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SportThursday, July 16, 2026

Merlier’s Third Win Marred by Mass Crash and Suspected Gaviria Fracture

Tim Merlier claimed his third stage victory in a chaotic sprint finish, but a high-speed pile-up 300 metres from the line left Fernando Gaviria with a suspected broken collarbone and overshadowed the day’s racing.

Tim Merlier of Soudal Quick-Step powered to his third stage win of the 2026 Tour de France on Thursday, prevailing in a bunch sprint into Chalon-sur-Saône that was immediately overshadowed by a violent mass crash. The Belgian edged Olav Kooij and Jasper Philipsen in the final metres, but behind him, Colombian sprinter Fernando Gaviria lay on the tarmac after a collision that Colombian media reported likely ended his race with a suspected fractured clavicle. Gaviria crossed the line with the aid of a teammate, his leg bleeding, as race leader Tadej Pogačar expressed hope for his former colleague’s recovery.

The 179-kilometre stage from the Magny-Cours motor racing circuit had followed a familiar flatland script. A four-man breakaway featuring Frenchman Baptiste Veistroffer, who earned the day’s combativity prize, was reeled in with six kilometres to go, setting up a frenetic sprint. At roughly 350 metres, as the peloton touched speeds near 70 km/h, Vlad Van Mechelen of Bahrain Victorious shifted his line, and Gaviria, launching his own effort, struck the Belgian’s rear wheel and went down hard. Race commissaires later relegated Van Mechelen from 17th to 144th on the stage. German sprinter Pascal Ackermann, who narrowly avoided the carnage, told reporters he was “still shaking” from the proximity of the crash.

Pogačar retained the yellow jersey without incident, his overall lead of 3 minutes 36 seconds over Jonas Vingegaard intact. Mexico’s Isaac del Toro, riding in support of the Slovenian, finished safely in 59th place and held seventh overall, 5 minutes 8 seconds back, while remaining third in the young rider classification. German GC hope Florian Lipowitz stayed sixth, 38 seconds off the podium, and lightened the mood by joking about his errant toss of a bidon toward a roadside target: “That’s why I quit biathlon.” Colombian outlets quoted Caja Rural’s general manager describing the mood as one of “desolation,” noting that the team had believed Gaviria was on the cusp of a stage win after a long period of recovery.

The crash reshapes the sprinter landscape, with Gaviria almost certain to abandon, but the general classification remains untouched ahead of a decisive shift in terrain. Friday’s 205.8-kilometre Stage 13 from Dole to Belfort, the longest of the race, introduces the medium mountains and the ascent of the Ballon d’Alsace, offering the first serious test for the overall contenders before the high Alps loom on the weekend.

Divergence — who tells it how
Axis: Solidarietà vs. Trionfo
20%Low
2 blocs · positions from −0.20 to +0.20
Preoccupazione per cadutaCelebrazione della vittoria
LATEUR
Divergence between press blocs
Latin American press−0.20neutral
Continental European press+0.20neutral
Latin American press−0.20
Voice

Latin America stands in solidarity with Fernando Gaviria, denouncing the cruel twist of fate that struck one of its own, while quietly celebrating Isaac del Toro's resilience.

Mechanismpersonificazione della sfortuna

By repeatedly emphasizing Gaviria's personal story and the 'bad luck' narrative, the bloc makes the crash feel like an injustice rather than a routine racing incident, appealing to regional identity.

Omission

The bloc omits that many other sprinters also crashed and that the stage winner Tim Merlier avoided the pile-up, focusing exclusively on the Latin American victims.

AlarmVictimhood
Continental European press+0.20
Voice

Europe celebrates Tim Merlier's hat-trick of stage wins, framing the crash as an unfortunate but routine part of sprint finishes, and reaffirms Pogacar's dominance.

Mechanismnormalizzazione dell'incidente

By foregrounding Merlier's achievement and using neutral race-reporting language, the bloc normalizes the crash as a predictable hazard, deflecting attention from any individual tragedy.

Omission

The bloc omits the personal impact on Gaviria and the possibility that his Tour might end, focusing instead on the winner's consistency and the overall standings.

TriumphDetachment

Broaden your view

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Upd. 05:04 PM4 languages · 10 outlets
10 outlets|4 languages|2 min read
Thursday, July 16, 2026

Merlier’s Third Win Marred by Mass Crash and Suspected Gaviria Fracture

Tim Merlier claimed his third stage victory in a chaotic sprint finish, but a high-speed pile-up 300 metres from the line left Fernando Gaviria with a suspected broken collarbone and overshadowed the day’s racing.

Tim Merlier of Soudal Quick-Step powered to his third stage win of the 2026 Tour de France on Thursday, prevailing in a bunch sprint into Chalon-sur-Saône that was immediately overshadowed by a violent mass crash. The Belgian edged Olav Kooij and Jasper Philipsen in the final metres, but behind him, Colombian sprinter Fernando Gaviria lay on the tarmac after a collision that Colombian media reported likely ended his race with a suspected fractured clavicle. Gaviria crossed the line with the aid of a teammate, his leg bleeding, as race leader Tadej Pogačar expressed hope for his former colleague’s recovery.

The 179-kilometre stage from the Magny-Cours motor racing circuit had followed a familiar flatland script. A four-man breakaway featuring Frenchman Baptiste Veistroffer, who earned the day’s combativity prize, was reeled in with six kilometres to go, setting up a frenetic sprint. At roughly 350 metres, as the peloton touched speeds near 70 km/h, Vlad Van Mechelen of Bahrain Victorious shifted his line, and Gaviria, launching his own effort, struck the Belgian’s rear wheel and went down hard. Race commissaires later relegated Van Mechelen from 17th to 144th on the stage. German sprinter Pascal Ackermann, who narrowly avoided the carnage, told reporters he was “still shaking” from the proximity of the crash.

Pogačar retained the yellow jersey without incident, his overall lead of 3 minutes 36 seconds over Jonas Vingegaard intact. Mexico’s Isaac del Toro, riding in support of the Slovenian, finished safely in 59th place and held seventh overall, 5 minutes 8 seconds back, while remaining third in the young rider classification. German GC hope Florian Lipowitz stayed sixth, 38 seconds off the podium, and lightened the mood by joking about his errant toss of a bidon toward a roadside target: “That’s why I quit biathlon.” Colombian outlets quoted Caja Rural’s general manager describing the mood as one of “desolation,” noting that the team had believed Gaviria was on the cusp of a stage win after a long period of recovery.

The crash reshapes the sprinter landscape, with Gaviria almost certain to abandon, but the general classification remains untouched ahead of a decisive shift in terrain. Friday’s 205.8-kilometre Stage 13 from Dole to Belfort, the longest of the race, introduces the medium mountains and the ascent of the Ballon d’Alsace, offering the first serious test for the overall contenders before the high Alps loom on the weekend.

Divergence — who tells it how
Axis: Solidarietà vs. Trionfo
20%Low
2 blocs · positions from −0.20 to +0.20
Preoccupazione per cadutaCelebrazione della vittoria
LATEUR
Divergence between press blocs
Latin American press−0.20neutral
Continental European press+0.20neutral
Latin American press−0.20
Voice

Latin America stands in solidarity with Fernando Gaviria, denouncing the cruel twist of fate that struck one of its own, while quietly celebrating Isaac del Toro's resilience.

Mechanismpersonificazione della sfortuna

By repeatedly emphasizing Gaviria's personal story and the 'bad luck' narrative, the bloc makes the crash feel like an injustice rather than a routine racing incident, appealing to regional identity.

Omission

The bloc omits that many other sprinters also crashed and that the stage winner Tim Merlier avoided the pile-up, focusing exclusively on the Latin American victims.

AlarmVictimhood
Continental European press+0.20
Voice

Europe celebrates Tim Merlier's hat-trick of stage wins, framing the crash as an unfortunate but routine part of sprint finishes, and reaffirms Pogacar's dominance.

Mechanismnormalizzazione dell'incidente

By foregrounding Merlier's achievement and using neutral race-reporting language, the bloc normalizes the crash as a predictable hazard, deflecting attention from any individual tragedy.

Omission

The bloc omits the personal impact on Gaviria and the possibility that his Tour might end, focusing instead on the winner's consistency and the overall standings.

TriumphDetachment

This story appeared in

10 outlets · 4 languages

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