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Tadej Pogacar Extends Tour de France Lead With Stage 10 Solo Win

Samantha Reed
Samantha Reed
Motorsport Correspondent
7:50 PM
RACING
Tadej Pogacar Extends Tour de France Lead With Stage 10 Solo Win
Watch Highlights
Tadej Pogacar won Stage 10 to Le Lioran with a solo attack and pushed his Tour de France lead beyond three and a half minutes over Jonas Vingegaard. Remco Evenepoel finished second, 32 seconds behind.

What happened: Tadej Pogacar won Stage 10 of the Tour de France with another solo move, extending his overall lead on Bastille Day. The Guardian reports that the Slovenian attacked on the penultimate climb during the stage to Le Lioran in the Massif Central and finished 32 seconds ahead of Remco Evenepoel, who took second on the day.

Watch the highlights: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yN_NfzI-v44

The result is more than another stage win. Pogacar now leads the Tour by more than three and a half minutes over longtime rival Jonas Vingegaard. The Guardian reports that Vingegaard wilted and lost more time to other podium contenders on a demanding route featuring seven categorised climbs.

Race recap: Stage 10 was built for separation. The route included seven categorised climbs, with the first-category Puy Mary Pas de Peyrol and Col de Pertus arriving in the final hour of racing. Pogacar used that terrain in familiar fashion, launching a decisive attack on the penultimate climb and turning the stage into another demonstration of control rather than a late sprint or narrow tactical gamble.

Tournament impact: The general classification picture has shifted from close rivalry toward Pogacar control. A lead of more than three and a half minutes does not end the Tour, but it changes the obligations on everyone behind him. Vingegaard can no longer rely on small cracks or bonus seconds. The pressure now moves onto rivals to find stages where they can take back meaningful time, and the risk of overreaching rises as the deficit grows.

Evenepoel’s second place is also important because the source notes Vingegaard lost time not only to Pogacar but to other podium contenders. That suggests the battle behind the yellow jersey may be tightening even as Pogacar’s position strengthens. The Tour now has two linked contests: whether anyone can destabilise Pogacar, and how the podium order forms beneath him.

What to watch: The biggest question is recovery. Pogacar’s attack came after a hard climbing stage, and repeated solo efforts can accumulate cost across a three-week race. But the immediate signal is clear: he had the legs to attack late, distance key rivals and add another stage win. Vingegaard’s response in the next mountain tests will say whether this was a bad day or a deeper trend.

Confidence: Confirmed by the source: Pogacar won Stage 10 to Le Lioran, Evenepoel finished second at 32 seconds, Pogacar extended his Tour lead to more than three and a half minutes over Vingegaard, and the stage included seven categorised climbs. Still requiring follow-up: full updated standings beyond the details reported, time gaps to every podium contender and any team explanations after the stage.

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