Tour de France standings 2023: Winners for each stage, results, jersey meanings

07-22-2023
7 min read
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The 2023 Tour de France began with two overwhelming favorites: Jonas Vingegaard and Tadej Pogacar. Pogacar won the prestigious race in 2020 and 2021, but he was dethroned by Vingegaard last year.

Still, Pogacar is the phenom. Only 24 years old, Pogacar has two Tour de France wins and three white jerseys (best young rider) to his name. He had a chance to add a record-setting fourth white jersey this year.

According to the odds, it would have been a major surprise if anyone else pulled off an upset and beat Vingegaard and Pogacar.

Twenty-two teams participated in the race, which began in Bilbao, Spain, on July 1 and finishes in Paris on July 23. The Tour de France last started in the Basque Country region of Spain in 1992.

MORE: Watch the 2023 Tour de France with Fubo (free trial)

The Sporting News is tracking the results from the 2023 Tour de France. Follow along with the stages below.

Tour de France standings 2023

General classification through Stage 20

Pos. Cyclist (Nationality) Time Back
1. Jonas Vingegaard (Denmark) 79 hours, 16 minutes, 38 seconds
2. Tadej Pogacar (Slovenia) 79 hours, 24 minutes, 07 seconds 0:07:29
3. Adam Yates (Great Britain) 79 hours, 27 minutes, 34 seconds 0:10:56
4. Simon Yates (Great Britain) 79 hours, 29 minutes, 1 second 0:12:23
5. Carlos Rodriguez (Spain) 79 hours, 29 minutes, 55 seconds 0:13:17

MORE: How to watch the 2023 Tour de France

Tour de France winners, results by stage

The 2023 Tour de France began in Bilbao, Spain, on July 1 and last until July 23, when it finishes on the Champs Elysees in the heart of Paris.

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The race will run 2,115 miles, about 47 miles longer than last year's edition. There will be 21 stages, the longest being the second stage on July 2. July 10 and July 17 are the riders' only rest days during the 23-day marathon.

Follow along with the winners for each stage below.

# Date (local time) Length Stage Winner
1 July 1 182 km (113.09 miles) Bilbao (hilly) Adam Yates
2 July 2 209 km (129.86 miles) Vitoria-Gasteiz to San Sebastian (hilly) Victor Lafay
3 July 3 185km (114.95 miles) Amorebieta-Etxano to Bayonne (flat) Jasper Philipsen
4 July 4 182 km (113.09 miles) Dax to Nogaro (flat) Jasper Philipsen
5 July 5 165km (102.53 miles) Pau to Laruns (mountain) Jai Hindley
6 July 6 145km (90.1 miles) Tarbes to Cauterets-Cambasque (mountain) Tadej Pogacar
7 July 7 170km (105.63 miles) Mont-de-Marsan to Bordeaux (flat) Jasper Philipsen
8 July 8 201km (124.9 miles) Libourne to Limoges (hilly) Mads Pedersen
9 July 9 184km (114.33 miles) Saint-Leonard-de-Noblat to Puy de Dome (mountain) Michael Woods
July 10 Rest
10 July 11 167km (103.77 miles) Vulcania to Issoire (hilly) Pello Bilbao Lopez
11 July 12 180km (111.85 miles) Clermont-ferrand to Moulins (flat) Jasper Philipsen
12 July 13 169km (105.01 miles) Roanne to Belleville-en-Beaujolais (hillly) Ion Izagirre
13 July 14 138km (85.74 miles) Chatillon-sur-Chalaronne to Grand Colombier (mountain) Michal Kwiatkowski
14 July 15 152km (94.45 miles) Annemasse to Morzine les Portes du Soleil (mountain) Carlos Rodriguez
15 July 16 180km (111.85 miles) Les Gets les Portes du Soleil to Saint-Gervais Mont Blanc (mountain) Wout Poels
July 17 Rest -
16 July 18 22km (13.67 miles) Passy to Combloux (individual time trial) Jonas Vingegaard
17 July 19 166km (103.15 miles) Saint-Gervais Mont Blanc to Courchevel (mountain) Felix Gall
18 July 20 186km (115.58 miles) Moutiers to Bourg-en-Bresse (hilly) Kasper Asgreen
19 July 21 173km (107.5 miles) Moans-en-Montagne to Poligny (flat) Matej Mohoric
20 July 22 133km (82.64 miles) Belfort to Le Markstein-Fellering (mountain) Tadej Pogacar
21 July 23 115km (71.46 miles) Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines to Paris Champs-Elysees (flat) Jordi Meeus

What do the Tour de France jerseys mean?

There are four jerseys given to riders during the Tour de France, marking overall leaders and winners of certain classifications.

Yellow jersey

The yellow jersey is worn by the aggregate time leader at the beginning of a stage. For example, if one rider has the best time through three stages, they will wear the yellow jersey for the fourth stage. That means the winner of the Tour de France after all 21 stages always receives the yellow jersey, or the maillot jaune.

Polka dot jersey

The polka dot jersey is awarded to the rider who performs the best on the race's grueling climbs. Known as "King of the Mountains," the rider receives the jersey based on finishing with the highest number of points assigned from mountaintop checkpoints.

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Green jersey

The green jersey is awarded to points classification winners. It's considered the sprinter's jersey, as more points are awarded in this case for flat stages. The winner of a flat stage will receive 50 points, whereas the winner of a "hilly" stage receives 30 and the winner of a "high mountain" stage receives 20. The top 15 finishers are traditionally awarded points, and points also can be accumulated during intermediate sprints in the middle of stages.

White jersey

The white jersey is awarded to the best finisher among riders aged 25 or younger. That means riders can win both the white jersey and the yellow jersey, and that's exactly what Tadej Pogacar did in both 2020 and 2021.