Share and Follow


Ireland’s Ben Healy won stage six of the Tour de France in Normandy on Friday morning AEST with a long solo break, as Mathieu van der Poel reclaimed the overall leader’s yellow jersey by one second.
Van der Poel was billed at the start of the tour as a potential winner of stage seven to Mur de Bretagne, where he first took the yellow in 2021.
“It would be a great finale to a great week,” said an exhausted Van der Poel.
“If I get the win or not, it’ll be great anyway just to wear the yellow jersey again.”

Belgian Evenepoel is third at 49 seconds with France’s Kevin Vauquelin fourth at one minute. Jonas Vingegaard is fifth at one minute 14 seconds.

Healy, 24, became the first Irish stage winner since sprinter Sam Bennett won on the Champs Elysees in 2020.
“That was so enjoyable, and once we had all got away, I discussed it with the team car and we chose that unlikely place to attack,” said Healy.

“I’m very proud to be presenting Ireland, I’m from an Irish family and though I wasn’t born there it was an option I chose as a youngster.”

Stage six was intense from the off over a series of hills between Bayeux and Vire as temperatures rose above 26.5 Celsius with the peloton putting the hammer down at 47 kilometres per hour average over the first three hours.
Healy and Van der Poel were part of a nine-person mid-race escape who set a relentless pace.
Healy broke solo knowing that if he waited for the hilly finale, he had little chance of beating the proven experts in the breakaway.
He made his move suddenly on a flat section, 32 kilometres out. As he pulled to the left and accelerated, the eight others dithered as the distance widened.

For Pogacar, allowing the Dutch powerhouse to sneak into the escape meant he lost the overall lead.

Once Healy had broken away, even Van der Poel sat up, saving energy, possibly for the run up the Mur de Bretagne — scene of his 2020 triumph to seize the tour lead he kept for eight days.

Behind him Pogacar and arch-rival Jonas Vingegaard battled up the final 10 per cent slope, but van der Poel regained the lead by the narrowest margin.

‘Vauquelin-mania’

After an all-day effort, American champion Quinn Simmons came second, and Michael Storer put Team Tudor on the tour podium for the first time in third.
The day started at Bayeux, renowned for its tapestry of the 1066 Norman conquest of England, but also the birthplace of burgeoning French star Kevin Vauquelin.

The Arkea rider, 24, was toast of the town as he left in third position on the tour, just 59 seconds adrift of Pogacar and ended in fourth overall at one minute.

Ahead of the stage he hailed “the roads where I grew up and learned to love the hills”.
At the finish line, he spoke of “goose bumps” as the fans cheered him along, with local media speaking of “Vauquelin-mania”.
After six days of racing in the north of France, the tour heads west with a 197 kilometre run from Saint Malo over rolling hills in Britany, finishing atop the steep climb called the Mur-de-Bretagne.

The place to watch the 2025 Tour de France — live, free and exclusive — plus the fourth edition of the Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift is right here on the SBS On Demand Hub.
Share and Follow
You May Also Like

Devastating Path of Typhoon Kalmaegi: Impact on Vietnam and the Philippines’ Tragic Toll

Typhoon Kalmaegi churned across Vietnam on Friday, claiming five more lives after…
People watch rough waves caused by Typhoon Kalmaegi in Khanh Hoa, Vietnam on Thursday, November 6.

Typhoon Kalmaegi Strikes Central Vietnam Following Devastating Impact on the Philippines

Typhoon Kalmaegi brought fierce winds and torrential rains to Vietnam on Friday,…

Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces Accepts US-Arab Truce for Humanitarian Relief Efforts

Sudan’s paramilitary Rapid Support Forces agreed to a proposal from the United…
explosions went off at a high school compound in Jakarta

Breaking: Explosive Incident at Indonesian High School Leaves 54 Injured

Indonesian authorities said they have identified a 17-year-old boy as the suspected…
Prince William reveals the message of hope he gives his children each night as he prepares to unveil the winners of his Earthshot environment prize in Rio

Prince William Shares Uplifting Bedtime Tradition with His Children

As Prince William prepared for the fifth Earthshot Awards in Rio, he…

Explosion at Jakarta High School Mosque Leaves 54 Injured

A 17-year-old boy has been identified as the suspected perpetrator of an…

Devastating Typhoon Kalmaegi Hits Vietnam: Aftermath of a Deadly Trail from the Philippines

Typhoon Kalmaegi has slammed into Vietnam, forcing authorities to cancel hundreds of…
There's going to be 67,000 people coming to watch us play the All Blacks... it would be a damn shame if we don't believe we can win, says Scotland skipper Tuipulotu

Scotland Skipper Tuipulotu Rallies 67,000 Fans with Bold Confidence Ahead of All Blacks Clash

Scotland’s captain, Sione Tuipulotu, is rallying his teammates for a momentous challenge…