Mads Pederson wins stage 13 from the breakaway – Tour de France

The 122.6km route from Bourg d’Oisans to Saint-Etienne threw up a fascinating Stage 13 of the Tour de France as Mads Pedersen stormed to victory from a three-way sprint finish. There was real drama earlier on in the day’s racing too as Caleb Ewan and the entire Lotto-Soudal team crashed at a seemingly innocuous corner. Fortunately, the Australian and his team-mates were able to continue.

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Tom Pidcock wins stage 12 on Alpe d’Huez – Tour de France

Tom Pidcock claimed an epic Tour de France stage victory on debut after combining outrageous descending skills with impressive legs going uphill. Geraint Thomas rose to third in the standings and Chris Froome took third on the stage as Pidcock became the youngest ever winner on the legendary Alpe d’Huez. Meanwhile, Jonas Vingegaard kept Tadej Pogacar on a tight leash to keep yellow.

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Jonas Vingegaard takes yellow jersey with stage 11 victory – Tour de France

Jonas Vingegaard bulldozered into the yellow jersey after cracking Tadej Pogacar in spectacular fashion on the Col du Granon to take a maiden stage win on the Tour de France. After being subjected to a flurry of attacks all day from Vingegaard’s Jumbo-Visma team, two-time champion Pogacar lost almost three minutes on the final climb to drop to third in the standings in Stage 11.

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Magnus Cort wins protest disrupted stage 10 – Tour de France

Denmark’s Magnus Cort denied Australia’s Nick Schultz in a thrilling uphill sprint finale as a large breakaway battled for Stage 10 spoils on the altiport runway in the Alpine ski resort of Megeve. Germany’s Lennard Kamna came within 11 seconds of taking over the yellow jersey from Tadej Pogacar, who endured a stressful day after another UAE team-mate was forced out with Covid.

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Bob Jungels pulls off immense solo effort to win stage 9 – Tour de France

A fine solo break from Bob Jungels saw him become the first rider from Luxembourg to win a stage at the Tour de France since Andy Schleck in 2011. At one stage, it looked as though Thibaut Pinot might soar back as the French fans roared him on, but the Groupama–FDJ faded and eventually finished fourth. Tadej Pogacar looked typically lively in the closing stages to assert himself on his GC rivals.

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