Tour Today: stage 14 - The third and final day in the Pyrenees
Tadej Pogacar has four stage wins already, will he make it five on the third and final stage in the Pyrenees. Catch up with anything you might have missed and get all the details of what's coming up today in Domestique's daily guide.

Tour de France stage 14 profile
The stage features four very well-known climbs, including an ascent of the Col du Tourmalet (19km at 7.4%), Col d’Aspin (5km at 7.6%), Col de Peyresourde (7.1km at 7.8%), and a summit finish on Luchon-Superbagnères (12.4km at 7.3%).
The route is based on stage 14 from the 1986 edition, which was the penultimate time that a Tour de France stage finished atop Superbagnères and was won by Greg LeMond of La Vie Claire, who would carry the yellow jersey to Paris. Robert Millar also won atop Supebagnères three years later in 1989, which is one of the most iconic editions in Tour de France history, also won overall by LeMond.
Follow every move of Stage 14 with our live report!
What to expect?
Based on the first two stages in the Pyrenees, it seems as though it will be up to Tadej Pogačar as to who will win stage 14. If he wants the stage win, his UAE Team Emirates-XRG teammates will surely keep any breakaway in check, similar to stage 12. After a more promising stage 13 time trial, can Vingegaard close the gap more compared to the Hautacam?
Remco Evenepoel (Soudal-QuickStep) holds a six-second lead over Florian Lipowitz (Red Bull-BORA-hansgrohe) in the fight for the podium, with Oscar Onley (Picnic PostNL), Kévin Vauquelin (Arkéa-B&B Hotels) and Primož Roglič (Red Bull-BORA-hansgrohe) all within a minute and a half. Will the Belgian defend his podium position on the slopes of Superbagnères?
If Pogačar is willing to let the stage win go to the breakaway, there will be many candidates who will be looking to seize the opportunity, including Lenny Martinez (Bahrain-Victorious), Mattias Skjelmose (Lidl-Trek) and Michael Storer (Tudor), who have scored well so far in the mountains classification.
Read Domestique's preview for stage 14 here.
Tour de France: Results and classification standings after stage 13
Tadej Pogačar extended his lead in the Tour de France to 4:07 over Jonas Vingegaard in second and 7:24 over Remco Evenepoel in third.
Jonathan Milan (Lidl-Trek) still leads the points classification, but his gap has been cut to 28 points to Pogačar.
Pogačar leads the mountains classification by 10 points over Lenny Martinez and Vingegaard, whilst Evenepoel holds a six-second lead over Florian Lipowitz (Red Bull-BORA-hansgrohe) in the youth classification
Tour de France: Results and classification standings after stage 13
The latest Tour de France news
Everything you need to know from the last 24 hours of the Tour de France:
- Pogacar soars in stage 13 TT, tightens grip on yellow at Tour de France
- Pogacar doesn't care about making enemies at Tour de France - Analysis
- 'Smash as much as possible' - Radio-free Pogacar crushes mountain TT
- 'Today was one of my best' - Vingegaard bounces back with strong TT
- 'Really, really bad' - Evenepoel caught by Vingegaard in time trial ordeal
- 'The Tour humbles you' - Jorgenson proud after positive time trial
- Oscar Onley still on the rise in breakout Tour de France
- 'You can't keep that up to Paris' - Van Wilder questions Visma's tactics
What time does stage 14 of the 2025 Tour de France start?
Stage 14 of the 2025 Tour de France will begin with the neutralised start at 12:00 (CET), and the finish is expected around 17:07. Full live coverage will be available from start to finish.
What time are the key moments on stage 14 to Superbagnerès?
When should you tune in? (Based on 37km/h) schedule
- Intermediate Sprint to Esquièze-Sère: 112.5km to go - Around 13:48
- Summit of Col du Tourmalet: 93.1km to go - Around 14:36
- Summit of Col d'Aspin: 63.3km to go - Around 15:20
- Summit of Col de Peyresourde: 32.5km to go - Around 16:11
- Base of Luchon-Superbagnères: 12.4km to go - Around 16:36
How to watch the 2025 Tour de France: Live stream, TV coverage and broadcasters by country
The 2025 Tour de France is being broadcast in over 190 countries. In the table below, you can find the broadcasters for the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada and Australia.
Do you want to know more about the broadcaster for your county? Visit our 'How to watch the 2025 Tour de France' guide.' This guide includes the full TV schedule, live stream options, and a country-by-country broadcaster list.
Country | Tour de France live broadcaster |
---|---|
United Kingdom | ITV / TNT Sports / Discovery+ |
United States | NBC Sports |
Canada | FloBikes |
Australia | SBS |
How to follow the Tour de France on Domestique?
- Our live race report keeps you updated with all the action as it happens, and also brings you the key pre and post-race interviews. Live coverage at Domestique starts around 10:45 CET.
- During the whole day, you can enjoy full coverage in terms of news and interviews
- After the race, you can enjoy a post-race show with Cyrus Monk and Aiden Burgess
- For sharp insights and expert takes, stay tuned to Domestique after the finish.