2025 Tour de France Stage 14 Results & Recap

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Arensman Wins Stage 14 Thymen Arensman (INEOS Grenadiers) claimed a career-defining solo victory on Stage 14 after launching a long-range attack in the high mountains. The Dutch climber held off race ...

Stage 14 of the 2025 Tour de France is in the books. The final results and standings are below, followed by our recap of how the race unfolded.

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Race Recap

Arensman Wins Stage 14

Thymen Arensman (INEOS Grenadiers) claimed a career-defining solo victory on Stage 14 after launching a long-range attack in the high mountains. The Dutch climber held off race leader Tadej Pogačar and Jonas Vingegaard to post up solo atop the Peyresourde summit.

The stage began under dreary, wet skies and opened with a furious pace. After an hour of racing and 51 kilometers covered, no breakaway had stuck. Eventually, Mattéo Vercher, Quentin Pacher, and Geraint Thomas opened up a small gap, but were reeled in before the intermediate sprint, won by green jersey Jonathan Milan.

The peloton hit the Col du Tourmalet, where the fireworks began. Remco Evenepoel, struggling early, lost contact and later abandoned the race, along with Mattias Skjelmose, who crashed out. Up front, Lenny Martinez and Ben O’Connor pushed the pace after an initial move by Arensman, with Martinez eventually going solo to carve out a two-minute lead.

A strong chase group containing Einer Rubio, Enric Mas, Ben Healy, Sepp Kuss, and several others formed behind, but the race dynamic shifted again on the Col de Peyresourde. Arensman bridged to the leaders and launched his decisive attack just over four kilometers from the summit. He quickly opened a gap of over a minute and extended it to 3:30 on the GC group, led by Pogačar.

Behind, Matteo Jorgenson dropped from the yellow jersey group, while Felix Gall briefly surged ahead of the other GC contenders. With four kilometers remaining, Jonas Vingegaard attacked, followed by Pogačar and Florian Lipowitz. The Slovenian and Dane pushed each other hard, ultimately distancing Lipowitz.

Arensman powered to the finish line alone, claiming a historic win, the biggest of his career. Pogačar outsprinted Vingegaard for second place, gaining four seconds on his closest rival in the GC.

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