Pogacar wins first Dauphine´ ahead of Vingegaard ahead of Tour de France title defence

Tadej Pogačar is on form ahead of the Tour de France.
Tadej Pogačar is on form ahead of the Tour de France.ANNE-CHRISTINE POUJOULAT / AFP
Slovenian world champion Tadej Pogačar (26) won the Critérium du Dauphiné for the first time on Sunday afternoon. In the traditional pre-Tour de France test, he showed great form ahead of his fight to reclaim the Tour de France trophy.

Reigning Tour de France champion Tadej Pogacar wrapped up the Criterium du Dauphine on Sunday with a podium finish in the eighth and final stage, which was won by France's Lenny Martinez.

The Slovenian, who rode his first race since triumphing in April's Lutych-Bastogne-Lutych classic, celebrated his 99th victory and consolidated his top spot among active riders. He moved up to 25th in the historical standings.

A winner of three stages in total, the Slovenian dominated the 77th edition of the Dauphine to top the overall classification by 59sec ahead of Dane Jonas Vingegaard -- three weeks before the start of the Tour de France.

"It's been a really amazing week," Pogacar said.

"Once again today, the team did a great job. We managed to defend the (yellow) jersey and we can go home happy and prepare for the Tour."

German Florian Lipowitz completed the podium, 2min 38sec behind Pogacar, while Belgium's Remco Evenepoel came fourth at 4min 21sec.

Sunday's final stage was a 133.3km mountainous trek from Val-d'Arc to Val-Cenis, with an uphill finish at the Plateau du Mont-Cenis.

The 21-year-old Martinez caught Spaniard Enric Mas with 8km to go to give France its first victory in this Dauphine, finishing 34sec ahead of Vingegaard and Pogacar.

Vingegaard tried to catch Martinez but was unable to shake off Pogacar. The Dane and the Slovenian then stopped attacking and rolled in together.

Pogacar now has 99 victories to his name -- a record for an active rider at just 26 years of age.

"There's a lot of positives from this week and we turned all the negatives into positives, so it's all good," said Pogacar, who bounced back from a poor time-trial performance in stage four to lay down the gauntlet to his principal Tour rivals.

"There's not much to do ahead of the Tour. I rest a bit, maybe some extra work for the time-trial, and then I'm ready," the three-time Tour winner added.

The 2025 Tour de France runs from July 5-27, with Pogacar the firm favourite following his first Dauphine crown.