Tour de France 2025 stage 11 preview: Sprint or breakaway?

Tour de France 2025 stage 11 preview: Sprint or breakaway?

A smattering of climbs in the final half of the stage could be enough to foil the sprinters' chances of a rare bunch finish in the second week


Date: Wednesday, July 16
Distance: 157km
Start location: Toulouse
Finish location: Toulouse
Start time: 13:15 CEST
Finish time: 17:05 CEST

The second phase of the Tour de France begins today. A long transfer brings the race south for a start in Toulouse, and ever closer to the Pyrenees, where the GC race will soon ignite. We’re not in those mountains yet, the riders eased back into racing after the rest day with a stage that is the shortest completed so far (and third shortest of the race) that loops away from and then back towards Toulouse around mostly flat roads. But the riders might start to feel the heat, which is often yet another factor that makes the Tour de France such a gruelling test — the temperature here averages 23 degrees at this time of year with highs over 30, and the riders will spend the rest of the second week even further south. 

As well as being known for its distinctive pink-coloured architecture constructed from the local terracotta bricks, a successful rugby team, and the Basilica of St Sernin that lays claim to being the largest Romanesque building in Europe, Toulouse is also a place of high tech and intellect. Its aerospace industry is the largest in Europe, and it's home to one of the oldest universities, the alumni of which include the 17th-century mathematician Pierre de Fermat. It was here where he conceived Fermat’s Last Theorem, which became notorious as the most difficult mathematical problem to solve — riders trying to figure out a way to defeat Tadej Pogačar can probably relate.  

Today won’t be a day for solving that particular conundrum, in what looks instead to be finely poised between hopeful breakaway specialists and the sprinters. Recent history suggests Toulouse is a town for bunch sprints: in 2019, Caleb Ewan pipped Dylan Groenewegen in a photo finish to claim what was his first ever Tour stage win, while 11 years earlier, Mark Cavendish was the victor on a rainy day, by a much bigger margin ahead of Gerald Ciolek.

However, the parcours today is trickier. There are five categorised climbs in total, four of them coming inside the final 46km. The hardest of them all, the category three Côte de Pech David, comes just 9km from the finish, and rising at a vicious 12.4% is steep enough for puncheurs to launch attacks, even if it does last only 800m. This climb could make all the difference, not just for attackers to gain enough of a gap over the peloton to survive to the finish, but perhaps also to discourage the sprinters’ teams from chasing down the day’s break. But with the Pyrenees on the horizon, and no realistic chance for another bunch sprint until a week later, surely they won’t want to let this opportunity slip by?

Tour de France 2025 stage 11 preview

Contenders

Due to the lumpy finale, it would take a sprinter who is capable of climbing to survive the stage. Last year's green jersey winner, Biniam Girmay (Intermarché-Wanty), can climb well but hasn't quite shown the form to win a stage yet at this race. Likewise, Kaden Groves (Alpecin–Deceuninck) is a pure sprinter but one who can get over climbs. His Alpecin team may decide to let Mathieu van der Poel have a go at the stage, as he has shown his form is there to win from both the peloton and breakaway.

The Tour's two fastest sprinters, Jonathan Milan (Lidl-Trek) and Tim Merlier (Soudal Quick-Step), may struggle to get over the climbs to challenge. The former can climb better than the latter, but his Lidl-Trek team might allow their puncheurs like Quinn Simmons, Thibau Nys, or Jasper Stuyven to try their luck.

The current yellow jersey team EF Education-EasyPost, after Ben Healy's impressive ride on stage 10 might want to continue their aggressive racing and have the riders to challenge on a stage like this, including Kasper Asgreen and Neilson Powless.

Other teams should try and get riders in the breakaway for a chance at glory, including Bruno Armirail (Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale Team), Davide Ballerini (XDS Astana Team), Magnus Cort (Uno-X Mobility), Fred Wright (Bahrain-Victorious), Louis Barré (Intermarché-Wanty), Axel Laurence and Samuel Watson (Ineos Grenadiers).

Prediction

We think the breakaway will take the win, and Mathieu van der Poel will win his second stage of the Tour.

READ MORE

Paul Seixas leads the Decathlon CMA CGM train on a tree-lined climb

Tour Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes 2026 preview: Paul Seixas's time to shine

With no Tadej Pogačar or Jonas Vingegaard on the startline, this year's race is all about the next big GC talent and his preparation for...

Read more
Strength in numbers: FDJ United-Suez powers Vollering to her long-awaited Giro moment

Strength in numbers: FDJ United-Suez powers Vollering to her long-awaited Giro moment

The Dutch star’s first Giro stage victory underlines her decision to renew her contract with Stephen Delcourt’s team for another two years. FDJ’s strength is...

Read more
Josh Kench was the Giro d'Italia's unlikeliest finisher: 'It’s been a rollercoaster'

Josh Kench was the Giro d'Italia's unlikeliest finisher: 'It’s been a rollercoaster'

Unwanted by any European team, New Zealander Josh Kench found himself racing in China for two seasons. Through a valuable connection he was given a...

Read more
'He has everything to be a Grand Tour winner': Lidl-Trek sound note of optimism over Juan Ayuso's return

'He has everything to be a Grand Tour winner': Lidl-Trek sound note of optimism over Juan Ayuso's return

Juan Ayuso will be one of the favourites when one-week stage racing returns at the Tour Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes. Beyond that he'll be targeting a Tour de...

Read more
‘I’ve worked really hard to get to this point again’: Anna van der Breggen strikes back

‘I’ve worked really hard to get to this point again’: Anna van der Breggen strikes back

On a brutal  time trial stage of the Giro d'Italia Women, the SD Worx-Protime rider stunned her rivals by claiming a lead of over a...

Read more
"I don't find it hard to suffer": Antonia Niedermaier's accidental climb to the top

"I don't find it hard to suffer": Antonia Niedermaier's accidental climb to the top

With under-23 world titles and Giro d'Italia Women stage victories, Antonia Niedermaier's career in professional cycling has been a whirlwind success story. The former ski...

Read more

READ RIDE REPEAT

JOIN ROULEUR TODAY

Get closer to the sport than ever before.

Enjoy a digital subscription to Rouleur for just £4 per month and get access to our award-winning magazines.

SUBSCRIBE