Tour de France 2025: stage one sets battle for yellow jersey around Lille – live

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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.

Here’s the profile of stage one of the Tour de France 2025:

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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.
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/EPA

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.

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.

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.

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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