Tour de France 2023 stage 5: Result and winner from stage 5 today

Jai Hindley won stage five of the Tour de France in Laruns to take the yellow jersey from Adam Yates and Jonas Vingegaard rode clear of rival Tadej Pogacar as an early trip to the Pyrenees ripped up the general classification.

Hindley, winner of last year’s Giro d’Italia, marked himself out as a major contender with a breakaway victory but surely more important was the sight of defending champion Vingegaard leaving behind two-time winner Pogacar on the final climb to make his case as the favourite to be in yellow come Paris.

Vingegaard set off in pursuit of Hindley on the descent into Laruns, coming home in fifth place a little over 30 seconds down.

Follow all the latest updates from stage five below:

Tour de France 2023 - Stage Five

  • Jai Hindley takes the yellow jersey after a superb stage-five ride

  • Defending champion Vingegaard rode clear of Pogacar to gain over a minute on main rival

  • 18km to go - Hindley leads charge over climb as Vingegaard attacks

  • 75km to go - Gall launches attack to collect maximum King of the Mountain points

  • Stage five sees a 163km route from Pau to Laruns

Jai Hindley wins Tour de France stage five to take yellow jersey

17:15 , Ben Fleming

Jai Hindley won stage five of the Tour de France in Laruns to take the yellow jersey from Adam Yates and Jonas Vingegaard rode clear of rival Tadej Pogacar as an early trip to the Pyrenees ripped up the general classification.

Hindley, winner of last year’s Giro d’Italia, marked himself out as a major contender with a breakaway victory but surely more important was the sight of defending champion Vingegaard leaving behind two-time winner Pogacar on the final climb to make his case as the favourite to be in yellow come Paris.

Having gone clear from the last of his fellow escapees on the final climb of the Col de Marie Blanque, Hindley soloed into Laruns to take the win by 32 seconds, with Vingegaard coming home at the back of a four-strong group that was second on the road.

For the full stage-five report, click below:

Jai Hindley wins Tour de France stage five to take yellow jersey

Stage six preview

17:14 , Ben Fleming

Well, we should have an exciting race in store for tomorrow. Only time will tell but you’d suspect a big response from Team UAE Emirates and Pogacar as they look to make up some of that time on Vingegaard that they lost today.

But it will be a tough route from Tarbes to Cauterets. It’s a 145km route that takes on the double trouble of the category one Col d’Aspin (12km, 6.5%) followed by the monstrous hors categorie Tourmalet (17.1km, 7.3%), before a fast ascent and a final climb to the summit finish at Cauterets (16km, 5.4%).

For the full stage preview, click below:

Stage-by-stage guide to the 2023 Tour de France route

Jersey standings after stage five

17:11 , Ben Fleming

After stage five, there has been plenty of change in the jersey standings with both the yellow and polka-dot jersey changing hands.

Yellow: Jai Hindley (Bora-Hansgrohe)

White: Tadej Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates)

Green: Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck)

Polka Dot: Felix Gall (Ag2r-Citroën)

The combativity award for stage five goes to Jumbo-Visma’s Wout van Aert, so he’ll have the red number for tomorrow’s stage.

Tadej Pogacar speaking to Europsort

17:07 , Ben Fleming

“It was not such a difficult day but it was just that Jonas [Vingegaard] went so, so fast on the climb. I lost my legs on the last kilometre of the climb. But I feel good so I hope the next few days go better.

On losing Hindley early: “It was a bit hectic over the small climbs. Everybody wanted to go and break so it was one moment where we couldn’t close the gap immediately and the big group went away. It was not the best and Jai can take the yellow but we hope for a better result in the final climb.

“I think now I know my limit so my motivation is pretty high. I think we can go day-by-day pretty strong.

Jonas Vingegaard speaking to Eurosport

17:01 , Ben Fleming

“The guys did great today. We didn’t have to pull in the bunch which was good for us and then on the final climb, I felt good and I said to Sepp [Kuss] that he should go to the front and start pushing and he did and then I was able to attack.

“I know Tadej [Pogacar], he never gives up so it will be a fight all the way to Paris. I’m super happy with my 53-second [lead over Tadej] - it’s super nice.

“Of course, we have to look to Jai Hindley. During the stage, we were thinking should we put a guy at the front. We decided not because being in the break takes a lot of energy but of course, we have to think about Jai as well now.

“I think I had a super good day.”

General classification standings after stage five

16:57 , Ben Fleming

And here are the new GC standings. Hindley takes the yellow jersey but the big story is the huge gap that defending champion Vingegaard now has over two-time champion and main rival Tadej Pogacar.

Jai Hindley (Bora-Hansgrohe) - 22:15:12

Jonas Vingedaard (Jumbo-Visma) +47

Giulio Ciccone (Lidl-Trek) +1:03

Emmanuel Buchmann (Bora-Hansgrohe) +1:11

Adam Yates (UAE Team Emirates) +1:34

Tadej Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates) +1:40

Simon Yates (Team Jayco-UlUla) +1:40

Mattias Skjelmose (Lidl-Trek) +1:56

Carlos Rodriguez (Ineos Grenadiers) +1:56

David Gaudu (Groupama-FDJ) +1:56

Top ten from stage five

16:51 , Ben Fleming

Before we get into the all-crucial general classification standings, here are the top ten from today’s stage:

Jai Hindley (Bora-Hansgrohe) - 03:57:07

Giulio Ciccone (Lidl-Trek) +32

Felix Gall (Ag2r-Citroën) +32

Emanuel Buchmann (Bora-Hansgrohe) +32

Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma) +34

Mattias Skjelmose (Lidl-Trek) +1:38

Daniel Martinez (Ineos Grenadiers) +1:38

Tadej Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates) +1:38

David Gaudu (Groupama-FDJ) +1:38

Carlos Rodriguez (Ineos Grenadiers) +1:38

HINDLEY WINS STAGE FIVE!

16:40 , Ben Fleming

The victorious Jai Hindley speaking to Eurosport: “I was just improvising out there and enjoying some bike racing and I managed to find myself in that group - enjoyed it out there today.

“It’s really incredible, I have no words. The guys on the radio were screaming about riding to the line. I couldn’t really hear what was happening but I just wanted to gain as much time as possible and get the stage win. Now I’ve found myself in the yellow jersey which is pretty cool.

“I didn’t really know what to expect, it’s my first Tour. It’s hard to come here with such massive ambitions already but I want to be competitive and have some form of success.

“This one’s for my girlfriend, my family, all the support, all the fans back home. Everyone that has supported me throughout my whole career. I’m really thankful for everyone.”

HINDLEY WINS STAGE FIVE!

16:32 , Ben Fleming

After Hindley, it’s Ciccone who comes through in second. Gall and Buchmann follow him with Vingegaard having to settle for fifth after a small sprint for the finish.

The Jumbo-Visma rider won’t mind all that much, though. His devastating attack today gained him 64 seconds over his main rival, Pogacar, who ends the race today in eighth. That could be absolutely fatal for the chances of the two-time champion.

HINDLEY WINS STAGE FIVE!

16:22 , Ben Fleming

A special ride by the Bora-Hansgrohe rider and 2022 Giro champion who will take the yellow jersey off Adam Yates. It’s his first appearance in the Tour but he leads after just five stages and he’s fully deserved it.

He was part of the breakaway group all day and timed his attack up the final climb to perfection. Only time will tell if he can hold on to this lead with Vingegaard and Pogacar bearing down his neck but that’s a problem for another day - right now, it’s time to celebrate a special performance which inserts him right into the mix.

1km to go - Hindley on course for victory

16:21 , Ben Fleming

It will be a procession for the last kilometre and his race today will have thrown the Tour de France wide open. He may not end up winning but his surge today caused Vingegaard to attack and that has left Pogacar with a huge task over the remaining stages.

5km to go - No help for Vingegaard

16:17 , Ben Fleming

Hindley is closing in on a superb victory which will see him take the yellow jersey.

Behind him, Vingegaard, Ciccone and Buchmann have caught up with Gall. The Jumbo-Visma rider is leading the quartet but turns around asking for support. There’s none forthcoming from the other three who have been ahead grinding in the breakaway groups all day.

10km to go - Vingegaard extends lead over Pogacar

16:13 , Ben Fleming

The defending champion is unlikely to catch up Hindley at the front but the Jumbo-Visma rider will have is eyes on one thing - extending his lead over his main rival Tadej Pogacar.

He left him for dead on the Col de Marie Blanque climb with a devastating attack and now leads him by around a minute.

15km to go - Hindley leads Vingegaard by a minute

16:07 , Ben Fleming

The Bora-Hansgrohe rider begins his descent but Vingegaard is in hot pursuit alongside Ciccone and Hindley’s team-mate Buchmann.

Between them is Felix Gall who is 30 seconds behind Hindley.

18km to go - Hindley leads charge over climb as Vingegaard attacks

16:01 , Ben Fleming

What a ride this has been by Jai Hindley and he surges clear of Felix Gall to get to the top of Col de Marie Blanque climb in first.

Further back Vingegaard, Kuss and Pogacar break free from the peloton...but now Vingegaard attacks on his own and Pogacar doesn’t stay with him! Dramatic turn of events and what a message to send to his main rival. The defending champ is now under 90 seconds behind Hindley.

20km to go - Peloton catches up strugglers

15:56 , Ben Fleming

The main group is now just 2 minutes behind the main two, Hindley and Gall, as many including Van Aert drop back into the peloton.

Jumbo-Visma are now beginning to come to the fore of the peloton as they look to chase down Hindley ahead.

22km to go - climb splinters lead group

15:49 , Ben Fleming

This category one climb has really splintered this main group. Van Aert, Alaphilippe and Neilands have all been dropped after they were caught and now it’s Hindley and Gall who break ahead as a two but the Australian has team-mate Buchmann nearby him a few seconds back.

30km to go - Col de Marie Blanque climb upcoming

15:37 , Ben Fleming

The final climb of the day is the category one climb, Col de Marie Blanque. It’s 7.8km at an average gradient of 8.5%. The peloton have cut the lead to Hindley’s group to about three minutes but with that climb coming up, they’ll have to work really hard to cut further into the lead before the finishing kilometres.

35km to go - leaders complete Col d’Ichère climb

15:29 , Ben Fleming

Neilands crosses the category three climb in first to take the two points. Van Aert crosses in second to take the remaining point on offer.

Van Aert and Alaphilippe have now caught up the Latvian on the downhill but Hindley’s chasing group are now under 20 seconds behind them.

The peloton remains over three minutes back with just 35km to go.

40km to go - Van Aert and Alaphilippe break away

15:20 , Ben Fleming

Neilands remains in the lead but finally two riders decide to try and close the gap to the Latvian and it’s Van Aer and Alaphillipe who are those two.

They are only 17 seconds behind Neilands and have a 30-second lead over Hindley and the rest of the breakaway riders.

44km to go - Col d’Ichère climb coming up

15:12 , Ben Fleming

It’s far less intimidating than the Col de Soudet earlier. But it’s a category three climb so KOM points are available. It’s 4.2km at 6.2%.

50km to go - breakaway group beginning to splinter

15:06 , Ben Fleming

Krists Neilands makes a burst out of the breakaway group and the Israel-Premier Tech rider has a 25-second lead now from the main breakaway group.

A few have also begun to fall off from that main breakaway group, one of which is Victor Campenaerts who lead such a good charge with Van Eart and Pedersen up the Col de Soudet earlier.

56km to go

14:55 , Ben Fleming

Felix Gall is eventually caught by the chasing group who is now 17-riders strong. Their lead continues to move past four minutes with Alaphilippe (Soudal-Quick Step) doing his best to widen that even further.

70km to go - Four-minute lead for first group

14:42 , Ben Fleming

This has been a fantastic stage so far for Jai Hindley. He’s got Bora-Hansgrohe team-mate Emanuel Buchmann with him in this first chasing group. They are only a few seconds behind Felix Gall but he has a mammoth four-minute lead over the likes of Tadej Pogacar and Jonas Vingegaard in the peloton.

If Team UAE and Jumbo-Visma weren’t concerned before, they should be now.

75km to go - Gall launches attack to collect maximum King of the Mountain points

14:37 , Ben Fleming

Just as quickly as the lead group is brought together and Felix Gall (Ag2r-Citroën) launches an attack. Jai Hindley lets him go and the Austrian will summit the Col de Soudet first and should take the polka-dot jersey off Neilson Powless at the end of this stage.

Daniel Martínez (Ineos Grenadiers) crosses in second to take 15 points with Giulio Ciccone (Lidl-Trek) third taking 12 points.

The visibility is terrible at the top of the climb and real caution will be needed especially from the peloton.

77km to go - leaders caught

14:32 , Ben Fleming

Finally, the leaders in Van Aert and Campenaerts are caught. There is now a 25-man group in the lead with Jai Hindley the main GC contender amongst them - they have just 2km to the top of the Col de Soudet.

From there, it’s three minutes back to the peloton.

78km to go

14:30 , Ben Fleming

The leading two continue to maintain their slender lead over the first chasing pack but a few are beginning to fall out of that. One is Pedersen but another, more intriguingly, is Marc Soler. However, it appears that the Team UAE rider is merely following team orders and waiting for the peloton.

Perhaps a sign that they are getting a bit concerned by the lead that the first chasing group have over them and Soler will no doubt be asked to do some of the heavy lifting involved to get them back closer to them.

83km to go - Pedersen dropped

14:14 , Ben Fleming

The Dane decided enough is enough for him and he drops out of the leading back and falls back to the first chasing group which is fronted by Lidl-Trek’s Juanpe Lopez. Van Aert and Campenaerts still have a lead of just over 20 seconds from them but their chasing group is moving nicely.

The peloton is still being headed up by Team UAE Emirates and Matteo Trentin but they are now over three minutes back from the leading pair.

87km to go - first chasing group closes gap

14:03 , Ben Fleming

Remi Cavagna and Julian Alaphilippe (Soudal-Quick Step) have taken to the front of the first chasing group who are behind our leading three. The pace increases immediately and there’s clearly a desire to close that gap which is now down to around 30 seconds.

95km to go

13:47 , Ben Fleming

Behind the three leaders, we have a first chasing group of 33 riders. Here is the full list of those:

Tiesj Benoot (Jumbo-Visma), Christophe Laporte (Jumbo-Visma), Felix Grosschartner (UAE), Marc Soler (UAE), Omar Fraile (Ineos), Dani Martínez (Ineos), Valentin Madouas (Groupama-FDJ), Esteban Chaves (EF), Rigoberto Uran (EF), Julian Alaphilippe (Soudal-QuickStep), Kasper Asgreen (Soudal-QuickStep), Remi Cavagna (Soudal-QuickStep), Jack Haig (Bahrain Victorious), Jai Hindley (Bora-Hansgrohe), Emanuel Buchmann (Bora-Hansgrohe), Patrick Konrad (Bora-Hansgrohe), Giulio Ciccone (Lidl-Trek), Juanpe López (Lidl-Trek), Berthet (AG2R), Felix Gall (Ag2R), Aurelien Paret-Peintre (AG2R), Bryan Coquard (Cofidis), Matteo Jorgenson (Movistar), Gregor Muhlberger (Movistar), Chris Hamilton (DSM), Hugo Houle (Israel-Premier Tech), Krists Neilands (Israel-Premier Tech), Christopher Juul-Jensen (Jayco-AIUIa), Anthony Delaplace (Arkea-Samsic), Maxim Van Gils (Lotto-Dstny), Harold Tejada (Astana Qazaqstan), Torstein Traen (Uno-X), Mathieu Burgaudeau (Total-Energies).

99km to go

13:44 , Ben Fleming

The front three (Van Aert, Pedersen and Campenaerts) have over a minute ahead of the second breakaway group - they now have under 100km to go.

Still no real effort from Pogacar and Team UAE in the peloton to get up to Jai Hindley in that second breakaway group. Will they launch an attack later on the climbs or are they happy to lose the yellow jersey for now?

105km to go - Col de Soudet upcoming

13:35 , Ben Fleming

Coquard drops back to the second breakaway group leaving just Van Aert, Pedersen and Campenaerts in the lead. They have a 35-second advantage over that bigger breakaway group and are more than 2 mins 30 secs ahead of the peloton.

The lead riders are now about 15km away from the foot of today’s first climb, the Col de Soudet. It’s over 15km at an average gradient of 7% and the first proper mountain and all-category climb of this year’s Tour.

112km - Coquard takes maximum points in the sprint

13:26 , Ben Fleming

The Cofidis rider gets the better of Mads Pedersen in the intermediate sprint to take the maximum 20 points on offer and move second in the green jersey standings.

Pedersen takes 17 while Wan Aert and Campenaerts take 15 and 13 points respectively.

115km to go - Intermediate sprint upcoming

13:22 , Ben Fleming

The Lanne-en-Barétous intermediate sprint is coming up with Wout van Aert and Mads Pedersen breaking away from the original lead group as they eye up points for the green jersey.

Bryan Coquard (Cofidis) and Victor Campenaerts (Lotto-Dstny) join them and these four will be the main contenders for maximum points.

125km to go - 1 minute gap for breakaway group

13:12 , Ben Fleming

This large breakaway group have suddenly opened up a nice lead of just over a minute. 2022 Giro D’Italia champion, Jai Hindley is a real GC contender and he’s got support in the form of team-mates Emanuel Buchmann and Patrick Konrad in this lead group

That could well be a cause for concern for Team UAE back in the peloton who look to be trying to close the gap.

Towards the back, Lidl-Trek Quinn Simmons has a nasty fall but looks to be back on his bike.

130km to go

13:04 , Ben Fleming

Remi Cavanga (Soudal-Quick Step) and Gregor Muhlberger (Movistar) briefly moved into a two-man breakaway but were swiftly caught and the jostling for the breakaway group continues. There’s now a 36-man group including GC contender Jai Hindley (Bora-Hansgrohe) who have a small gap from the peloton.

142km to go - Latour back to the peloton

12:51 , Ben Fleming

You have to feel for the Frenchman who launched a solid early attack but had no support from any other rider. He’s eventually chased down by a breakaway group and before you know it the peloton are back together again.

148km to go

12:43 , Ben Fleming

Alberto Bettiol is the next to launch an attack to try and get up Latour. He’s joined by Jumbo-Visma’s Wout van Aert amongst others.

We are only 15km in but sprinter Fabio Jakobsen has already been dropped by the peloton. The Soudal-Quick Step rider had a nasty crash yesterday and is clearly still feeling the effects of it.

153km to go

12:36 , Ben Fleming

There’s an early crash for Lidl-Trek’s Mattias Skjelmose who might have fancied his chances today. The Dane is back up and appears unharmed as he makes his way back to the peloton. Mathieu van der Poel makes briefly looks to make an attack but quickly comes back to the peloton.

159km to go

12:30 , Ben Fleming

The initial attack falls apart but another is launched now by Pierre Latour with nobody following the TotalEnergies rider so far.

Tour de France - Stage Five

12:25 , Ben Fleming

The yellow flag is raised and we are underway as Lotto Dstny make an early move. Neilson Powless mentioned earlier in an interview that he needed to be in any breakaway group today and the American is on the second wheel behind Victor Campenaerts.

Tour de France - Stage Five

12:24 , Ben Fleming

We have 1km to go until the official starts but some quick news on a couple of withdrawals. Both Leon Sanchez (Astana-Qazaqstan) and Jacopo Guarnieri (Lotto Dstny) fell in the sprint yesterday, both breaking their collarbones meaning their Tour is done for this year.

Tour de France - Stage Five

12:12 , Ben Fleming

Today promises to be a fast start with teams looking to get in a good position before the first climb. The riders have begun their neutralised rollout before the official start.

Tour de France - Stage Five

12:03 , Ben Fleming

Britain’s Adam Yates won the first stage to take the yellow jersey and the Team UAE Emirates rider still has the maillot jaune as we enter the fifth day. Here is a reminder of the general classification standings:

Adam Yates (Team UAE Emirates): 18:18:01

Tadej Pogacar (Team UAE Emirates): +6 secs

Simon Yates (Jayco-Alula): +6 secs

Victor Lafay (Cofidis): +12 secs

Wout van Aert (Jumbo-Visma): +16 secs

Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma): +17 secs

Jai Hindley (Bora-Hansgrohe): +22 secs

Tour de France - Stage Five

11:59 , Ben Fleming

Neilson Powless (EF Education-EasyPost) has enjoyed a stellar start to this Tour with an 11-point lead in the King of the Mountain standings. Stage five will be a very different day and with seconds on offer at the top of today’s first climb, the American will have to fight hard to maintain the jersey.

Speaking to Eurosport earlier, he said: “I need to be in the breakaway today for more points. I think me and 130 other riders want to be in that breakaway so it’s going to be a really tough fight. It might be the hardest for me wearing this jersey.

“I think a lot of other guys that maybe want the polka-dot as well are going to show their hands, show their cards today so it’s going to be a big fight for sure but I’m already wearing the jersey so that’s already really motivating.

“On a day like today, anything is possible because there are bonus seconds on offer on the final climb and again at the finish so maybe someone like Tadej Pogacar thinks he can get more seconds over Jonas Vingegaard. But yeah, there’s so many riders that want to go in the breakaway that it’s going to be hard for anyone to control.”

Tour de France - Stage Five

11:50 , Ben Fleming

Here’s a reminder of the full list of jersey wearers today. Benoît Cosnefroy (AG2R Citroën) has the coloured numbers after winning Stage Four’s combativity prize.

Yellow: Simon Yates (UAE Team Emirates)

White: Tadej Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates)

Green: Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck)

Polka Dot: Neilson Powless (EF Education-EasyPost)

How Mark Cavendish became a Tour de France legend – according to his fierce rivals and loyal teammates

11:33 , Ben Fleming

It wasn’t to be for Mark Cavendish on stages three and four as the Manxman saw opportunities at both sprint stages pass him by.

In what is his final Tour de France, Cavendish goes in search of his record-breaking 35th stage win which would see him surpass the great Eddy Merckx’s tally.

But how did we get to this point? Lawrence Ostlere spoke to some of Cavendish’s fiercest foes and closest allies to find out what makes the Manx Missile a Tour de France legend.

How Mark Cavendish became a Tour de France legend – according to rivals and teammates

Tom Pidcock earmarked three Tour de France stages to win. This is one of them

11:16 , Ben Fleming

When Tom Pidcock assessed the 2023 Tour de France with his leadership team at Ineos Grenadiers, they pored over the opening nine stages before the first rest day and earmarked three they thought he could win.

The first was stage one, a hilly route through the Spanish Basque Country with the promise of the yellow jersey at the finish in Bilbao. It didn’t go to plan – Pidcock couldn’t keep pace with the elite group over the steep Cote de Vivero climb and he lost contact, eventually coming in 30 seconds behind the winner, fellow Briton Adam Yates. He was frustrated by how it played out.

The second was stage two, another lumpy day en route to San Sebastian. This time he did keep up with the fastest few, but he could not out-sprint the supreme Wout van Aert or two-time champion Tadej Pogacar, and anyway, none of them had accounted for the surprise solo attack of Victor Lafay. Pidcock finished fourth.

The third was today’s stage five.

Read the full article and interview with Pidcock below:

Tom Pidcock earmarked three Tour de France stages to win. This is one of them

Tour de France 2023 - Stage Four Recap

11:03 , Ben Fleming

It was another day for Jasper Philipsen yesterday in Nogaro and another missed opportunity for Mark Cavendish as he hunts down that elusive 35th stage win.

Jasper Philipsen and Caleb Ewan reached the line together on the Circuito Paul Armagnac, a motor racing track here in south-west France, after a crash-riddled drag race along the 700m home straight. They lunged, and Philipsen pipped Ewan by centimetres to claim back-to-back stage wins and cement his position as the alpha sprinter at this Tour de France.

Read the full report from Lawrence Ostlere below:

‘I knew I couldn’t win’: Cavendish dissescts finish as Philipsen wins against at Tour

Tour de France - Stage Five Route Map and Profile

10:54 , Ben Fleming

Welcome back to another day of Tour de France action. After two sprint days which saw Jasper Philipsen take back-to-back victories, today is one for the general classification riders.

The riders have a 163km route from Pau to Laruns which is flat for the first 70km, but then comes the first hors categorie climb of this year’s race, the Col du Soudet (15.2km at 7.2%). It is a long and gruelling drag to the top, and we can expect plenty in the peloton to get dropped here as the leaders crank up the pace.

That means two-time winner Tadej Pogacar, who is looking to win again after being dethroned last year, and reigning champion Jonas Vingegaard will likely go head to head and we could see some attacks here in the middle of the stage.

For the full stage five preview, click below:

Tour de France stage 5 preview: Yellow jersey showdown in the Pyrenees

Tour de France 2023 – stage five

10:45 , Ben Fleming

Follow all the build-up and latest updates from stage five of the Tour de France.

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