;13 July 2022 –
Albertville to
Col du Granon, in
Saint-Michel-de-Maurienne, prior to the ascent of the
Col du Télégraphe The eleventh stage took the riders into the high mountains, with the race tackling the Col du Granon for the first of two consecutive summit finishes. The Tour climbed the Col du Granon for the first time since
1986. The first was completely flat, with the riders passing through the intermediate sprint in
Aiguebelle after of racing. Afterwards, the riders tackled the second-category Lacets de Montvernier, a climb with an average of 8.2 percent. A short flat section led to the foot of the first-category
Col du Télégraphe, which is long with an average of 7.1 percent. After a short descent, the riders immediately climbed the first
hors categorie climb of the race, the
Col du Galibier. The climb is long with an average of 6.9 per cent. With the climb topping at above sea level, the
Souvenir Henri Desgrange was awarded to the first rider across the top of the highest point reached during the race. Following a long descent, the riders tackled the final climb, the
hors categorie Col du Granon, an climb with an average of 9.2 percent. Following the stage's official start, there was an initial attack by
Wout van Aert () and
Mathieu van der Poel (). Both riders held an advantage as they passed through the intermediate sprint where van Aert took maximum points. They were soon joined by
Mattia Cattaneo () before a group of 17 riders bridged up to the lead group ahead of Lacets de Montvernier. The break of 20 riders was allowed to build an advantage of nine minutes as kept a steady pace at the front of the peloton. At the Col du Télégraphe, the break began to dwindle in number as 11 riders were left up front. Meanwhile, in the peloton, began to set up their plan as
Primož Roglič launched two separate attacks on the Télégraphe. After his second attack, only the
maillot jaune of
Tadej Pogačar (),
Jonas Vingegaard (), and
Geraint Thomas () were able to follow him. With the gap at over half a minute on the rest of the peloton, Roglič and Vingegaard began to repeatedly attack Pogačar, but the
maillot jaune, as well as Thomas, were able to respond each time. Eventually, Pogačar's teammate,
Marc Soler, managed to bridge up to the
maillot jaune group, setting a steady pace before the rest of the reduced peloton got back to the group. On the Col du Galibier, the break continued to drop riders as only van Aert,
Warren Barguil (),
Simon Geschke (),
Dylan Teuns (), and
Pierre Latour () were left in the lead group. With left, Barguil attacked, dropping the rest of his breakaway companions. He gradually increased his gap on the way to taking the Souvenir Henri Desgrange, with Geschke passing the summit of the Galibier at almost a minute down. In the peloton, began attacking Pogačar once again in an attempt to isolate him. Pogačar responded by increasing the pace, with only Vingegaard able to follow him. The duo crossed the top of Galibier at four and a half minutes down on Barguil. On the descent, there was a regrouping as the other contenders came back. The contenders began looking at each other until van Aert, who dropped back from the break, began to pace the group. The Belgian decreased Barguil's lead to around three and a half minutes before the riders reached the Col du Granon. On Col du Granon,
Rafał Majka () began to set a steady tempo, dropping contenders such as Roglič,
David Gaudu (),
Tom Pidcock (),
Aleksandr Vlasov (), and
Alexey Lutsenko (). With around to go,
Nairo Quintana () attacked, with Majka keeping his tempo. Quintana passed the remnants of the breakaway as he got closer to his teammate, Barguil. A few kilometres later,
Romain Bardet () also attacked in pursuit of Quintana, who managed to pass Barguil. Majka kept pacing the
maillot jaune group before Vingegaard launched his attack with left. Pogačar was unable to respond as Vingegaard passed both Bardet and Quintana. The Dane continued to increase his lead all the way to the line while Pogačar suffered, with Thomas, Gaudu, and
Adam Yates () passing and dropping the Slovenian. Vingegaard soloed to his first Tour stage win, 59 seconds ahead of Quintana. Bardet, Thomas, Gaudu, and Yates finished between 1' 10" and 2' 10" behind while Pogačar ended up losing 2' 51". There were massive changes on due to the results of the stage. Vingegaard took the
maillot jaune, 2' 16" ahead of Bardet, who rose to second. Pogačar dropped to third, a further six seconds behind. Thomas, Quintana, Yates, and Gaudu also sit within less than a minute of Bardet in second. Vlasov and Lutsenko entered the top ten after limiting their losses while
Enric Mas () rounded out the top ten at 9' 29" down on Vingegaard. == References ==