Tim Merlier Claims Stage 7 Victory in Chaotic Bordeaux Sprint
On 10 July 2026, Belgian sprinter Tim Merlier (Soudal Quick‑Step) edged out Norway’s Søren Waerenskjold in a frantic bunch finish to win the seventh stage of the Tour de France. The 175.1‑kilometre flat route from Hagetmau to Bordeaux concluded with a high‑speed dash that saw Merlier launch his decisive attack in the final 200 metres, securing his fourth Tour stage win.
How the Sprint Unfolded
After a relatively uneventful first half, the peloton began to reel in early breakaway attempts. Riders Baptiste Veistroger and Jakub Otruba** had forged a lead shortly after the start, but the main field caught them with roughly 18 km remaining, neutralising the gap.
As the race entered Bordeaux, the Uno‑X Mobility squad tried to position Waerenskjold for the sprint, leading the Norwegian into the final kilometre. Meanwhile, Merlier waited in the slipstream of his Soudal Quick‑Step teammate Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin‑Premier Tech), who briefly took the front before being overtaken.
With the peloton hitting speeds above 60 km/h in the last five kilometres, Merlier timed his move perfectly. He surged past Waerenskjold in the final 200 metres, crossing the line first, while Philipsen faded to fifth and Biniam Girmay** claimed third.
Stage Statistics and Context
- Distance: 175.1 km (flat)
- Average speed of the peloton in the final 5 km: >60 km/h
- Winning margin: approximately 0.02 seconds (photo‑finish)
- Merlier’s Tour de France stage wins: 4 (2022, 2023, 2024, 2026)
- Yellow jersey holder after the stage: Tadej Pogačar** (UAE Team Emirates‑XRG), retaining his overall lead.
Reactions from the Peloton
“It was chaos to be in position. But I did it thanks to the team,” Merlier said after the stage, acknowledging the crucial lead‑out work from his Soudal Quick‑Step colleagues.
He also paid tribute to teammate Bert van Lerberghe**, who withdrew before the stage:
“We were the only team with Alpecin that tried to bring the breakaway group back, so I’m glad that another team didn’t win.”
What Lies Ahead
The Tour continues on Saturday with another flat stage, a 180.4 km ride from Périgueux to Bergerac. Sprinters will again be favoured, but the cumulative fatigue from the opening week could shake up the dynamics in the final kilometres.
Sources
- Official Tour de France 2026 stage 7 results – letour.fr
- SBS Sport tweet covering the finish – twitter.com/SBSSportau
- Post‑stage quotes from Tim Merlier – SBS Sport broadcast, 10 July 2026.


