
La Vuelta 2025 Stage 21 | Alalpardo > Madrid
After three weeks of racing that stretched from the vineyards of Piedmont to the streets of Madrid, La Vuelta 2025 wrapped up in dramatic – and unexpected – fashion. The final stage from Alalpardo to the Spanish capital was cut short as protests spilled onto the road, halting the peloton before the ceremonial laps in the city center. No podium, no procession, but plenty of history: Jonas Vingegaard sealed his first red jersey and Denmark’s first ever La Vuelta win, adding to his two Tour de France titles. Behind him, Joao Almeida confirmed Portugal’s rise onto the Grand Tour stage with second overall, while Tom Pidcock delivered Britain’s first Vuelta podium in four decades – and a new chapter for mountain bikers in the Grand Tours. And as the dust of this chaotic edition settles, names like Mads Pedersen, Jay Vine, and Matthew Riccitello also carve themselves into the record books.
Extended Video Highlights – Stage 21 – La Vuelta 2025
Stage Summary from LaVuelta.com
The final stage of La Vuelta 25 was shortened due to protests in Madrid. After three weeks of racing across Italian, French, Andorran, and Spanish roads, the peloton started the final stage from Alalpardo but was stopped upon reaching the Spanish capital, where the stage ended early to ensure the safety of the riders, and no podium ceremony was held.
Two-time Tour de France winner Jonas Vingegaard (Visma-Lease a Bike) claimed victory in the 80th edition of La Vuelta, making Denmark the 15th nation to win the Spanish Grand Tour.
He was joined on the overall podium by Portugal’s Joao Almeida (UAE Team Emirates-XRG) and Great Britain’s Tom Pidcock (Q36.5), the first MTB Olympic Champion to finish in a Grand Tour top 3.
Mads Pedersen (Lidl-Trek) won the green jersey for a second time, becoming the second rider in history to win the points standings of both the Giro and La Vuelta in the same year, after Eddy Merckx in 1973. Jay Vine (UAE Team Emirates-XRG), winner of the KOM classification for the second consecutive year, became the first rider to defend La Vuelta’s polka-dot jersey successfully since Omar Fraile in 2015 and 2016.
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