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Healy wins Stage 6 of Tour de France, Van der Poel takes yellow jersey

Sports Scene

Ben Healy (front), riding for Education EasyPost, competes at the sixth stage of Tour de France, 201.5 kilometers between Bayeux and Vire Normandie, France, July 10, 2025. /VCG
Ben Healy (front), riding for Education EasyPost, competes at the sixth stage of Tour de France, 201.5 kilometers between Bayeux and Vire Normandie, France, July 10, 2025. /VCG

Ben Healy (front), riding for Education EasyPost, competes at the sixth stage of Tour de France, 201.5 kilometers between Bayeux and Vire Normandie, France, July 10, 2025. /VCG

Irish rider Ben Healy won a hilly sixth stage of the Tour de France after a long solo breakaway on Thursday and Mathieu van der Poel took back the yellow jersey from defending champion Tadej Pogacar by one second.

The 24-year-old Healy had won a stage on the Giro d'Italia before, but this was his first victory at cycling's showcase race.

"A stage win in the Tour is just unbelievable, it's what I've worked for," he said. "I grew up watching the Tour and wishing one day I could just be there. Participating in the Tour is already an achievement and to win a stage is just so so amazing."

American rider Quinn Simmons finished two minutes, 44 seconds behind Healy in second place and Australian Michael Storer was 2:51 back in third spot.

Van der Poel finished eighth, and Pogacar was a little further back in ninth.

Stage 6 took riders over 201.5 kilometers from Bayeux to Vire Normandie, featuring six minor climbs before a sharp uphill finish with a 10-percent gradient.

The Slovenian star accelerated at the end of the stage but could not quite do enough to stop the yellow jersey going to the 30-year-old Dutchman Van der Poel, who is not considered a race contender.

"I would have loved to have a bit more than one second but I'm happy to have it again," said Van der Poel, who struggled with the heat. "I'll try my best to recover as good as possible and then we'll see tomorrow, but first I'm going to enjoy the yellow jersey. I will probably only have it for one day."

Two-time Tour winner Jonas Vingegaard finished 10th, just behind Pogacar, and is fifth overall.

Source(s): AP
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