those final five kilometres. When I heard it stayed at three minutes still with three kilometres to go, I knew I was safe and it was so good.”
How it unfolded
Col de la Madeleine
The attackers gained an extra 30 seconds on the technical descent of the Glandon while Jorgenson and Arensman went off the front as the 19.2km Col de la Madeleine neared and the riders reached the 85km mid-point of the stage.
Jorgenson’s aggression confirmed he was feeling better after a week of illness. However, the third week of the Tour is always cruel and Enric Mas (Movistar) was dropped and forced to abandon due to pain in his left knee.
The constant 7% grid of the Col de la Madeleine shook out the attack group, with Armirail, Gall, Roglič, Wellens, O’Connor, Rubio and Baudin making it across to Jorgenson and Arensman.
The Pogačar peloton was timed at 3:00 when Visma played another tactical card and Van Aert began to pace the peloton, taking over from UAE.
The Belgian only lasted for a few kilometres but it hurt everyone, with Kévin Vauquelin (Arkéa-B&B Hotels) dropped. Victor Campanaerts soon took over from Tiesj Benoot as Pogačar sat tight on Vingegaard’s wheel, with only Jhonatan Narváez and Adam Yates there if needed.
Visma appeared to be in the ascendancy, with Simon Yates and then Sepp Kuss riding on the front for Vingegaard as Pogačar was forced on the defensive.
An attack was brewing and Vingegaard eventually danced away with Pogačar on his wheel with 4.6km of the Madeleine to climb. They soon joined the attackers and Jorgenson did the pacing to the summit for Vingegaard.
Behind Florian Lipowitz (Red Bull-Bora–Hansgrohe) was dropped but so was his third-place rival Oscar Onley (Picnic-PostNL), as they raced their own battle for the spot on the final podium in Paris.
Jhonatan Narváez and Adam Yates were distanced when Vingegaard attacked and were soon timed at 2:30, as Jorgenson dived down the descent.
“Jorgenson is going a bloc, full gas,” Pogačar said over race radio in a call for help from his teammates.
Vingagaard could create no real decisive tactical advantage on Pogačar. Jorgenson helped set the pace but Pogačar seemed calm and in control. The long descent off the Madeleine and the hesitancy in the attack group helped Lipowitz gradually closed the gap, while Onley was much further behind.
With 40km to go and the Col de la Loze nearing, Jorgenson became tired of pacing the attackers.
When he eased and asked for help and Pogačar and Vingegaard looked at each other, O’Connor and Rubio jumped away, thinking of the stage victory. Jorgenson joined them and suddenly the race changed again.
The trio soon gained a minute, as Pogačar and Vingegaard slowed, locked in their own tactical battle. Lipowitz joined them and bravely attacked alone. It was the right thing to do as Pogačar and Vingegaard slowed even more and suddenly the chase group joined them, giving both strategically important teammates but surely ending their hopes of winning the stage.
There were 14 riders in the group, including Onley as the race reshuffled again before the 26.4km to the summit of the Col de la Loze.
Col de la Loze summit finish
Pogačar had Narváez, Soler and Adam Yates in the group, while Vingegaard had Kuss and Simon Yates. Soler did the pacing on the lower slopes of the Col del la Loze and up to the Courchevel ski resort.
Up front Jorgenson was dropped by O’Connor and Rubio, paying for his earlier hard work. Lipowitz was stronger and fresher, with his Red Bull directeur telling him to focus on his own watts and not to look back. He focused on the road ahead of him, carefully reducing the gap to the front of the race to 1:45.
The Pogačar group was timed at 3:00 with 17km to climb, meaning anything was still possible on the highest climb of this year’s Tour de France.
With 16km to go, O’Connor threw down the gauntlet to Rubio, dancing away from the Colombian in pursuit of the stage victory. It was a brave play but the right one if he was going to hold off the GC group, Pogačar and Vingegaard.
O’Connor extended his lead on Rubio to 45 seconds on the easier gradients in Courchevel mid-way up the Col de la Loze, with the Pogačar group at 3:20 as Jorgenson dropped back, checked if his Visma teammates needed a bidon and then eased up.
There was an eerie sense of peace in the group as Simon Yates and Kuss continued to lead onto the final slopes of the Col de la Loze. When Simon Yates moved off the front, UAE surprisingly took over the pacemaking and Narváez rode a steady tempo, allowing O’Connor to stay 3:00 clear. Neither Pogačar or Vingegaard appeared able to go on the attack in a moment of stalemate.
Lipowitz slipped back as he ran out of energy. He was caught and dropped with seven kilometres to go. Surprisingly Roglič did not wait for him, riding his own race and own GC battle.
With five kilometres to go, O’Connor hit the 11% section of the Col de la Loze. The huge crowd cheered him on but it was a moment of pain for the Australian. He survived and was relieved when the gradient eased and so could fight on.
The final kilometres were up into the mist but fortunately earlier hailstone had eased. O’Connor kept his composure, knowing he had a three minute lead on the GC group. He had time to celebrate his second Tour de France victory and shouted out in celebration as he crossed the line and again beyond it.
Pogačar surged in the mist and cruelly caught Rubio in sight of the finish. He gained nine seconds on Vingegaard at the line to extend his lead and land a significant psychological blow on his rival before Frida’s stage to La Plagne.
The 2025 Tour de France is not decided but Pogačar and UAE Team Emirates-XRG took another big step towards final victory.
Results :
The start feels like corrupted data as it is pixellated and does not have a smooth playback.
Thanks for this site though
Still shows”video in queue”…