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Tour de France GC standings – Enormous gaps after just six stages
As it happened: Long-range attack and crash sees the yellow jersey change hands on mountainous stage 6 of the Tour de France.
Jonas Vingegaard avoids Tour de France disaster, scrambles to finish on teammate’s bike after late crash chaos
‘Not the day I wanted’ – Jonas Vingegaard dealt major blow by Tadej Pogačar but insists he will improve at the Tour de France
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Dani Ostanek
Published
‘I still believe my legs will get better throughout the race’ says Dane
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Jonas Vingegaard has said that “the fight is not over” at the Tour de France after losing 2:38 to his main yellow jersey rival Tadej Pogačar over the Col du Tourmalet on stage 6.
The two-time Tour winner had hoped to challenge the four-time winner on the first mountain stage of the race, but he had no answer when Pogačar and his teammate Isaac del Toro accelerated at the front with 43km to go on the Tourmalet.
Vingegaard would shed 30 seconds at the top and wouldn’t see the world champion again before the finish, where he crossed the line almost three minutes behind Pogačar.
“It was a very tough day. It was not the day I wanted, obviously, but that’s how it is sometimes,” Vingegaard told TNT Sports after the finish.
“So they put in a big attack on the Tourmalet, and I couldn’t follow, and I had to settle within my own pace, and over the top I was not that far. But on a downhill like this, it’s not really suited for me.”
Vingegaard admitted he didn’t produce his best power numbers on the 186.2km stage between Pau and Gavarnie-Gèdre. He said that “that’s life”, before concluding that he’ll keep on battling for yellow.
“I don’t think so. It was not my best day, but that’s how it is,” he said.
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“I’m obviously I’m disappointed. I have to be, but yeah, sometimes that’s life, and I cannot change it.
“I still believe in myself. I still believe my legs will get better throughout the race, so the fight is not over.”
The world’s biggest bike race deserves world-class coverage. Subscribe to Cyclingnews for unlimited access to our unrivalled reporting of the 2026 Tour de France. From Barcelona through to Paris, our experienced team will bring you breaking news, expert insight, and in-depth coverage from every stage as the battle for the yellow jersey plays out. Plus, access the Cyclingnews app to follow the action on the go!Find out more.
Dani Ostanek is Senior News Writer at Cyclingnews, having joined in 2017 as a freelance contributor, later being hired full-time. Her favourite races include Strade Bianche, the Tour de France Femmes, Paris-Roubaix, and Tro-Bro Léon.
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1How to watch Tour de France Stage 7: All the broadcasters and live streams as sprinters get a second opportunity in Bordeaux
-
2‘Would you give away stages?’ – Tadej Pogačar consumes all on Col du Tourmalet at the Tour de France but does he win too much?
-
3Torstein Træen out of Tour de France due to injuries from Col du Tourmalet crash
-
4‘A-game’ pays off for L39ION of Los Angeles as Skylar Schneider secures second career victory at Gastown Grand Prix
-
5‘He’s on a good team’ – French President Emmanuel Macron visits the Tour de France and urges Paul Seixas to stay with Decathlon CMA CGM
‘Not the day I wanted’ – Jonas Vingegaard dealt major blow by Tadej Pogačar but insists he will improve at the Tour de France
News
By
Dani Ostanek
Published
‘I still believe my legs will get better throughout the race’ says Dane
-
Facebook
-
X
-
Pinterest
-
Email
Follow us
Jonas Vingegaard has said that “the fight is not over” at the Tour de France after losing 2:38 to his main yellow jersey rival Tadej Pogačar over the Col du Tourmalet on stage 6.
The two-time Tour winner had hoped to challenge the four-time winner on the first mountain stage of the race, but he had no answer when Pogačar and his teammate Isaac del Toro accelerated at the front with 43km to go on the Tourmalet.
Vingegaard would shed 30 seconds at the top and wouldn’t see the world champion again before the finish, where he crossed the line almost three minutes behind Pogačar.
“It was a very tough day. It was not the day I wanted, obviously, but that’s how it is sometimes,” Vingegaard told TNT Sports after the finish.
“So they put in a big attack on the Tourmalet, and I couldn’t follow, and I had to settle within my own pace, and over the top I was not that far. But on a downhill like this, it’s not really suited for me.”
Vingegaard admitted he didn’t produce his best power numbers on the 186.2km stage between Pau and Gavarnie-Gèdre. He said that “that’s life”, before concluding that he’ll keep on battling for yellow.
“I don’t think so. It was not my best day, but that’s how it is,” he said.
The latest race content, interviews, features, reviews and expert buying guides, direct to your inbox!
“I’m obviously I’m disappointed. I have to be, but yeah, sometimes that’s life, and I cannot change it.
“I still believe in myself. I still believe my legs will get better throughout the race, so the fight is not over.”
The world’s biggest bike race deserves world-class coverage. Subscribe to Cyclingnews for unlimited access to our unrivalled reporting of the 2026 Tour de France. From Barcelona through to Paris, our experienced team will bring you breaking news, expert insight, and in-depth coverage from every stage as the battle for the yellow jersey plays out. Plus, access the Cyclingnews app to follow the action on the go!Find out more.
Dani Ostanek is Senior News Writer at Cyclingnews, having joined in 2017 as a freelance contributor, later being hired full-time. Her favourite races include Strade Bianche, the Tour de France Femmes, Paris-Roubaix, and Tro-Bro Léon.
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-
1How to watch Tour de France Stage 7: All the broadcasters and live streams as sprinters get a second opportunity in Bordeaux
-
2‘Would you give away stages?’ – Tadej Pogačar consumes all on Col du Tourmalet at the Tour de France but does he win too much?
-
3Torstein Træen out of Tour de France due to injuries from Col du Tourmalet crash
-
4‘A-game’ pays off for L39ION of Los Angeles as Skylar Schneider secures second career victory at Gastown Grand Prix
-
5‘He’s on a good team’ – French President Emmanuel Macron visits the Tour de France and urges Paul Seixas to stay with Decathlon CMA CGM
‘Not the day I wanted’ – Jonas Vingegaard dealt major blow by Tadej Pogačar but insists he will improve at the Tour de France
News
By
Dani Ostanek
Published
‘I still believe my legs will get better throughout the race’ says Dane
-
Facebook
-
X
-
Pinterest
-
Email
Follow us
Jonas Vingegaard has said that “the fight is not over” at the Tour de France after losing 2:38 to his main yellow jersey rival Tadej Pogačar over the Col du Tourmalet on stage 6.
The two-time Tour winner had hoped to challenge the four-time winner on the first mountain stage of the race, but he had no answer when Pogačar and his teammate Isaac del Toro accelerated at the front with 43km to go on the Tourmalet.
Vingegaard would shed 30 seconds at the top and wouldn’t see the world champion again before the finish, where he crossed the line almost three minutes behind Pogačar.
“It was a very tough day. It was not the day I wanted, obviously, but that’s how it is sometimes,” Vingegaard told TNT Sports after the finish.
“So they put in a big attack on the Tourmalet, and I couldn’t follow, and I had to settle within my own pace, and over the top I was not that far. But on a downhill like this, it’s not really suited for me.”
Vingegaard admitted he didn’t produce his best power numbers on the 186.2km stage between Pau and Gavarnie-Gèdre. He said that “that’s life”, before concluding that he’ll keep on battling for yellow.
“I don’t think so. It was not my best day, but that’s how it is,” he said.
The latest race content, interviews, features, reviews and expert buying guides, direct to your inbox!
“I’m obviously I’m disappointed. I have to be, but yeah, sometimes that’s life, and I cannot change it.
“I still believe in myself. I still believe my legs will get better throughout the race, so the fight is not over.”
The world’s biggest bike race deserves world-class coverage. Subscribe to Cyclingnews for unlimited access to our unrivalled reporting of the 2026 Tour de France. From Barcelona through to Paris, our experienced team will bring you breaking news, expert insight, and in-depth coverage from every stage as the battle for the yellow jersey plays out. Plus, access the Cyclingnews app to follow the action on the go!Find out more.
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