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84km to go: Benjamin Thomas (Cofidis) and Mattéo Vercher (Total Energies) are being joined by Arnaud De Lie (Lotto). The gap between this group and the peloton now sits at 55secs.
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Thank you all for the emails. They’re coming in thick and fast now!
I have a reader who has been in touch from Ireland (sadly I don’t have their name):
Enjoying the commentary from beautiful Dungarvan, County Waterford, Ireland which famously hosted a stage of the Tour in 1998.
Just did my first 75km, at around half the average speed that the fastest Tour winner achieved over 3400km!!!
Will from Scotland is out on the stage route and sends this report of the atmosphere and wind conditions:
I’m on the Mont Noir climb after cycling down from Scotland. The route touches the Belgian border and they’re here in their thousands. It’s packed!
Mega windy here, the run in to the finish will be pretty sketchy, fingers crossed everyone stays upright.
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94km to go: Mattéo Vercher (Total Energies) has attacked again and he’s been let go by the peloton. Benjamin Thomas (Cofidis), after a moment, follows him. They have a very slender gap on the pack but it won’t last (I’m pretty sure, but they could amaze me).
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Milan wins first intermediate sprint
97km to go: Lidl-Trek’s Jonathan Milan beat Jasper Philipsen, Biniam Girmay and Bryan Coquard on the first sprint. Milan has taken 20 points to put him in the green jersey.
Results of the intermediate sprint of La Motte-aux-Bois
1. Milan, 20 pts
2. Coquard, 17 pts
3. Girmay, 15 pts
4. Philipsen, 13 pts
5. Turgis, 11 pts
6. Meeus, 10 pts
7. Penhoët, 9 pts
8. Lund Andresen, 8 pts
9. Consonni, 7 pts
10. Cattaneo, 6 pts
11. Evenepoel, 5 pts
12. Ballerini, 4 pts
13. Merlier, 3 pts
14. Van Wilder, 2 pts
15. Valgren, 1 pt
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Updated at 14.43 BST
102km to go: The breakaway have been caught. There’s a group that dropped off the peloton and are 33secs behind. Apparently that group includes: Mauro Schmid, Luke Plapp (Jayco AlUla), Lenny Martinez (Bahrain Victorious), Louis Barré (Intermarché-Wanty), Frank Van den Broek (Picnic PostNL), Florian Lipowitz (Red Bul-Bora-Hansgrohe), Thibau Nys (Lidl-Trek) and Stefan Bissegger (Decathlon-AG2R La Mondiale).
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Updated at 14.33 BST
My lovely pals Nick and Lucy, who have travelled over to Lille – cycling from Calais after a train and a ferry – have sent a note to share on this blog:
Bonjour Amy!
Greetings from a very excitable Lille, where we jostled around the slightly bizarre fan park where people exchanged personal data for a wide array of what my dad has always described as ‘cheap tat’. A truly sustainable enterprise, Le Tour …
Lucy cycling to Lille to watch the Grand Départ. Photograph: Nick Turnbull
Anyway, French Glasto is in full swing and it was a genuine thrill to see the riders come through the streets during le depart fictif. We cycled up through Cassel and Mont Noir yesterday and they were OK on a touring rig so I expect the sprinteurs won’t mind too much.
My pick? Tim Merlier. Boring but likely.
Bon courage!
Nick and Lucy ready to watch the Tour de France stage one in Lille. Photograph: Nick TurnbullShare
Updated at 14.31 BST
107km to go: The attackers’ lead is down to 15secs. There’s been a mechanical for Florian Lipowitz (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) – he’s just had a front wheel change.
The riders who crashed – Bissegger, Ganna, Nys, Flynn – have come back to the bunch after about 20 kilometres of chasing.
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Here are some pictures of the riders:
The peloton rides during the first stage of the Tour de France. Photograph: Mosa’ab Elshamy/APArkea – B&B Hotels’ Mathis Le Berre and TotalEnergies’ Matteo Vercher ride past Eglise catholique Saint-Martin a Bouvigny-Boyeffles during stage one. Photograph: Benoît Tessier/ReutersQuinn Simmons of Lidl-Trek leads the pack of riders during the first stage of the 2025 Tour de France. Photograph: ShutterstockShare
114km to go: The gap between the breakaway and peloton has been reduced to 36secs.
Adam Blythe on the TNT Sports commentary is adamnt that the high pace (45.1km/h) will continue to the finish. He says the peloton are not particularly bothered about catching the breakaway (they assume they will), but the teams are instead prioritising positioning and trying to stay out of trouble by being up at the front.
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122km to go: Thibau Nys (Lidl-Trek) has also crashed but it sounds as if he’s back up. The official Tour updates attribute the spate of crashes to a hard pace, tension in the bunch and the peloton riding through wind-exposed sections.
The pace is up and the peloton are eating away at the gap that the five riders out front created in the first part of this race. UAE Team Emirates are driving hard to bring the advantage down. It now stands at less than a minute for the breakaway.
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129km to go: Sean Flynn (Picnic PostNL) also went down with Filippo Ganna but seems to be OK and back on his bike.
Stefan Bissegger (Decathlon-Ag2R La Mondiale) has also crashed and is having a concussion check, which is now mandatory before a rider is allowed to move on.
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133km to go: The peloton have descended and pushed to reduce the gap between them and the breakaway. The advantage for the five out front has dropped to 1min 40secs.
Filippo Ganna from Ineos Grenadiers has crashed on a corner! But he is standing and speaking to his team.
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138km to go: While the peloton tackled the first climb, the breakaway group pushed the gap to 2mins 25sec. It’s settled to about 2mins at the moment.
For those interested in their speed, the front five have maintained a pace of about 44.1km in the first hour of this stage.
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143km to go: Benjamin Thomas (Cofidis) takes the first King of the Mountains (KOM) point of the Tour de France 2025 on the 1km long Côte de Notre-Dame-de-Lorette (with an average gradient of 7.6 %). Well done Thomas!
The peleton passes the ruins of the church of Ablain-Saint-Nazaire, which was destroyed during WWI. Photograph: Marco Bertorello/AFP/Getty ImagesShare
Updated at 13.54 BST
144km to go: The five in the break – Jonas Rutsch (Intermarché-Wanty), Matis Le Berre (Arkéa-B&B Hotels), Bruno Armirail (Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale), Benjamin Thomas (Cofidis) and Mattéo Vercher (Total Energies) – are on the climb.
Bruno Armirail (Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale) attacks early but Benjamin Thomas (Cofidis) also has his eyes on the first KOM.
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Updated at 13.39 BST
Peter and Flo have emailed in to say they travelled over from Sheffield to Lille last night to watch the Grand Départ.
Great crowds and atmosphere here in Lille. Sat by the Notre-Dame with ‘une petite biere’ following you coverage. Thanks!!
Their note has made me a little envious, I have to admit. It sounds as if they’re having a brilliant time. I was in Lille earlier this year to watch Paris-Roubaix and it is a great place to visit. Enjoy!
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Updated at 13.42 BST
148km to go: The first climb is in sight. The five riders in the breakaway are heading towards the category four Côte de Notre-Dame-de-Lorette.
There are another category four climbs on today’s route, with Mont Cassel and Mont Noir. Who’ll take the polka dot jersey after this stage?
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Kurt has emailed in asking whether there are any Americans who have a chance to win the Tour De France this year?
From a quick scan of the starting riders list, there are five US cyclists in the peloton: Matteo Jorgenson and Sepp Kuss for Visma-Lease a Bike, Neilson Powless (EF Education-Easypost), Quinn Simmons (Lidl-Trek), William Barta (Movistar).
What do you think? What are the best chances for these riders?
Quinn Simmons looking not at all American. Photograph: Dario Belingheri/Getty ImagesShare
Updated at 13.55 BST
John has emailed in about the winds on the course. It’s definitely going to be a concern for the riders, with some strong gusts and crosswinds anticipated:
I’m watching ITV4’s coverage, with infill from Discovery+ during the advert breaks.
David Millar and Ned Boulting made the point that the very strong wind will be a cross/tailwind on the run-in back to Lille. Two things from that:
i) if the breakaway still has a gap with, say, 10km to go, they will believe that they have a chance, especially with Armirail and Thomas in the group.
ii) the wind looks strong enough for echelons to form, so there’s a chance that one of the GC favourites might get stuck behind the front group and lose time.
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161km to go: Over on the team radios, riders have been warned about speedbumps, which are often in place at the entry and exit of French towns.
The breakaway’s gap stays steady at 2mins 14secs.
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Updated at 13.13 BST
One of my favourite things during the Tour de France is seeing the creative and fun ways that fans come out to support the race. Here’s a few pictures that have come in so far:
Spectators in rooster costumes along the race route of the first stage of the 112th edition of the Tour de France, in Lille. Photograph: Marco Bertorello/AFP/Getty ImagesFans watch the start of Tour de France 2025 from the roof of their house. Photograph: Benoît Tessier/ReutersSpectators line the race route during stage one of the Tour de France 2025. Photograph: Marco Bertorello/AFP/Getty ImagesShare
168km to go: It looks like Cofidis’s Bryan Coquard is back in the peloton. The breakaway have increased their lead to 2mins 19secs. Here’s a picture of the five men in that group:
(L-R) Benjamin Thomas of Cofidis, Mathis Le Berre of Arkea – B&B Hotels, Matteo Vercher of TotalEnergies, Jonas Rutsch of Intermarche – Wanty and Bruno Armirail of Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale in the breakaway. Photograph: Dario Belingheri/Getty Images
Also, dare I ask what people think of the new kits?
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174km to go: The group-of-five breakaway have just over 2mins on the bunch. Jonathan Milan’s Lidl-Trek and Jasper Philipsen’s Alpecin-Deceuninck are driving the drive the peloton. Cofidis’s Bryan Coquard is dropping off the back and is 15secs behind.
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Updated at 12.58 BST
178km to go: The gap has grown to 1min 38secs, but the peloton behind are yet to act on the breakaway.
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182km to go: Already a group of five have opened up a gap of 25secs. The riders are: Jonas Rutsch (Intermarché-Wanty), Matis Le Berre (Arkéa-B&B Hotels), Bruno Armirail (Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale), Benjamin Thomas (Cofidis) and Mattéo Vercher (Total Energies). The peloton behind seem pretty chilled about it at the moment.
Bruno Armirail, Mathis Le Berre, Jonas Rutsch and Matteo Vercher make an early move. Photograph: Marco Bertorello/AFP/Getty ImagesShare
Updated at 12.51 BST
The racing has begun!
184km to go: The race is on and the first attack comes from perennial underdog French squad, Total Energies.
Spectators cheer from a balcony along the race route at the start of 112th edition of the Tour de France starting and finishing in Lille Métropole. Photograph: Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP/Getty Images
According to TNT Sports’ viewer predictor poll for today’s stage winner, Jonathan Milan is the favourite, followed by Jasper Philipsen.
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Updated at 12.47 BST
My first email! Thanks Guy.
Bonjour Amy, Le Tour est ici! If the Giro was anything to go by, this could be a vintage year for Grand Tours. Though it’s obviously hard to see past Pogačar for the GC in France, there should be subplots aplenty and opportunities for teams to attack him and go for the other jerseys.
My money is on Jasper Philipsen today (and not just because he’s in my fantasy team) but we’ve all seen plenty of chaos in opening sprint stages so I’m also hoping everyone stays upright.
I’m looking forward to seeing what the subplots might be this year too.
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Here is a clip of the riders starting stage one:
Also, there’s been some discussion on the live coverage about the wind conditions today. According to the official TdF updates, there is a south-westerly wind, with gusts of up to 45 km/h, which the riders will face for the first 40km. After that, they should have the wind in their favour for the next 70km. Oh, and there’s a chance of rain in the afternoon.
TNT Sports spoke to Jonas Vingegaard before stage one and asked him about the wind today. The Danish rider spoke about growing up in the wind and says he remembers well riding into a headwind often, which he admits is “annoying”. On another note, he happily told the interviewer he’d had a good nine and a half hours sleep, which he said he doesn’t often get these days due to his children.
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According to the Tour’s live coverage, the peloton has stopped at Porte de Paris, one of Lille’s city gates, where an orchestra is playing the Marseillaise, the French national anthem.
The pack of riders cycles past the Porte de Paris arch. Photograph: Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP/Getty ImagesShare
Updated at 13.04 BST
Today’s rollout has begun
And the Tour de France 2025 is off! Well, the controlled, 11km slow rollout before the official race starts is on. There are 184 riders taking part and the TV coverage is showing quite a few smiling faces as they parade around during the neutralised start in Lille.
(L-R) Tadej Pogačar of UAE Team Emirates and Jonas Vingegaard of Visma-Lease a Bike before stage one of the Tour de France 2025 rollout. Photograph: Dario Belingheri/Getty ImagesShare
Updated at 12.20 BST
The rollout should begin in just one minute. The riders, such as three-time Tour de France stage winner Biniam Girmay, can be spotted waiting at the start line:
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Updated at 12.11 BST
Earlier I mentioned that all eyes will be on sprinters such as Jasper Philipsen, Jonathan Milan and Tim Merlier. Here’s a little bit about each of them:
Jasper Philipsen
Jasper Philipsen of Alpecin – Deceuninck during the team presentation prior to the 112th Tour de France 2025. Photograph: Dario Belingheri/Getty Images
Part of Alpecin-Deceuninck, Philipsen has one plan: the green jersey. On the flat stages, team mate Mathieu van der Poel uses his explosive power and superlative bike handling to lead out Philipsen, who has won nine stages in the last three Tours and the green jersey in 2023.
Jonathan Milan
Jonathan Milan of Lidl – Trek prior to the 112th Tour de France 2025, in Lille. Photograph: Dario Belingheri/Getty Images
After a prolific spring for Lidl-Trek, July is all about stage wins, with Milan for the flat finishes. The Italian sprinter with four stages in the Giro to his name shines when the roads are the lumpy side of flat.
Tim Merlier
Soudal Quick-Step team’s Belgian rider Tim Merlier awaits the start of the stage one of the 112th edition of the Tour de France. Photograph: Marco Bertorello/AFP/Getty Images
In early June, Soudal-Quick-Step nudged past 1,000 wins since their foundation; they will add to that in the next few weeks, targeting sprint stages with the European champion, Merlier.
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Updated at 12.07 BST
Ahead of the stage one rollout, the Tour de France have posted a plea to those coming out to watch the race to respect the riders. “Don’t run alongside them, don’t touch them and don’t throw anything at them.” There’s a video clip showing some previous incidents too.
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Here’s the profile of stage one of the Tour de France 2025:
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Updated at 11.41 BST
Here’s an interesting fact for you all: the last time a Tour de France stage finished in Lille was 11 years ago and it was won by Marcel Kittel.
Giant Shimano team rider Marcel Kittel of Germany celebrates on the podium after winning the fourth stage of the 2014 Tour de France between Le Touquet-Paris-Plage and Lille Métropole. Photograph: Bas Czerwinski/EPAShare
Jeremy Whittle
My colleague Jeremy Whittle has written about Tadej Pogačar and Jonas Vingegaard’s rivalry – sure to be a key theme again at this year’s TdF:
The pair, whose rivalry is becoming one of the Tour’s most longstanding, will be locked in battle again this month with Pogačar widely expected to hammer home the supremacy of the past 18 months with another win.
The UAE Team Emirates leader says he is “confident and ready”. Certainly his team, memorably bushwhacked by Vingegaard’s Visma-Lease a Bike teammate Simon Yates on the penultimate stage of this year’s Giro, will want payback.
Tadej Pogacar, wearing the overall leader’s yellow jersey, and onas Vingegaard, pump fists prior to the twelfth stage of the Tour de France 2024. Photograph: Daniel Cole/AP
In a tricky and tortuous opening to the Tour that will test every rider’s mettle, the biggest threat to Pogačar will be crashing. He has already ended up in a ditch this year, during the Italian gravel race Strade Bianche. Even then, he went on to win.
“The first week of the Tour is one of the most intense and nervous weeks,” he said. “You can quite easily lose the race in the first 10 days to the first rest day.
A lot can happen in such a long race, but I’m looking forward to racing against Jonas again. He’s in great shape. It will be a great month for people in front of the TV and beside the road.
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Updated at 12.22 BST
Stage one: Lille Métropole to Lille Métropole, 184.9km
Here’s a look at today’s stage, Saturday 5 July: Lille Métropole to Lille Métropole, 184.9km, with William Fotheringham’s preview:
The climbs of Mont Cassel and Le Mont Noir won’t be enough to split the peloton, so this is almost guaranteed to be a bunch sprint, unless it gets windy. A strong westerly would make this a nightmare with more than 140km of crosswinds, but if it stays calm it’s a first big test for Jasper Philipsen, Tim Merlier and the other fast men. For the favourites, a first day of trying to stay upright.
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Preamble
Hello and welcome to the Guardian’s live coverage of the Tour de France 2025, starting with stage one in Lille.
Today, the peloton will roll out from the northern French city at 1.10pm CEST (12.10pm BST) and tackle 184.9km on a flat stage that will loop back into Lille for what will most likely end in a bunch sprint. So, all eyes will be on sprinters such as Jasper Philipsen, Jonathan Milan and Tim Merlier. I’d love to hear your predictions though, so please email them over.
While we wait for the live TV coverage to kick off, here’s some reading from our sports team who have been previewing this year’s Tour:
Tadej Pogačar v Jonas Vingegaard – The battle for the yellow jersey
Who’s who?
Your stage-by-stage guide
The Tour de France’s version of VAR?
Fifty years of finishes on Champs-Élysées
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