As it happened: Tour de Suisse stage 3 sees two-up breakaway hold off the sprinters’ teams in dramatic fashion

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That’s Narvaez’s fourth win of the season after his triple stage win at the Giro d’Italia last month. He’s been brilliant for UAE since joining in 2025 – not long after he beat Pogačar in a two-up sprint on the opening day of the 2024 Giro.

Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates-XRG), after two days of attacking, enjoys a rare quiet day in the peloton, retaining his yellow jersey and big overall lead ahead of the two key GC days that will finish this race at the weekend – Saturday’s time trial and Sunday’s big mountain stage.

Finish line shot

BAD RAGAZ, SWITZERLAND - JUNE 19: Jhonatan Narvaez of Ecuador and UAE Team Emirates - XRG celebrates at finish line as stage winner during the 89th Tour de Suisse 2026, Stage 3 a 157.4km stage from Bad Ragaz to Bad Ragaz / #UCIWT / on June 19, 2026 in Bad Ragaz, Switzerland. (Photo by Tim de Waele/Getty Images)

(Image credit: Getty Images)

We’ve unfortunately no idea how that final kilometre played out but Narvaez has taken it! He’s outsprinted Meurisse just ahead of the galloping peloton. What a win!

Jhonatan Narváez (UAE Team Emirates-XRG) wins stage 3 of the Tour de Suisse

The race communications systems have gone down, so we’re in the dark in the final kilometre!

Television footage goes down!

NSN pick it up again. 2.5km to go and 30 seconds is the gap.

Pogacar finds himself on the front! He’s obviously not going to chase… it looks like game over for the sprinters.

The chase is falling apart here. They’re aren’t enough men in line here to keep this pace high in consistent fashion.

Pinarello send a man towards the front of the peloton. New helper? Not a chance – Meurisse is up the road and they’re trying to get in the way and disrupt this chase.

Narvaez and Meurisse continue to trade turns flawlessly. However this shakes out, what a ride from those two. It might end in heartbreak but imagine if they can pull it off…

It’s raining again and Movistar post a rider to the front so that’s another set of legs, but the gap, which had started to tumble, has slowed once more in his rate of depletion.

1:10 is the gap with 12km to go!

Those teams do have more riders further back in the bunch. They’ll all want to save their lead-out rider, as well as one or two others for the final 5km.

Seven riders are currently sharing the work in front of UAE at the head of the peloton – two from Visma, two from NSN, and one apiece from EF, NSN, Jayco, and Lidl-Trek.

The gap comes down below the two-minute mark and it has finally started to tumble…

Jayco and Movistar back involved again, and Lidl-Trek are now working. This looks like enough firepower on paper but the gap is not coming down very quickly…

The rain has stopped (though the roads are still wet) and that seems to allow for the pace to pick up, with Jayco, Visma, and EF riding hard.

The gap ducks under the 3-minute mark with 35km to go.

Torrential rain now. You can see the raindrops bouncing back up off the tarmac.

UAE are also prominent with the yellow jersey Tadej Pogačar not far from the front. They’re just trying to stay safe in this rain and might possibly be tempted to try and lightly disrupt this chase given they have Narvaez out front.

There’s the rain. The roads are soaked already.

The skies have gone gloomy, there are storms breaking over the hills in the near distance, so we could be in for some rough weather in the finale of this stage.

Here’s a shot of our breakaway duo

BAD RAGAZ, SWITZERLAND - JUNE 19: (L-R) Jhonatan Narvaez of Ecuador and UAE Team Emirates - XRG and Xandro Meurisse of Belgium and Team Pinarello Q36.5 Pro Cycling compete in the breakaway during the 89th Tour de Suisse 2026, Stage 3 a 157.4km stage from Bad Ragaz to Bad Ragaz / #UCIWT / on June 19, 2026 in Bad Ragaz, Switzerland. (Photo by Tim de Waele/Getty Images)

(Image credit: Getty Images)

The peloton is taking this descent a little more gently than the leaders. The gap had come down to 3:30 but it’s nudging back out again now. Still, it looks like enough teams are invested in chasing this down for a sprint.

Narvaez and Meurisse are taking on that last downhill now and once again it’s Narvaez who’s the more comfortable descender, taking the corners far more fluidly, while Meurisse keeps having to sprint out of the bends.

All ambition and optimism looks to be draining from the chase group. They haven’t completely backed off but plenty of conversations are happening and as they slip further behind the two leaders (3:05 now), they’re close to being caught by the peloton, which is closing 40 seconds behind them.

The riders are now taking on a fast downhill and it’s complicated by a sudden deluge of rain.

The eight riders in the chase group are: Alexandr Vlasov (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe), Michal Kiwatkowski (Netcompany-Ineos), Antonio Tiberi (Bahrain Victorious), Ewen Costiou (Groupama-FDJ United), Emiel Verstrynge (Alpecin-Premier Tech), Max Schachmann (Soudal-QuickStep), Simon Dalby (Uno-X Mobility), Marco Brenner (Tudor Pro Cycling).

Meurisse and Narvaez are well clear now and it looks like the peloton has completely backed off.

Kwiatkowski has been dropped by Narvaez and Meurisse have opened a gap of nearly two minutes on the peloton. There are eight chasers in between as we hit the ramps that take us up onto the day’s second climb.

The road has flattened out between the two climbs, and there are two big bunches so the peloton is effectively split in two but the situation is still fluid.

The breakaway swells to 16 riders but more and more riders look to jump across and that’s bringing things back together towards the top of this first climb.

Here’s a first shot of our breakaway

BAD RAGAZ, SWITZERLAND - JUNE 19: (L-R) Sam Oomen of Netherlands and Team Lidl - Trek and Axel Laurance of France and Netcompany INEOS Cycling Team compete in the breakaway during the 89th Tour de Suisse 2026, Stage 3 a 157.4km stage from Bad Ragaz to Bad Ragaz / #UCIWT / on June 19, 2026 in Bad Ragaz, Switzerland. (Photo by Tim de Waele/Getty Images)

(Image credit: Getty Images)

After 25km, the breakaway has established itself with a lead of 90 seconds.

This could well be our break of the day. The peloton, which had split, has now reformed and the gap has gone out to 40 seconds after 15km of racing.

Groves looks to be one of those riders off the back – not the best sign with a couple of bigger climbs to come before long.

The stage starts out with a climb that’s uncategorised but still difficult, and it’s seeing plenty of riders dropped already. Nothing sticking off the front just yet, although Bauke Mollema has just had a pop.

Start delayed

The riders are still on the start line and we’re hearing the roll-out has been pushed back to 2pm local time, so in just over 10 minutes. No reason has been given as yet.

We don’t have a huge number of pure sprinters in this race. Matthew Brennan (Visma-Lease a Bike) stands out, while the likes of Corbin Strong (NSN), Orluis Aulaur (Movistar), Luke Lampert (EF), and Marius Mayrhofer (Tudor) are here. Alpecin-Deceuninck are an interesting one – they were meant to have Jasper Philipsen before he changed his mind about coming, but the team do have Kaden Groves and a certain Mathieu van der Poel.

The riders have all signed on for the stage and they’re about to roll out. The start proper is coming up in just over five minutes’ time.

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