Tour de France 2022 final standings: Stage winners, results, route, jerseys as Jonas Vingegaard triumphs in Paris

Joe Wright

Tour de France 2022 final standings: Stage winners, results, route, jerseys as Jonas Vingegaard triumphs in Paris image

The Tour de France reached Paris on Sunday and the 2022 edition concluded with a new champion.

Jonas Vingegaard overcame the scare of a near-crash to come in second behind Jumbo-Visma teammate Wout van Aert in the Lacapelle-Marival to Rocamadour individual time trial.

It extended Vingegaard's advantage over two-time reigning champion Tadej Pogacar to three minutes and 34 seconds, meaning the Danish rider stood on the top step of the podium in the yellow jersey after the ceremonial final stage in Paris.

Jumbo-Visma have dominated this year's race, in part because a COVID-19 outbreak hindered Pogacar's UAE Team Emirates squad. The formidable Van Aert will take home the green points jersey, Vingegaard also has the polka-dot King of the Mountains jersey in his possession and Saturday was Jumbo-Visma's sixth stage win.

Below are the standings for the Tour de France 2022, along with the schedule, route, stage winners and how to watch the concluding action on the Champs-Elysees.

Tour de France 2022 standings

General Classification

Position Rider Team Time
1 Jonas Vingegaard Jumbo-Visma 79:33:20
2 Tadej Pogacar UAE Team Emirates 79:36:03
3 Geraint Thomas Ineos Grenadiers 79:40:42
4 David Gaudu Groupama-FDJ 79:46:59
5 Aleksandr Vlasov Bora-Hansgrohe 79:49:06
6 Nairo Quintana Team Arkea-Samsic 79:49:53
7 Romain Bardet Team DSM 79:51:31
8 Louis Meintjes Intermarche-Wanty-Gobert Materiaux 79:52:04
9 Alexey Lutsenko Astana-Qazaqstan 79:56:16
10 Adam Yates Ineos Grenadiers 79:58:12

Points Classification

Position Rider Team Points
1 Wout van Aert Jumbo-Visma 480
2 Jasper Philipsen Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl Team 286
3 Tadej Pogacar UAE Team Emirates 250
4 Christophe Laporte Jumbo-Visma 171
5 Mads Pedersen Trek-Segafredo 159
6 Jonas Vingegaard Jumbo-Visma 157
7 Fabio Jakobsen Alpecin-Fenix 155
8 Michael Matthews Team BikeExchange-Jayco 133
9 Peter Sagan Totalenergies 120
10 Dylan Groenewegen Team BikeExchange-Jayco 116

King of the Mountains

Position Rider Team Points
1 Jonas Vingegaard Jumbo-Visma 72
2 Simon Geschke Confidis 65
3 Giulio Ciccone UAE Team Emirates 61
4 Tadej Pogacar UAE Team Emirates 61
5 Wout Van Aert Jumbo-Visma 59
6 Thibaut Pinot Groupama-FDJ 52
7 Louis Meintjes Intermarche-Wanty-Gobert Materiaux 39
8 Neilson Powless Ef Education-Easypost 37
9 Pierre Latour Totalenergies 35
10 Geraint Thomas Ineos Grenadiers 32

Young Rider Classification

Position Rider Team Time
1 Tadej Pogacar UAE Team Emirates 79:36:03
2 Tom Pidcock Ineos Grenadiers 80:34:35
3 Brandon McNulty UAE Team Emirates 81:04:39
4 Matteo Jorgenson Movistar 81:07:17
5 Andreas Leknessund Team DSM 81:30:51
6 Michael Storer Groupama-FDJ 81:36:55
7 Georg Zimmermann Intermarche-Wanty-Gobert Materiaux 82:13:00
8 Kevin Geniets Groupama-FDJ 82:21:28
9 Fred Wright Bahrain Victorious 82:37:28
10 Stan Dewulf AG2R Citroen Team 83:02:38

Team Classification

Position Team Time
1 Ineos Grenadiers 239:03:03
2 Groupama-FDJ 239:40:36
3 Jumbo-Visma 239:47:57
4 Bora-Hansgrohe 240:51:48
5 Movistar Team 241:14:25
6 UAE Team Emirates 241:22:57
7 Bahrain Victorious 242:01:35
8 Team DSM 242:29:11
9 Team Arkea-Samsic 242:59:54
10 Astana Qazaqstan Team 243:02:03

Tour de France 2022 schedule and stage winners

# Date (local time) Length Stage Winner
1 July 1 13.2 km (8.2 miles) Copenhagen to Copenhagen (individual time-trial) Yves Lampaert
2 July 2 202.5 km (125.8 miles) Roskilde to Nyborg (flat) Fabio Jakobsen
3 July 3 182 km (113.1 miles) Vejle to Sonderborg (flat) Dylan Groenewegen
Transfer July 4 -- NA
4 July 5 171.5 km (106.6 miles) Dunkerque to Calais (hilly) Wout van Aert
5 July 6 157 km (97.6 miles) Lille Metropole to Arenberge Porte du Hainaut (hilly) Simon Clarke
6 July 7 220 km (136.7 miles) Binche to Longwy (hilly) Tadej Pogacar
7 July 8 176.5 km (109.7 miles) Tomblaine to La Super Planche des Belles Filles (mountain) Tadej Pogacar
8 July 9 186.5 km (115.9 miles) Dole to Lausanne (hilly) Wout van Aert
9 July 10 193 km (119.9 miles) Aigle to Chatel Les Portes du Soleil (mountain) Bob Jungels
Rest day July 11 -- Morzine Les Portes du Soleil N/A
10 July 12 148.5 km (92.3 miles) Morzine Les Portes du Soleil to Megeve (hilly) Magnus Cort
11 July 13 152 km (94.4 miles) Albertville to Col du Granon Serre Chevalier (mountain) Jonas Vingegaard
12 July 14 165.5 km (102.8 miles) Briancon to Alpe D'Huez (mountain) Thomas Pidcock
13 July 15 193 km (119.9 miles) Le Bourg D'Oisanas to Saint-Etienne (flat) Mads Pedersen
14 July 16 192.5 km (119.6 miles) Saint-Etienne to Mende (hilly) Michael Matthews
15 July 17 202.5 km (125.8 miles) Rodez to Carcassonne (flat) Jasper Philipsen
Rest day July 18 -- Carcassonne N/A
16 July 19 178.5 km (110.9 miles) Carcassonne to Foix (hilly) Hugo Houle
17 July 20 130 km (80.8 miles) Saint-Gaudens to Peyragudes (mountain) Tadej Pogacar
18 July 21 143.5 km (89.2 miles) Lourdes to Hautacam (mountain) Jonas Vingegaard
19 July 22 188.5 km (117.1 miles) Castelnau-Magnoac to Cahors (flat) Christophe Laporte
20 July 23 40.7 km (25.3 miles) Lacapelle-Marival to Rocamadour (individual time-trial) Wout van Aert
21 July 24 116 km (72.1 miles) Paris La Defense Arena to Paris Champs-Elysees Jasper Philipsen

How to stream and watch the 2022 Tour de France on TV

  • In the UK, the Tour de France will be live on GCN+, Discovery+, Eurosport and ITV.
  • In Australia, SBS will broadcast every day of the Tour live, as well as offering highlights.

Tour de France teams 2022

There are 22 teams in the 2022 Tour de France, with eight riders per team for a total of 176 cyclists in the field.

Last year, Bahrain Victorious won the team classification, ending a run of three straight victories by Movistar Team.

MORE: Who is Tadej Pogacar? Cycling superstar looking to make history with third successive Tour de France win

Team Country
AG2R Citroen Team France
Astana Qazaqstan Team France
Bahrain Victorious Bahrain
Bora-Hansgrohe Germany
Cofidis France
Ef Education-Easypost United States
Groupama-FDJ France
Ineos Grenadiers Great Britain
Intermarche- Wanty-Gobert Materiaux Belgium
Israel-Premier Tech Israel
Jumbo-Visma Netherlands
Lotto Soudal Belgium
Movistar Team Spain
Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl Team Belgium
Team BikeExchange-Jayco Australia
Team DSM Germany
Trek-Segafredo United States
UAE Team Emirates United Arab Emirates
Alpecin-Fenix Belgium
Team Arkea-Samsic France
B&B Hotels-KTM France
Totalenergies France

Tour de France past winners

Pogacar is looking for his third straight win in the Tour de France, which would make him the sixth cyclist to win the event in at least three consecutive years.

The others are Louison Bobet (1953-55), Jacques Anquetil (1961-64), Eddy Merckx (1969-72), Miguel Indurain (1991-95) and Chris Froome (2015-17).

Lance Armstrong won seven straight races from 1999 to 2005 but his victories have been vacated due to doping offences.

Recent Tour de France winners

Year Winner Nationality
2022 Jonas Vingegaard Denmark
2021 Tadej Pogacar Slovenia
2020 Tadej Pogacar Slovenia
2019 Egan Bernal Colombia
2018 Geraint Thomas Great Britain
2017 Chris Froome Great Britain
2016 Chris Froome Great Britain
2015 Chris Froome Great Britain
2014 Vincenzo Nibali Italy
2013 Chris Froome Great Britain
2012 Bradley Wiggins Great Britain
2011 Cadel Evans Australia
2010 Andy Schleck* Luxembourg
2009 Alberto Contador Spain
2008 Carlos Sastre Spain
2007 Alberto Contador Spain
2006 Oscar Pereiro** Spain
2005 Lance Armstrong*** USA
2004 Lance Armstrong*** USA
2003 Lance Armstrong*** USA
2002 Lance Armstrong*** USA
2001 Lance Armstrong*** USA
2000 Lance Armstrong*** USA
1999 Lance Armstrong*** USA
1998 Marco Pantani Italy

*Alberto Contador won the race, but failed a drug test later

**Floyd Landis won the race, but failed a drug test later

***Lance Armstrong has had all his titles vacated due to doping. No winner was named in his place. 

Joe Wright

Joe Wright Photo

Joe is a Senior Editor at Sporting News. He was previously a sub editor and writer for Goal.com before spending six years as part of the Stats Perform editorial news service, covering major global sports including football, tennis, boxing, NBA, rugby union and athletics. Joe has reported live on some of the biggest games in football, including two UEFA Champions League finals, Euro 2016, the Confederations Cup 2017 and the 2018 World Cup final at the end of a month in Russia.