Ben Healy maintains yellow jersey at Tour de France after Stage 11
Ben Healy successfully defended his lead at the Tour de France on Stage 11, retaining the yellow jersey. Defending champion Tadej Pogacar faced a setback, allowing Healy to maintain his 29-second lead. The stage was eventful, with a protester disrupting the sprint finish. Stage 12 will feature the Tour's first high-mountain showdown on Hautacam.

Ben Healy will wear the yellow jersey at the Tour de France again on Thursday after safely defending his lead on an incident-packed Stage 11.
Defending champion Tadej Pogacar suffered a crash 5km from the end, moments before a protester disrupted the sprint finish where Norway's Jonas Abrahamsen claimed his first Tour stage victory.
Healy was in the peloton, crossing the line safely three minutes later over three minutes after a lumpy and relatively short 156.8km loop that started and began in Toulouse.
Pogacar went down after touching wheels with another rider but quickly remounted and the peloton eased off to allow the overall race favourite to rejoin.
Healy explained that he had a brief chat with two-time Tour champion Jonas Vingegaard, seen as Pogacar's main rival for the title, and both agreed they should wait for the Slovenian.
Healy, the fourth Irish cyclist to wear the yellow jersey retains his 29-second lead with no difference from yesterday for the top 10 in the general classification.
Stage 12 on Thursday will bring the Tour’s first high-mountain showdown with a summit finish on the legendary Hautacam.
Having produced a typically aggressive display last Thursday to claim his first Tour de France stage win, Healy again took the initiative on Monday to finish third on the Bastille Day stage and sensationally wrest the GC lead from Pogacar.
All eyes will be on Pogacar following today's crash, with Healy hoping to extend his time in possession of the le Maillot Jaune.
\"I’m optimistic,\" he said. \"I think it’s going to be a pretty hard fight to hold on to yellow, but I’m going to fight right until the end. Hopefully I’ll have some super legs tomorrow.\"
As the stage reached its dramatic conclusion, a protester wearing a T-shirt reading \"Israel out of the Tour\" and waving a Palestinian keffiyeh scarf ran onto the final straight, just 50 metres from the line.
According to the source: RTE.ie.
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