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    Isaac del Toro wins Tour de France stage two ahead of Tadej Pogaar as UAE Team Emirates-XRG dominate Barcelona finale
    Isaac del Toro made a daring late move in the final kilometre to take the second stage of the 2026 Tour de France on an uphill finish in Barcelona. The UAE Team Emirates-XRG rider chased down late-attacker Matthias Skjelmose (Lidl-Trek), cornering at high speed with 500 metres to go and unleashing his acceleration. His team-mate Tadej Pogaar attacked from behind and had the beating of yellow jersey Jonas Vingegaard (Visma-Lease a Bike), but appeared to all his young colleague to take an historic victory in a UAE Team Emirates-XRG 1-2. Remco Evenepoel (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) topped an impressive opening weekend by finishing third. Vingegaard remains in the yellow jersey of race leader, but Pogaar has closed the gap from twelve to six seconds, moving into second overall. Evenepoel now sits third, 15 seconds down. Del Toro claimed his first Tour de France stage win, and what's more, took Mexico's first win at the race in 36 years, since Ral Alcala claimed stage 7 in 1990.More to follow...
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    Tour de France 2026 Classifications Update Stage 2 - Jonas Vingegaard keeps yellow but UAE take over other jerseys as Tadej Pogacar closes in
    The 2026 Tour de France classifications will shift across three weeks of racing, from the Grand Dpart in Barcelona on 4 July to the final stage in Paris on 26 July. Across time trials, sprint stages, breakaway opportunities and the high mountains, each day can alter the shape of the race for yellow...
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  • CYCLINGUPTODATE.COM
    Im extremely happy with how its gone Jonas Vingegaard keeps yellow jersey despite time loss to Tadej Pogacar at Tour de France
    Jonas Vingegaard insisted he could be satisfied with stage 2 of the 2026 Tour de France, even after Tadej Pogacar reduced his yellow jersey lead to just six seconds in Barcelona. Vingegaard finished fourth on the stage, on the same time as Isaac del Toro, Pogacar and Remco Evenepoel, so the Dane was...
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  • CYCLINGUPTODATE.COM
    UPDATE: Stage 3 of 2026 Tour de France to go ahead without spectators as wildfire emergency forces major restrictions
    Stage 3 of the 2026 Tour de France is under serious threat, with officials set to decide by the end of Sunday whether Mondays first mountain test can go ahead amid a major wildfire emergency in the Pyrenees-Orientales. The 195.9km stage is scheduled to start in Granollers, Spain, before crossing in...
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  • WWW.CYCLINGWEEKLY.COM
    Public told not to watch Tour de France stage three due to wildfires
    As the Tour de France exits Barcelona and prepares to make landfall in France after a hot and sweaty Grand Dpart, teams are in the dark over how or if stage three of the race will take place as a wildfire rages in the eastern Pyrenees.The third stage of the 2026 race is slated to begin in Granollers, a town on the outskirts of Barcelona, before heading north, climbing to the La Molina ski station, and then crossing into France late in the day before a finish at Les Angles.But a wildfire approximately 70 kilometres from Les Angles has forced the closure of a long section of the D66 road which forms part of the races hors course the route that non-race vehicles are recommended to use. Around 700 firefighters are currently tackling the blaze.At the end of stage two in Barcelona, which was won by Isaac Del Toro, the prospect of the following day going ahead as planned dominated the discussion.All teams who Cycling Weekly spoke to said that it was a mystery what would happen, confirming that ASO, the Tour de France organisers, had not informed them of any developments.But all expected the final part of the route to be adapted, with some speculating that it might finish after the descent of the Collada de Toses, thus keeping the race within the Spanish borders. This would avoid the race having to enter France where the local government has said it has the ultimate authority over whether or not the stage can go ahead.Christian Prudhomme, the Tour race director, told France TV after stage three that the final 44km of the route would take place as planned but without any spectators, including on the climbs of Col du Calvaire and Les Angles. The publicity caravan would also stop on the French border. The teams of the prefecture of the Pyrnes-Orientales and the Tour de France were in contact this afternoon," Prudhomme said. "I also spoke to the prefect on the phone in the afternoon and we agreed, given the exceptional and frightening conditions of the fire that reigns in the Pyrnes-Orientales, not to allow the publicity caravan to pass through the last 40km, the final part of the stage in France, to limit the road to only the riders and the organisation vehicles that are essential. And we ask the public not to come to roadside or to the finish."Adapting is daily life of organisers of cycling courses like the Tour de France. All of this is done in agreement with the state authorities. Again, we were in constant contact. The teams of the Pyrnes-Orientales prefecture and the teams of the Tour de France. And we will adapt again tomorrow, the next day. Next year if we need to, or in three years."An ASO source told CW that the situation remains fluid, while other stakeholders in the sport suggested that the decision to prohibit fans in France wouldn't necessarily be the end of the story. Zak Dempster, chief of sports at Red Bull-Bora-hansgrohe, admitted that the confusion will cause unrest and unease among the Tour participants, even if it's not the first time that a Grand Tour stage has been in doubt; the Giro d'Italia often has a stage shortened due to snow."We dont really have a choice, just have to do what you have to do," Dempster said. "Ive been involved in a few cancellations, one in particular [at the Giro d'Italia] on the Stelvio that really ran up to the last minute. "There was a lot of angst, and I personally as a sports director that day I learned a lot about how to protect the group of riders from entering in too much. Its complicated, mainly mentally."
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    People suffered in the heat Mattias Skjelmose explains why stage 2 finale never fully exploded at 2026 Tour de France
    Mattias Skjelmose believes the heat played a major role in shaping stage 2 of the 2026 Tour de France, after the Montjuic finale created splits but stopped short of the full-scale GC explosion many expected. The Lidl-Trek rider was one of the few to attack late in Barcelona, launching shortly before...
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