Added verified internal links to the stage 3 race report and stage 3 preview. (ProCyclingUK)

Tour de France 2026 - Étape 3 - Granollers / Les Angles (195,9 km) - Liam Slock (Lotto Intermarché), Torstein Traeen (Uno-X Mobility), Joel Nicolau (Caja Rural-Seguros RGA), Louis Vervaeke (Soudal Quick-Step) et Thibault Guernalec (TotalEnergies)

Tour de France 2026 stage 3 fines: sticky bottles, feeding breaches and yellow cards

The commissaires were busy after stage 3 of the Tour de France 2026, with fines issued for sticky bottles, feeding infringements, inappropriate behaviour and vehicle movement breaches during the 195.9km stage from Granollers to Les Angles.

In total, the jury handed out 3,900 CHF in fines, with four yellow cards also issued. The sanctions were confirmed in jury decision no. 3 following Monday’s stage.

Quick summary

Incident typePeople sanctionedPenalty
Irregular feeding / sticky bottle41,400 CHF total
Feeding rule breaches / inappropriate behaviour31,000 CHF total, 1 yellow card
Vehicle movement breaches31,500 CHF total, 3 yellow cards
Total103,900 CHF, 4 yellow cards
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Sticky bottle fines for Hoole and Braz Afonso

Two riders were fined under article 2.12.007-4.11 for irregular feeding, specifically the familiar “sticky bottle” offence. This usually refers to a rider receiving a bottle from a team car or assistant and holding on for longer than permitted, gaining a short tow in the process.

The riders fined were:

RiderTeamFine
Daan HooleDecathlon CMA CGM Team200 CHF
Clément Braz AfonsoGroupama-FDJ United200 CHF

Their sports directors were also fined more heavily for the same incident category.

Sports directorTeamFine
Yvon CaerGroupama-FDJ United500 CHF
Luke RoweDecathlon CMA CGM Team500 CHF

That made the sticky bottle section alone worth 1,400 CHF in fines.

Feeding infringements bring more penalties

There were also sanctions under article 2.12.007-4.12, relating to non-compliance with article 2.3.025 by a team assistant during feeding.

Cofidis sports director Sébastien Hinault was fined 200 CHF for inappropriate behaviour.

Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe sports director Patxi Vila received three separate infringements, with a fine of 200 CHF for each infraction, bringing his total to 600 CHF.

PersonTeamReasonPenalty
Sébastien HinaultCofidisInappropriate behaviour during feeding200 CHF
Patxi VilaRed Bull-Bora-HansgroheThree feeding-related infringements600 CHF

Tudor Pro Cycling Team staff member Raphael Meyer was also fined 200 CHF and given a yellow card.

UAE sports director among those given yellow cards

The most serious-looking section of the communiqué concerned vehicle movements in the race convoy.

Under article 2.12.007-6.3, three people were fined for a breach of regulations or instructions concerning vehicle movements during the race, or for failing to comply with instructions from commissaires or the organisation.

Each received a 500 CHF fine and a yellow card.

PersonRole / teamPenalty
Andrej HauptmanUAE Team Emirates XRG sports director500 CHF, yellow card
Jean Antoine PonceTV motorbike pilot500 CHF, yellow card
Kurt VandenborrePhoto motorbike pilot500 CHF, yellow card

That part of the decision accounted for 1,500 CHF in fines and three of the four yellow cards issued after the stage.

No time penalties listed after stage 3

The commissaires’ decision did not list any sporting time penalties from these incidents. The sanctions were financial, with yellow cards added in the cases involving Raphael Meyer and the three vehicle movement breaches.

That matters because Tour de France 2026 stage 3 was already one of the first major stress points of the race, taking the peloton into the mountains early and forcing teams to manage positioning, feeding and convoy movements under pressure.

The main takeaway is that the jury took a firm line on race convoy conduct and feeding-zone behaviour on a demanding mountain stage into Les Angles. While sticky bottle fines are relatively routine in Grand Tours, the combination of team staff, sports directors and motorbike pilots being sanctioned gives the stage 3 communiqué a broader significance.