TDF 2024: Stage 15: Pogacar Dominates on Plateau de Beille

Tour de France 2024: Stage 15- Plateau de Beille, Sunday, July 14th

Tadej Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates) conquered the Plateau de Beille on Bastille Day in the Pyrenees, finishing 1’08” ahead of Jonas Vingegaard (Team Visma | Lease a Bike). It is Yellow Jersey Pogacar’s third win at this year’s Tour and is a significant victory, giving him a 3’09” GC advantage over his great rival Vingegaard going into Monday’s final rest day and with six stages remaining. Remco Evenepoel (Soudal Quick-Step) finished the stage in third place at 2’51”, meaning he now trails in the GC by 5’19”.

Girmay gains more points
The immediate climb up the Col de Peyresourde (Cat. 1, km 7) generated a continuous series of attacks that did not form into an established breakaway, with David Gaudu (Groupama-FDJ) taking first position on the Peyresourde summit.

Gaudu, Oier Lazkano (Movistar) and Romain Bardet (dsm-Firmenich) descended together, only to soon be caught by the bunch. It was at km 21 that Bob Jungels (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) began a round of attacks that went on all the way to the very top of the Col de Menté (Cat. 1, km 50), with Javier Romo (Movistar Team) the first over the summit accompanied by 16 other riders.

They had a 1’35” advantage over a peloton which Visma-Lease a Bike was leading. Biniam Girmay (Intermarche-Wanty) was in the leading group when they arrived at the intermediate sprint at Marignac (IS, km 37). Girmay won that sprint but was relegated to third after deviating from his line, with Michael Matthews (Jayco-AlUla) being awarded first place. Nonetheless, the Eritrean now already has enough points to guarantee him ownership of the green jersey on Stages 16 and 17.

17 riders in the breakaway
Simon Yates (Jayco-AlUla), Laurens de Plus (Ineos Grenadiers), Jai Hindley, Bob Jungels, Matteo Sobrero (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe), Lenny Martinez (Groupama-FDJ), Richard Carapaz, Ben Healy (EF Education- EasyPost), Jakob Fuglsang (Israel-Premier Tech), Guillaume Martin (Cofidis), Enric Mas, Alex Aranburu, Javier Romo (Movistar Team), Louis Meintjes (Intermarche-Wanty), Oscar Onley (Team dsm-firmenich PostNL), Magnus Cort and Tobias Halland Johannessen (Uno-X) collectively took on the Col de Portet-d’Aspet (Cat. 1, km 65.4), which was conquered in first position by Johannessen, with the peloton 1’05” behind at this point. Meintjes dropped back from the breakaway due to a mechanical problem which returned him to the main group, where Jonas Vingegaard’s Visma teammates continued to set the pace. On the way from the Col de Portet-d’Aspet to the Col d’Agnes (Cat. 1, km 138.6) there was some respite from the intense climbing for the riders, with the break building up an advantage of 3’30” by km 123.

Aggressive Col d’Agnes climb
With 73 km to go, before the Col d’Agnes climb, the breakaway was divided into two: De Plus, Hindley, Jungels, Sobrero, Healy, Mas and Romo leaving the rest behind. It was at the foot of the climb that these frontrunners would register the maximum advantage over the main group, of 3’45”. Jungels, Sobrero, Healy and Romo lost ground on the climb, whilst Carapaz managed to return to the front of the race 2 km from the summit, which was reached in first place by De Plus. The Yellow Jersey group was reduced to 15 riders, with all the GC favourites in position and guided by Visma-Lease a Bike, reaching the top of the climb 3’05” after the breakaway.

Final Climb is Decisive
It was a five-man breakaway of De Plus, Hindley, Mas, Carapaz and Johannessen who reached the foot of the final climb of Plateau de Beille (HC, km 197.7) together and 2’25” ahead of the GC group. The lead group gradually disintegrated on that final climb with Mas and Carapaz resisting for as long as they could before Vingegaard attacked from the main group with 11km to go. The Dane accelerated, with Pogacar on his wheel and the two GC favourites soon took the lead. With 5.4 kilometers to go, the Slovenian overtook Vingegaard and powered to a dominant victory by more than a minute, with Evenepoel struggling to limit the damage and eventually following the winner over the line almost three minutes later.