
Pogačar marvels after peeking break over Tour-de-France stage
In third place is the Belgian Remco Evenepoel with 4:06 minutes behind Pogacar
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Summary
In third place is the Belgian Remco Evenepoel with 4:06 minutes behind Pogacar. Home Sport Pogačar marvels after peeping break over Tour-de-France stage stand: 15.07.2026, 21:52 Comments We follow on Google average of almost 51 km/h: Tadej Pogačar marvels at the Tour de France about a historical record pace, which he only notices properly when peeing. This broke the previous record for a regular stage (apart from time trials) from 1999.
Furthermore, The high-speed race was overshadowed by a moment of terror about 30 kilometres before the finish. Tadej Pogačar defended his yellow jersey sovereignly and continues to lead the classification with a comfortable lead of 3:36 minutes ahead of his Danish permanent rival Jonas Vingegaard. At that time, the sprint legend Mario Cipollini raced with an average of 50.36 km/h to the day’s victory.
In addition, Pogacar was enthusiastic about the historic ride: “It’s great to be part of the fastest tour stage ever.” The murderous pace was necessary to set an extremely strong outlier group in time before the target.
Cross-referenced from 2 sources.
Factual coreconfirmed by several independent voices
In third place is the Belgian Remco Evenepoel with 4:06 minutes behind Pogacar.
reliability low1/2 sourcesHome Sport Pogačar marvels after peeping break over Tour-de-France stage stand: 15.07.2026, 21:52 Comments We follow on Google average of almost 51 km/h: Tadej Pogačar marvels at the Tour de France about a historical record pace, which he only notices properly when peeing.
reliability low1/2 sourcesThis broke the previous record for a regular stage (apart from time trials) from 1999.
reliability low1/2 sourcesThe high-speed race was overshadowed by a moment of terror about 30 kilometres before the finish.
reliability low1/2 sourcesTadej Pogačar defended his yellow jersey sovereignly and continues to lead the classification with a comfortable lead of 3:36 minutes ahead of his Danish permanent rival Jonas Vingegaard.
reliability low1/2 sourcesAt that time, the sprint legend Mario Cipollini raced with an average of 50.36 km/h to the day’s victory.
reliability low1/2 sourcesPogacar was enthusiastic about the historic ride: “It’s great to be part of the fastest tour stage ever.” The murderous pace was necessary to set an extremely strong outlier group in time before the target.
reliability low1/2 sources
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