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Tadej Pogacar claims milestone stage four win to move level with Mathieu van der Poel in Tour de France yellow jersey battle

Tadej Pogacar celebrates on the podium with the best climber's polka dot jersey after the fourth stage
Tadej Pogacar celebrates on the podium with the best climber's polka dot jersey after the fourth stage

Tadej Pogacar claimed the 100th victory of his professional career to move level on time with Mathieu van der Poel in the yellow jersey on a thrilling stage four of the Tour de France in Rouen.

In the hometown of the Tour's first five-time winner Jacques Anquetil, Pogacar took a stride to what he hopes will be his fourth title with a show of strength on another classics-style stage, beating Van der Poel and his great rival Jonas Vingegaard in an uphill sprint.

It was Pogacar's 18th career Tour stage win and one that put him on the same time as Van der Poel - who retains yellow on countback - with Vingegaard eight seconds back going into Wednesday's time trial. Pogacar, 26, became the fourth youngest rider to reach 100 professional wins.

Ireland's Eddie Dunbar (Team Jayco AlUla), who is riding in his Tour debut, crossed the line 1:49 down in 42nd, with Ben Healy (EF Education - EasyPost) four seconds further back.

Eddie Dunbar of Ireland and Team Jayco AlUla crosses the finish line during the 112th Tour de France, Stage 4 a 174.2km stage from Amiens Metropole to Rouen / #UCIWT / on July 08, 2025 in Rouen, France.
Eddie Dunbar crossing the finish line at the end of stage four

Healy is 35th overall in the general classification and ninth in the youth classification, while Cork native Dunbar is 55th in the GC.

Lenny Martinez, the last survivor of a four-man breakaway, was collected with around 20km left as Pogacar's UAE Team Emirates-XRG squad and Vingegaard's Visma-Lease A Bike team came to the fore, quickly making a major selection in the peloton as few could keep with the pace.

Pogacar tried to attack on the steepest section of the last categorised climb, where gradients hit 15% on the Rampe Saint-Hilaire, briefly distancing Vingegaard, who was the only man who could follow before getting back onto his rival's wheel by the summit.

Remco Evenepoel dragged a handful of riders back across to the leading pair on the descent into Rouen, Van der Poel among them, but there would be no beating the world champion to victory.

"I think today I got very, very close to the limit," Pogacar said. "I tried with an attack on the last climb and then Jonas followed me and everything came together.

"Joao (Almeida) did such an amazing job to lead me out until the very end, even if people were attacking so I'm super happy and proud of the team today, it's amazing and I'm just without words, it's such a nice victory.

"To win at the Tour is incredible, to do it in this jersey even more so and to win 100 victories is amazing...We will see, tomorrow is the real test. Already to win a stage in this jersey for me it's enough, I just go on enjoying this race. Of course we aim for yellow and we will see."

Evenepoel conceded another three seconds to Pogacar and Vingegaard, leaving him 58 seconds off yellow, while Primoz Roglic lost 32 seconds to fall one minute 27 seconds down.

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