Tour de France 2026: stage 15 takes riders into Alps and Plateau de Solaison finish – live

12 hours ago 18

Key events

174km to go Eight km to go until the sprint, with the white socks and boots of Alpecin still leading, three in a line, followed by Mads Pedersen and Lidl-Trek, controlling the peloton until the sprint.

178 km to go The gorgeous greens of the trees, burnt yellow of the fields, colour the scenery as the pelaton makes steady progress upwards, bobbing helmets and shifting shoulder blades.

182km to go The royal blue jerseys of Alpecin dominate the front of the peloton at this tentative stage, with early eyes on the intermediate sprint, just over 17km into the race.

A stat, courtesy of TNT: Paul Seixas is the youngest rider ever to wear a leader’s jersey at the TdF.

Kilometre zero

No rain today as the race director gives the flag a vigorous wave, and they’re off! The Alps await.

We’re just a km before the flag drop. Nice and easy at the moment, swarming like lazy summer bees.

A quick word from Tadej Pogacar: “I got four hours of sleep today, couldn’t fall back to sleep [after doping], so have been chilling, listening to old Eminem hits and drinking coffee.”

And hello to Ger Nugent, whose email is the first to thump on the Guardian doormat.

“I realise there’s some disappointment (to be kind) regarding Pogacar’s dominance, but I for one am always really intrigued by his, and the team’s, tactics.

“No boos coming from me that’s a certainty. The sheer athleticism of the man is incredible and should, in my humble opinion, be shown the respect he justly deserves.”

The peloton will pedal away from Champagnole in about five minutes, with kilometre zero at 12.20.

Doping control have been visiting in the night – Pogacar at 5am and Vingegaard at 2am – he isn’t impressed.

If you’re watching at home, in France, or anywhere else, do email in with your thoughts on the Tour so far. I’d love hear from you.

There’s just one minute 20 seconds between second-placed Vingegaard and seventh-placed Del Toro. But disappearing into the distance is Pogacar.

Adam Blythe: “He’s not unbeatable but – it’s easier to find weaknesses in his team than in him.

Robbie McEwen: “I’ve run out of words of advice, we thought [the team] might be slightly depleted but they popped up again yesterday, they’ve got a stranglehold on the race, and it becomes a mental thing for the others.”

Matt Stephens:”We haven’t seen any sharp attacks from Jonus so far, what he lacks is that real punch. His favourite terrain is to come.”

Tadej Pogacar wearing the yellow jersey before the start of stage 15
Tadej Pogacar strikes a pose before stage 15. Photograph: Gonzalo Fuentes/Reuters

Jeremy Whittle's report

Recap yesterday’s fascinating stage in the Voges.

White jersey standings

1. Paul Seixas (FRA) Decathlon CMA CGM Team 51:23:47

2. Juan Ayuso (ESP) Lidl - Trek +3

3. Isaac Del Toro (MEX) UAE Team Emirates - XRG +31

4. Lenny Martinez (FRA) Bahrain Victorious +3:06

5. Davide Piganzoli (ITA) Team Visma - Lease ‌a Bike +13:56

Points standings

1. Mads Pedersen (DEN) Lidl - Trek 397

2. Jasper Philipsen (BEL) Alpecin - Premier Tech 361

3. Biniam Girmay (ERI) NSN Cycling Team 347

4. Tim Merlier (BEL) Soudal Quick-Step 307

5. Max Kanter (GER) XDS Astana Team 255

6. Olav Kooij (NED) Decathlon CMA CGM Team 210

7. Søren Wærenskjold (NOR) Uno-X Mobility 159

8. Anthony Turgis (FRA) TotalEnergies 129

9. Tadej Pogacar (SLO) UAE Team Emirates - XRG 127

10. Milan Fretin (BEL) Cofidis 117

King of the Mountain standings

Paret_Peintre briefly held the virtual red-spotted jersey yesterday, before Pogacar’s final assault.

1 T. PogacarUAE Team Emirates - XRG 52

2 V. Paret-PeintreSoudal Quick-Step 43

3 R. CarapazEF Education - EasyPost 38

4 J. VingegaardTeam Visma-Lease a Bike 35

5 P. SeixasDecathlon CMA CGM Team 24

6 T. PidcockPinarello - Q36.5 Pro Cycling Team 18

7 I. Del ToroUAE Team Emirates - XRG 18

8 N. ProdhommeDecathlon CMA CGM Team 17

9 A. BaudinEF Education - EasyPost 16

10 L. MartinezBahrain Victorious 16

GC standings

Yellow jersey standings.

1 T. PogacarUAE Team Emirates - XRG 51:18:28

2 J. VingegaardTeam Visma-Lease a Bike +4:30

3 R. EvenepoelRed Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe +5:04

4 P. SeixasDecathlon CMA CGM Team +5:19

5 J. AyusoLidl Trek +5:22

6 F. LipowitzRed Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe +5:44

7 I. Del ToroUAE Team Emirates - XRG +5:50

8 M. SkjelmoseLidl Trek +7:35

9 T. PidcockPinarello - Q36.5 Pro Cycling Team +7:59

10 L. MartinezBahrain Victorious +8:25

William Fotheringham's stage guide

Stage 15, Sunday 19 July: Champagnole to Plateau de Solaison, 183.9km

South east through the Jura flirting with the Swiss border for much of the stage and two horribly steep climbs in the final quarter: the first category Col de la Croisette is five kilometres at an average of 11% and the super-category finish ascent is 11km at 9%. This is a mountain stage where the break may stay away, as the overall contenders are unlikely to get moving until the Croisette, 131km into the stage. A pure climber who is not in contention overall should win: why not last year’s Mont Ventoux winner Valentin Paret-Peintre?

Preamble

Bonjour! Thanks for joining us for a second consecutive day in the mountains, this time darting along the border with Switzerland. The organisers are spoiling us with an uphill intermediate sprint at 17km, three categorised climbs followed by a half hour, hors catégorie, big bang of a finish.

If the yellow jersey is disappearing into the distance on the back of a skinny Slovenian, who picked up his fourth stage win of this Tour yesterday, there are still plenty of intriguing puzzle pieces to place – the green jersey, the white (all of France is behind young Paul Seixas), and the fight for the podium places behind the inevitable Pogacar.

There’s a rest day tomorrow for the riders, so it’s all in before the final week. And the Guardian sofa has plenty of space, so bring un café and drop by.

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