
Waerenskjold Stuns Sprinters in Fastest Tour Stage Ever
Norwegian outsider Søren Waerenskjold claimed a surprise victory in the record-breaking 11th stage as Tadej Pogačar retained the yellow jersey.
Søren Waerenskjold, a 26-year-old Norwegian riding for Uno-X Mobility, delivered the most unexpected sprint victory of this Tour de France on a day that rewrote the record books. The 161.3-kilometre run from Vichy to Nevers became the fastest road stage in the race’s 113-year history, with an average speed of 50.91 km/h eclipsing the mark set by Mario Cipollini in 1999. Waerenskjold, who had finished last the previous day after a heavy crash, launched a long-range acceleration with 500 metres remaining, held off the fast-closing Dutchman Olav Kooij, and saw Belgian Jasper Philipsen relegated from third place, promoting compatriot Milan Fretin onto the podium.
The stage had all the ingredients of a routine sprinters’ finale until Waerenskjold tore up the script. An early four-man break featuring Julian Alaphilippe, Mathis Le Berre, Anthon Charmig and Nelson Oliveira built a lead of over a minute and a half, but Alaphilippe was dropped on a small climb 36 kilometres from the finish and later lost contact with the peloton entirely, crossing the line more than seven minutes down. The remaining escapees were swept up with six kilometres to go, and the expected mass gallop materialised. Waerenskjold, still nursing a bandaged right hand from his crash, found a gap on the right-hand barriers and surged decisively. “I thought I was too far back, and then it opened up,” he said. “It’s crazy that it happened today.”
For the general classification contenders, the day was one of preservation. Tadej Pogačar retained the yellow jersey with a 3-minute-36-second lead over Jonas Vingegaard, and Remco Evenepoel remained third at 4:06. The Slovenian later revealed a moment of alarm when his front wheel rolled over a discarded water bottle, but he stayed upright. Colombian hopes were mixed: Egan Bernal held 11th place overall, while Fernando Gaviria recovered from a late mechanical to finish ninth. Across Latin American media, the focus remained on Bernal’s steady positioning ahead of the high mountains.
Waerenskjold’s victory resonated beyond the tarmac. French-language outlets have highlighted the rider’s outspoken ethical stances: he turned down a contract offer from UAE Team Emirates in 2021, citing discomfort with the country’s human rights record, and has refused to race in Saudi Arabia over the treatment of political prisoners, women and LGBT people. Such declarations are rare in the professional peloton, and they lend a distinctive texture to his breakthrough win.
The Tour continues on Thursday with a 179.1-kilometre stage from the Magny-Cours motor-racing circuit to Chalon-sur-Saône, another flat route that should favour the sprinters. With the Alps looming, the fast men have one more clear opportunity before the race tilts decisively towards the climbers.
| Latin American press | 0.00 | neutral |
|---|---|---|
| Continental European press | +0.10 | neutral |
The Norwegian Waerenskjold wins the fastest stage in history, while Latin American riders like Bernal and Gaviria remain in contention for the general classification.
The report relies on objective data (average speed, positions) and includes references to local riders to create regional relevance, without adding moral judgments.
The discussion of ethical implications of the rider's team choice, present in other European outlets, is absent.
The Norwegian Waerenskjold wins the fastest stage, but his ethical choice to refuse the UAE team makes him an example of integrity in sport.
The narrative emphasizes the rider's personal decision, contrasting moral values with economic interests, to build an image of sporting purity.
The perspective of Latin American riders and the context of the general classification are left out to focus on the ethical angle.
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