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Tadej Pogacar poised to clinch Tour de France victory as Kaden Groves wins penultimate stage

Kaden Groves celebrates at the finish line
Kaden Groves celebrates at the finish line

Australian Kaden Groves completed his set of grand tour stage wins when he prevailed on the Tour de France's penultimate ride, avoiding a crash on slippery roads before powering to a solo triumph on the 184.2km journey from Nantua on Saturday.

Groves's bike-handling skills were on display when he managed to stay up as Spain's Ivan Romeo and France's Romain Gregoire skidded out of control in front of him on a wet descent 21 kilometres from the finish.

The Alpecin-Deceuninck rider then attacked from a reduced breakaway bunch and never looked back in the remaining 17 kilometres, bursting into tears in a mix of disbelief and exhaustion after the line.

Groves, who gave his team their third victory in this year's Tour after Jasper Philipsen and Mathieu van der Poel also won, has seven Vuelta and two Giro d'Italia stage wins to his name.

The 26-year-old, who is used to winning from bunch sprints, was beaming with pride after a memorable ride.

"There's so much pressure at the Tour, and having won in the Giro, having won in the Vuelta, all I ever get asked is am I good enough to win in the Tour? And now I show them," Groves said.

"It's my first time winning, so it's pretty incredible."

(L-R) Ben Healy of Ireland and Team EF Education - EasyPost and Mauro Schmid of Switzerland and Team Jayco AlUla compete during the 112th Tour de France 2025, Stage 20 a 184.2km stage from Nantua to Pontarlier / #UCIWT / on July 26, 2025 in Pontarlier, France.
Ben Healy (c) in action during Saturday's penultimate stage

Dutchman Frank van den Broek took second place, 54 seconds behind, with his compatriot Pascal Eenkhoorn third, five seconds further back.

Defending champion Tadej Pogacar spent a quiet day in the main peloton and made another step towards a fourth Tour title as he retained his overall leader's yellow jersey with a 4:24 advantage over Denmark's Jonas Vingegaard.

The final stage is a 132.3km ride from Mantes-la-Jolie to Paris, where the peloton will cycle up the famous Butte Montmartre three times before the final laps on the Champs-Elysees.

Ireland's Ben Healy (EF Education - EasyPost) finished 28th, in the peloton and 7:16 minutes down on Groves and three seconds ahead of the group of Pogacar, Vingegaard, Primoz Roglic and Wout van Aert.

That ensures Healy remains ninth overall in the general classification, 27:59 minutes behind Pogacar.

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