A Stellar Mathieu Van der Poel Excels in Ussel

Tour de France 2026 | Stage 9 | Malemort > Ussel

Attackers narrowly got the better of the peloton on a spectacular stage 9 of the Tour de France 2026 that eventually saw Mathieu Van der Poel power to victory in Ussel, after 154.6 km of exhilarating battle from Malemort. On the roads of Corrèze, the Flying Dutchman was instrumental in getting the breakaway established. He then split the front group on the final ascent of the day. And he eventually dominated Tobias Johannessen (Uno-X Mobility) and Tom Pidcock (Pinarello-Q36.5) to take his third stage win in the Tour. Van der Poel continues his team’s streak in the race: Alpecin-Premier Tech have now won stages in every edition since their debut in 2021. After Monday’s rest, the race will resume with a demanding stage in the Massif Central for climbers and puncheurs to bring fireworks on Bastille Day.

It’s time for the final stage before the first rest day of the Tour de France 2026. Bastille Day is close and attackers promise anticipated fireworks on Sunday with a hilly course on the roads of Corrèze. The route was adapted to the weather conditions: 154.6 km from Malemort to Ussel, with four categorised climbs and some 3,000 metres of elevation gain.

A most intense start

The road rises immediately and attackers set off as soon as the flag drops for the 176-man peloton, at 13:57. There are many contenders for the breakaway. But Lidl-Trek control them all the way to the intermediate sprint in Beynat (km 13.9), where Mads Pedersen takes full points ahead of Biniam Girmay (NSN). Attacks keep flying en route to Côte de Naves, the first categorised climb of the day. Valentin Paret-Peintre (Soudal Quic-Step) leads the way at the summit (km 46) but attackers are still to make the break.

After a series of attacks and counter-attacks that saw him play a leading role, Mathieu Van der Poel (Alpecin-Premier Tech) sets off again at km 57. A group of 16 riders emerges at the front with the latest additions of Tobias Johannessen (Uno-X Mobility), Tom Pidcock (Pinarello-W36.5) and Clément Braz Afonso (Groupama-FDJ United).

Johannessen and Simmons attack from that group ahead the Suc au May ascent (cat. 2, 3.8 km at 7.7%). Pidcock and then Van der Poel set off in pursuit, making it an eight-man front group led by the Brit at the summit (km 98.5). Van der Poel and Johannessen are up there, as well as Derek Gee-West, Quinn Simmons (Lidl-Trek), Lennert Van Eetvelt (Lotto Intermarché), Pablo Castrillo (Movistar) and Alex Baudin (EF Education-EasyPost).

Relentless action all the way to Ussel

UAE Emirates-XRG set a strong pace in the bunch. The gap never gets higher than 1’25’’, at the summit of the Suc au May ascent. Netcompany Ineos bring more manpower to the chase with just over 40 kilometres remaining. The situation frustrates the attackers, who no longer collaborate smoothly.

Van der Poel attacks on the final ascent of the day, the cat. 4 Mont Bessou (summit at km 24.5). Johannessen, Pidcock and Baudin follow his move to make it a four-man lead group into the last 20 kilometres. Behind them, Simmons and Gee-West wait for the bunch to try and set a bunch sprint for Pedersen.

The four leaders work well together until the final kilometre. Van der Poel is at the front. He controls his rivals as well as the gap to the bunch and eventually powers to victory ahead of Johannessen and Pidcock. Filippo Ganna (Netcompany Ineos) is the first rider from the bunch, crossing the line just 6 seconds behind Van der Poel.

Stage 9
1 Mathieu Van Der Poel Alpecin-Premier Tech 03h 27′ 51” – B : 10” –
2 Tobias Halland Johannessen Uno-X Mobility 03h 27′ 51” – B : 6” –
3 Tom Pidcock Pinarello-Q36.5 Pro Cycling Team 03h 27′ 51” – B : 4” –

GC
1 Tadej Pogacar Uae Team Emirates Xrg 32h 17′ 04” – B : 26” –
2 Jonas Vingegaard Hansen Team Visma | Lease A Bike 32h 19′ 46” + 00h 02′ 42” B : 12” –
3 Isaac Del Toro Romero UAE Team Emirates XRG 32h 20′ 31” + 00h 03′ 27” B : 14” –