2025 Tour de France

Who Won Stage 11 Of The Tour de France 2025? See The Full TDF Results Here

Who Won Stage 11 Of The Tour de France 2025? See The Full TDF Results Here

Jonas Abrahamsen won Stage 11 of the TDF 2025, while defending champion Tadej Pogacar emerged largely unscathed, despite crashing 4km from the line.

Jul 16, 2025 by AFP Report
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Norway's Jonas Abrahamsen won Stage 11 of the Tour de France 2025 in Toulouse on Wednesday, while defending champion Tadej Pogacar emerged largely unscathed, despite crashing 4 kilometers from the line.

Pogacar fell after hitting the back wheel of another rider, but his rivals, Jonas Vingegaard and Remco Evenepoel , sportingly waited for the Slovenian to catch up after he got back on his bike. 

Ireland's Ben Healy retained the leader's jersey.

Pogacar sheepishly laughed off the tumble.

"I'm a bit beaten up," he said. "I've been through worse days, but yeah that was unexpected."

He also was swift to thank his rivals.

"Big respect," he said of the gesture. "The race was nearly over, but I doubt I would have been able to catch up."

Pogacar said he had feared the worst when another rider rode across the front of him.

"He completely cut me off," said Pogacar, a three-time TDF winner. "I saw my head going toward the sidewalk, and I was worried I'd get hurt. Luckily, I've just lost some skin."

Norway's Tobias Johannessen was the rider in question and apologized for the incident.

"I am terribly sorry for what happened," he wrote on X. "I was trying to follow a move, and I can see that I was too close. I made a mistake... I hope he is as good as he can be after a crash like that."

Pogacar said he felt the fall would hurt him on Thursday's mountain stage.

"We are ready as a team for Hautacam," he said of the main obstacle on Stage 12. "But a day after a fall like that, you are never at your best."

Healy was next to Pogacar when he fell and narrowly missed coming down with him.

"I didn't see him fall," said the 24-year-old Healy, who took the lead at the end of Stage 10 in the Massif Central. "I'll be honest, I was looking somewhere else. That's possibly what happened to him."

Healy retained the overall lead on his first day in the fabled yellow jersey, while Pogacar remains second at 29 seconds. Evenepoel third, another minute off the pace.

The peloton next heads into the Pyrenees, where the first real mountains will test their legs on the legendary Hautacam climb.

"I'm not sure I'll still have the lead tomorrow night," Healy said. "It's a large task, but I'll fight all the way. Either way, this has been a real whirlwind for me."

Sprinters Foiled

Anyone who expected a quiet day was instead treated to a thrilling stage over 156.8 kilometers from Toulouse and back, which unexpectedly was won by Abrahamsen.

Abrahamsen also won the combativity award, as he was at the origin of the long-range breakaway that foiled the ambitions of the sprinters.

Abrahamsen then contested a cat-and-mouse duel down the home straight with Swiss Mauro Schmid, as the cunning Mathieu van der Poel crept up on them and finished third at seven seconds.

The Norwegian Abrahamsen fractured a collarbone two weeks before the Tour.

"Thanks to the team who did everything to get me ready in time," said the Uno-X rider. "They are very good people, and I've been here since 2017. I like to have pain in my legs, I've been like this since I was 15."

Following Tuesday's rest day, Wednesday's run was billed as a likely sprint finish, with 70 points at stake in the sprint standings in Toulouse.

The stage did, however, feature five small climbs along the route, making sure it was constantly fast and nerve-wracking.

When Pogacar fell late on, he struggled to put his chain on after sliding across several meters of tarmac, and it looked initially as if he would lose 30 to 40 seconds.

Diminutive French climber Lenny Martinez is in the King of the Mountains polka dot jersey as the race heads into the Pyrenees and will be the focus for home fans all weekend with further blockbuster crowds expected.

Tour de France 2025 Stage 11 Results – Top 25

  1. Jonas Abrahamsen (Uno-X Mobility) – 3:15:56 (B10)
  2. Mauro Schmid (Team Jayco AlUla) – 3:15:56 (B6)
  3. Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Deceuninck) – 3:16:03 (B4)
  4. Arnaud De Lie (Lotto) – 3:16:49
  5. Wout van Aert (Team Visma | Lease a Bike) – 3:16:49
  6. Axel Laurance (INEOS Grenadiers) – 3:16:49
  7. Fred Wright (Bahrain Victorious) – 3:16:49
  8. Mathis Le Berre (TotalEnergies) – 3:16:49
  9. Quinn Simmons (Lidl-Trek) – 3:16:49
  10. Davide Ballerini (XDS Astana Team) – 3:17:07
  11. Kaden Groves (Alpecin-Deceuninck) – 3:19:24
  12. Alberto Dainese (Tudor Pro Cycling Team) – 3:19:24
  13. Julien Jégat (TotalEnergies) – 3:19:24
  14. Romain Grégoire (Groupama-FDJ) – 3:19:24
  15. Simon Velasco (XDS Astana Team) – 3:19:24
  16. Quentin Pacher (Groupama-FDJ) – 3:19:24
  17. Louis Barré (Intermarché - Wanty) – 3:19:24
  18. Clément Champoussin (XDS Astana Team) – 3:19:24
  19. Alex Aranburu (Cofidis) – 3:19:24
  20. Jhonatan Narváez (UAE Team Emirates XRG) – 3:19:24
  21. Kévin Vauquelin (Arkéa-B&B Hotels) – 3:19:24
  22. Xandro Meurisse (Alpecin-Deceuninck) – 3:19:24
  23. Sergio Higuita (XDS Astana Team) – 3:19:24
  24. Ben Healy (EF Education - EasyPost) – 3:19:24
  25. Valentin Madouas (Groupama-FDJ) – 3:19:24

Tour de France 2025 Overall Standings – Top 25 After Stage 11

  1. Ben Healy (EF Education - EasyPost) – 41:01:13
  2. Tadej Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates XRG) – 41:01:42
  3. Remco Evenepoel (Soudal Quick-Step) – 41:02:42
  4. Jonas Vingegaard (Team Visma | Lease a Bike) – 41:02:59
  5. Matteo Jorgenson (Team Visma | Lease a Bike) – 41:03:19
  6. Kévin Vauquelin (Arkéa-B&B Hotels) – 41:03:39
  7. Oscar Onley (Team Picnic PostNL) – 41:04:37
  8. Felix Großschartner Lipowitz (Red Bull - BORA - hansgrohe) – 41:04:47
  9. Primoz Roglic (Red Bull - BORA - hansgrohe) – 41:04:54
  10. Tobias Halland Johannessen (Uno-X Mobility) – 41:06:16
  11. Felix Gall (Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale Team) – 41:06:51
  12. Carlos Rodriguez (INEOS Grenadiers) – 41:06:57
  13. Enric Mas (Movistar Team) – 41:07:09
  14. Julien Jegat (TotalEnergies) – 41:07:45
  15. Guillaume Martin Guyonnet (Groupama-FDJ) – 41:11:57
  16. Jhonatan Narvaez (UAE Team Emirates XRG) – 41:12:42
  17. Ben O'Connor (Team Jayco AlUla) – 41:13:03
  18. Mattias Skjelmose (Lidl-Trek) – 41:13:58
  19. Romain Gregoire (Groupama-FDJ) – 41:16:28
  20. Emanuel Buchmann (Cofidis) – 41:16:54
  21. Sepp Kuss (Team Visma | Lease a Bike) – 41:21:02
  22. Simon Yates (Team Visma | Lease a Bike) – 41:21:39
  23. Xandro Meurisse (Alpecin-Deceuninck) – 41:22:41
  24. Thymen Arensman (INEOS Grenadiers) – 41:23:19
  25. Cristian Rodriguez (Arkéa-B&B Hotels) – 41:24:27

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