
Tim Merlier wins second straight Tour de France stage in Bergerac bunch sprint
Belgian sprinter Tim Merlier of Soudal Quick-Step outsprinted Biniam Girmay and Olav Kooij to claim his second consecutive stage victory and fifth career Tour win in Bergerac on 11 July 2026.
Merlier's repeat victory
Belgian Tim Merlier took his second bunch sprint in as many days, winning stage 8 of the Tour de France into Bergerac after 176 kilometres from Périgueux. The Soudal Quick-Step rider powered past Eritrean Biniam Girmay (Intermarché-Wanty) and Dutchman Olav Kooij (Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale) with a late surge. Jasper Philipsen (Alpecin-Deceuninck), led out again by Mathieu van der Poel, finished fourth. Merlier, 33, now has five career Tour stage wins, confirming his status as the fastest sprinter in this edition.
When I see the finish line I get an adrenaline rush. It's addictive. I live as if it's the last minute of my life, as if I'm falling into the void and still trying to survive.
The breakaway and Slock's lone effort
A three-man breakaway formed in the opening kilometres: Czech Jakub Otruba (Caja Rural-Seguros RGA), Frenchman Thibault Guernalec (TotalEnergies), and Belgian Liam Slock (Lotto). Slock, who attracted viral attention in June when he won the GP Gippingen by sliding across the line after a crash, attacked on the Buisson-de-Cadouin climb with 40 kilometres remaining, dropping Otruba after Guernalec had already lost contact.
Slock pushed his advantage and still held a one-minute lead at the 10-kilometre banner, causing panic in the sprint teams' trains. The peloton, travelling at close to 57 km/h in the finale, finally swallowed him 1.4 kilometres from the line. He received the day's combativity award.
- Liam Slock attacks on Buisson-de-Cadouin, drops Otruba and goes solo
- Slock maintains 1-minute lead over peloton
- Slock caught by the peloton
- Tim Merlier wins the bunch sprint, Girmay second, Kooij third
General classification and race context
Tadej Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates) finished safely in the bunch and retained the yellow jersey with a 2-minute 42-second lead over Denmark's Jonas Vingegaard. The Slovenian remarked that the stage looked simple but that keeping body temperature down and avoiding urban obstacles was essential. The peloton pedalled at an average near 44 km/h under intense heat that prompted directors and journalists to discuss potential rule, design or calendar modifications.
Historical echoes and Belgian pride
The finish town of Bergerac carries cycling history: here Miguel Indurain crushed the field in a 1994 time trial on his way to a fourth Tour title. That morning he reportedly tested the course, then took a nap before mounting a 55-12 gear. On this day, a different Belgian tyrant ruled, bringing a measure of consolation after Belgium's elimination from the football World Cup by Spain.
What comes next
The race now heads toward the Massif Central with the overall contenders appearing to take a truce. Mads Pedersen retained the green points jersey. Merlier dedicated his win to his ailing father. The sprinters’ battle, however, remains open with Girmay again second and Philipsen still winless in this Tour.


