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Tour de France stage 17 finish
It’s messy and De Lie nearly crashes but keeps it up, with Milan now going to the line in front!
Final sprint is about to start now, with Milan and De Lie looking the favourites.
Big crash in the final
1km to go
Merlier and Milan have a lot of places to move up in the final 2km, but it’s so difficult to do so in these conditions. Will be a lot of late bursts once we reach the final straight.
Fully lined out peloton now, with little chances to move up on the wet roads. This could be messy, but for the moment, everyone is still up.
Here comes Bahrain Victorious, working for German fast man Phil Bauhaus into the next roundabout.
Dylan Groenewegen is getting a red carpet ride for now from his Jayco teammates, but there’s a lot of road still to cover in the final 3km.
We’re into a series of dangerous, wet roundabouts for the final few kilometres, with Jayco AlUla and Tudor leading the peloton.
BREAKAWAY CAUGHT
5km to go

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Horrible conditons in the stage now, with the rain pouring on all of the riders. 10 seconds still to make up on Abrahamsen.
A big pull on the front from Pascal Ackermann tells us that Dauphiné stage winner Jake Stewart will be the chosen sprinter for Israel-Premier Tech today. He beat Milan to that stage win back in June, so will be full of confidence after another tough day.
Pacher and Burgaudeau are now caught, and Albanese knows his day out in front is done. Not many domestiques remain, however, with Abrahamsen still 13 seconds in the lead.
Israel-premier Tech now taking up the mantle of chasing in the peloton. UAE are in second and trying to get Pogačar to that crucial 5km to go point.
10km to go
Attack from the break
Lots of slippy roundabouts and disc breaks screeching now as the wet roads continue to play a part. Gap down under 20 seconds from the peloton to the break.
More riders coming to the front to work has reduced the break’s lead to just 23 seconds now. The four of them are swapping turns nicely, but they are competing with a large peloton.
15km to go
Here’s three of the four breakaway riders on stage 17, with Abrahamsen leading Albanese and Pacher through the gloomy conditions en route to Valence.

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Lots of difficult road furniture to navigate and bunny hop over in this final. Maybe the break have hope yet, with their lead still at 30 seconds.
Lotto are now getting involved in the chasing effort, so Arnaud De Lie must be feeling good. He’s finished third on a stage already at this year’s Tour, so could be in for another strong finish today.
Gap to the breakaway now less than 30 seconds and under control. Looks like we’re finally in for another sprint at the Tour de France.
Several riders dropped from the peloton, including Luke Plapp (Jayco AlUla) and Louis Barré (Intermarché-Wanty), who crashed hard earlier in the stage.
20km to go
It’s certainly wet out there. Teams will be holding their breath in the final, as they hope to make it to the sprint and make it home unscathed.

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Simmons continues to push on after a full day of work on the front. Gap to the break down to just 37 seconds.
If things do come down to a sprint, here’s what chaos awaits the fast men, with a series of roundabouts inside the 5km safety zone set to make everyone worried in the final run for home. Positioning will be essential.

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Pogačar and Vingegaard are being moved up, with the rain, roundabouts and traffic islands surely making the whole bunch nervous.
The rain complicates things in the chase for the sprinters teams, with more risk in the speeds they go. But they may get the added help of GC teams upping the pace to try and keep their respective leaders safe.
30km to go
Van Aert’s mission to join the breakaway has failed. He’s knocking off his effort and will soon be back in the peloton.
There’s some raindrops on the TV camera lenses, so there is some rain starting to fall. Hopefully, it won’t play too much of a factor in today’s final.
A look back at the moment Van Aert decided it was time to have a crack on stage 17. He’s currently not making much of an impression on the four leaders, with Albanese leading them for the moment.

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40km to go
It’s been a relatively quiet day so far for race leader Pogačar, with crunch time for him coming on Thursday and Friday in the Alps. He’ll just be looking to make it to today’s finish safely.

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No has yet decided to try and do what Van Aert did, but he’s closing in quickly on the four riders in front. His gap is at 26 seconds with a few hundred metres of the climb remaining. The peloton are a further 20 seconds down the climb.
WOUT VAN AERT ATTACKS
Soudal-QuickStep and Lidl-Trek have led the peloton onto the Col de Tartaiguille with more control, with Israel-Premier Tech now moving up alongside them. Milan and Merlier are both well-positioned.
Rodríguez is back in, but having done down, this may put off Ineos from lighting things up again on the next climb.
Crash in the peloton
50km to go
A look back at Ineos absolutely exploding things on the first category 4 climb of the stage. They didn’t quite manage to split things as they may have wanted, but with one more climb on offer, albeit not as hard an ascent, expect them to try once more on the Col de Tartaiguille.

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Van Aert returns, as does the familiar sight of Simmons’ US national champion’s jersey to the front of the bunch. Back to the traditional holding pattern of a Tour de France sprint stage now.
MECHANICAL FOR VAN AERT
65km to go

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Soudal-QuickStep have taken back over on the front, regaining control after that momentary madness. This should allow the break to rebuild their advantage, which was cut down to as little as under 30 seconds.
After a few kilometres of serious panic, Milan is back in the peloton and will not want another surge like that to happen before the finish. Perhaps the likes of Alpecin and Tudor will regret not fully committing and allowing the Lidl-Trek fast man to return to the peloton.

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75km to go
The gap is decreasing from the dropped Milan and Merlier group, but the likes of Alpecin-Deceuninck and Tudor have now come to the front to start pulling as well.
90km to go
Milan is reportedly in a group 1:21 away from the lead, with the peloton at only 37 seconds from the four leaders.
Milan dropped
Iván Romeo is back and attacking now, after his earlier dig in the day. It’s all out on this small climb, with the gap to the break reduced further to only 35 seconds. Simmons is still marking everything for Lidl-Trek.
Quinn Simmons is trying his best to mark the vicious attack from Ineos, but it’s got EF interested as well. The four breakaway riders are now just 47 seconds in front.
This is quite the burst from Ineos into the foot of the climb, reducing the break’s lead down to 1:15. Four riders from the British team are on the front.
Ineos Grenadiers are now on the front of the peloton and pacing hard. After missing out earlier, they must be seeing this categorised climb as a potential launch pad.
100km to go
The breakaway are onto a small descending section, before they head to the first of two categorised climbs on stage 17 – the Col du Pertuis (3.7km at 5.1%).
It should be a calmer day in the peloton for Vingegaard and the rest of the GC favourites, with a traditional Tour de France sprint stage playing out so far. Safety and making it to the 5km to go sprint zone will be paramount.

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110km to go
Louis Barré is back on his bike after that crash and continuing on with the race for now. He’s already 4:42 down on the peloton, but hopefully he can find a way of making it to the finish and recovering.
The peloton head into Roche-Saint-Secret-Béconne for the intermediate sprint, and it’s Milan who mops up the remaining maximum haul of 11 points quite easily ahead of Girmay.
Intermediate sprint
Crash
With Pogačar breathing down Milan’s neck in the race for the green jersey, the Italian maximising his points in each intermediate sprint will be vital. Just 11 points separated them this morning in the points classification.
The four riders in front are continuing to work well, but with the intermediate sprint approaching in less than three kilometres, the gap has dropped below two minutes.
120km to go
Soudal-QuickStep are riding for European champion Tim Merlier today. He’s already won two stages of this year’s race, and will be eyeing a third in Valence against Milan.

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While a more traditional sprint stage of the Tour plays out, make sure to get stuck into some reading on debutant Luke Plapp:
Luke Plapp plans assault on Rwanda World Championships time trial after debut Tour de France
130km to go
Lidl-Trek are leading the peloton through Thibau Nys and US national champion Quinn Simmons. First objective for them will be the intermediate sprint in Roche-Saint-Secret-Béconne.

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Laurance has now given up his effort, leaving four in front and a 2:47 deficit for the peloton to control.
A look at the formation of the day’s breakaway on stage 17, led by Albanese.

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140km to go
After some bickering, Lidl-Trek and Soudal-QuickStep have settled into their controlling pattern on the front of the peloton. 30km until the intermediate sprint.
Another day, another breakaway for Jonas Abrahamsen. The stage 11 winner is at it again on stage 17 and in the front group of attackers.

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Lidl-Trek and Soudal-QuickStep have slowed things down massively after limiting the break to just five riders – the four in front and Laurance. The bunch is 2:33 down, with Laurance sat on his own in the gap, still a minute down.
150km to go
A late attempt from Axel Laurance (Ineos Grenadiers) ended the calm behind, prompting Kasper Asgreen (EF Education-EasyPost) and others to try and similarly bridge. The sprint teams have responded.
It’s Vincenzo Albanese (EF Education-EasyPost), Quentin Pacher (Groupama-FDJ), Mathieu Burgaudeau (TotalEnergies) and Abrahamsen who have got up the road. They have a minute lead on the chasing peloton already.
A strong group of four have got up the road, but narrow roads out of the start have helped Lidl-Trek and Soudal-QuickStep to stem the flow of attacks from launching.
Groupama-FDJ, Uno-X Mobility and EF Education-EasyPost are among the teams most interested in breaking away as it stands. The sprint teams are trying their best to control things.
Good vibes at the start for Pogačar and yesterday’s stage runner-up Ben Healy (EF Education-EasyPost).

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A slightly uphill start has allowed the likes of Iván Romeo (Movistar) and Jonas Abrahamsen (Uno-X Mobility) to launch some attacks. It’s a lot of big hitters at the front.
160.4km to go
Wout van Aert is right up the front from the start, but almost just crashed into the red lead car. Thankfully, he was more than skillful enough to keep things up.
Talk from the start is, of course, that the day will come down to a sprint, but with many smaller teams not yet having any success at the Tour, a break could be likely. With small roads from the start of the day, the sprint teams will be trying to lock things up early.
A crucial day for Jonathan Milan (Lidl-Trek) in the green jersey and for his team. Will they be able to control things and make sure today ends in a sprint?

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Tour de France Stage 17 underway
Huge reception and introduction for Valentin Paret-Peintre after his heroics on yesterday’s stage to Mont Ventoux. His Soudal-QuickStep team have one of the big favourites for stage 17 in Tim Merlier, and if he’s victorious in Valence, it will be the Belgian squad’s fifth victory of the 2025 race.
After some words from Mark Cavendish about the great fans in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region, the team presentation is about to wind to a close with UAE Team Emirates-XRG and yellow jersey Tadej Pogačar now on stage.
Just 25 minutes to the neutralised roll-out from Bollène.
Today’s finish location Valence has played host to several Tour de France stages in the past, as both a transition away and towards the Alps, as it is today. The last three winners there have all been sprint royalty: Andre Greipel, Peter Sagan, and most recently Mark Cavendish, in 2021.

Cavendish won in Valence four years ago (Image credit: Getty Images)
Full update here on Johannessen and how he was treated to be able to start today, via Uno-X Mobility’s Instagram.
Uno-X Mobility are on stage and there’s good news as Tobias Halland Johannessen is going to start stage 17 despite requiring oxygen at the summit of Mont Ventoux yesterday.

Johannessen was in visible pain at the finish on stage 16 (Image credit: Getty Images)
There’s barely been a day off for the GC riders at this year’s Tour, so don’t expect a quiet day for the likes of Pogačar and Vingegaard. They will need to be on red alert throughout the day.
As it stands, though, the Slovenian is well in control, after smashing the Mont Ventoux KOM record yesterday, and extending his lead by two seconds after matching all of Vingegaard’s attacks on stage 16.
The neutralised start for today will come at 13:35 (CEST), with the flag drop scheduled for 13:50.
The team presentation in Bollène is getting underway now, with Intermarché-Wanty the first squad up on stage. They have one of the favourites for the day among their ranks in last year’s green jersey Biniam Girmay.
Or, for an alternative look into one of cycling’s most iconic climbs, read Matilda Price’s great colour piece from a day on the ‘Giant of Provence’:
Chaos and calm on Mont Ventoux – Reflections from the Tour de France

(Image credit: Zac Williams/SWpix.com)
If you somehow missed the crazy action on Mont Ventoux from yesterday’s stage 16, make sure to catch up with our stage report:

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The Tour peloton will be one rider smaller at the start of stage 17, but for a heartwarming reason, with Danny van Poppel (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) leaving the race after the birth of his daughter, Bobbie.
A look at the profile for the day, with a flat finish looking likely. However, those without a top sprinter and some strong rouleurs will surely be eyeing up a breakaway.

Tour de France stage 17 profile (Image credit: ASO)
We’re around an hour and a half away from the start in Bollène. The riders will head north for 160.4km to the finish in Valence.
Bonjour and welcome back to Cyclingnews’ live coverage of the 2025 Tour de France, with stage 17 set to bring the sprinters back into play.