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    Tour de France stage 8 LIVE – Merlier, Kooij and Philipsen primed for sprinters’ rematch in Bergerac

    Here’s Remco Evenepoel in the peloton. It might be a quiet day for him in the saddle, but behind the scenes the story of the tension between himself and teammate Florian Lipowitz won’t go away.

    Efforts from the Red Bull team to play down the story and demonstrate the pair are getting along have been far from convincing, and we’ll be keeping an eagle eye on how the two ride together for the remainder of this race.

    Remco Evenepoel and Florian Lipowitz are putting on a happy face at the Tour de France, but I’m not really buying it – is anyone?

    (Image credit: Getty Images)

    The crowds in Périgueux flocked to the roadside to see the Tour of earlier today.

    PERIGUEUX, FRANCE - JULY 11: A general view of the peloton passing through a Perigueux while fans cheers prior to the 113th Tour de France 2026, Stage 8 a 180.4km stage from Perigueux to Bergerac / #UCIWT / on July 11, 2026 in Perigueux, France. (Photo by Tim de Waele/Getty Images)

    (Image credit: Getty Images)

    The scene from the start in Périgueux, a picturesque spot on the banks of the river Isle. There might not be much action in terms of GC today, but there’s plenty of beautiful scenery for the local tourist boards to show off.

    PERIGUEUX, FRANCE - JULY 11: A general view of the peloton passing through a Perigueux while fans cheers prior to the 113th Tour de France 2026, Stage 8 a 180.4km stage from Perigueux to Bergerac / #UCIWT / on July 11, 2026 in Perigueux, France. (Photo by Tim de Waele/Getty Images)

    (Image credit: Getty Images)

    The peloton has now bunched up and slowed down, with Liam Slock having got up the road, and been joined by Thibault Guernalec and Jakub Otruba set to join him. Those three riders will be the break of the day.

    Although it’s another flat stage tailor made for sprinters, the terrain is a little bumpier than yesterday, and could therefore be a little more complicated than yesterday’s. Only two riders went up the road then – according to this Lotto DS, more might have a go today.

    “Stay in the front a bit for the start. There might be a little more action than the previous days.”

    Lotto Intermarché DS

    Here’s Paul Seixas before the start earlier. Interestingly, he’s wearing a mask – whether or not that’s precautionary, or if he’s carrying an illness, is unclear. In any case, thankfully for him today should essentially be a day off for the GC riders, on a parcours that is flat and which will be about avoiding incident or mishap rather than a test of legs.

    The riders have heard the countdown for the unofficial start, and are riding though the streets of Périgueux.

    Obviously today is a sprint day, but our Deputy Editor Patrick Fletcher has been reflecting on the GC, the decisive day that was stage 6, and if the course designers could have avoided a stage that opened up such big time gaps so early on…

    The Tour de France organisers wanted ‘suspense to the end’ but the Tourmalet stage design backfired dramatically – and they should have seen it coming

    In pitching this Tour de France, “suspense until the end” was a repeated refrain from the race director, Christian Prudhomme, who insisted: “Until the last mountain stage, anything is possible.”
    One week in, we have a gap of nearly three minutes between first and second place, and a yellow jersey that will remain on the shoulders of Tadej Pogačar for the next two weeks unless something utterly extraordinary happens.

    Patrick Fletcher

    Tadej Pogačar descends a mountain during the Tour de France

    (Image credit: Getty Images)

    Welcome to today’s stage!

    Hello and welcome to Cyclingnews’ live coverage of stage 8 of the Tour de France!

    We’re expecting another sprint finish today, with the parcours almost totally pan-flat and a very sprint-friendly finale in Bergerac. That means we’re getting two sprint days in a row after yesterday’s gallop into Bordeaux.

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