The solo breakaway requires a certain type of rider. To be out on your own all day with a peloton of stage-hungry sprinters chasing you down, knowing your chances of staying away are slim, requires grit, determination, a degree of insanity and incredible self-belief. Not just in your legs, but also in the equipment you are using.
That was the position Baptiste Veistroffer found himself in on stage 5 from Lannemezan to Pau, the third most visited town in the Tour's history, riding solo for the best part of the day's 158.3km under a punishing southern French sun. His gap hovered at around three minutes for most of the day, the peloton seemingly happy to leave him hanging out there on his own. Afterwards, he admitted he couldn't quite understand why nobody had joined him, noting there are plenty of riders who barely feature across the three-week race.
It is exactly the kind of day an aero bike is made for, and Veistroffer's Lotto-Intermarché team-issue Orbea Orca Aero was just the ticket for a day-long adventure off the front.

Orbea launched the fourth-generation Orca Aero just days before this Tour de France. The first Orca Aero arrived in 2017, with the previous generation landing in 2022. It was a fast bike, but aero bikes have moved on, and simply being quick in a wind tunnel is no longer enough. The headline number is a claimed 21-watt advantage over that outgoing model as a complete bike package. The days of huge aero gains from previous bikes in one area are gone; instead, gains come from the bike and rider as a whole.

The frameset alone accounts for a 5.1-watt reduction in drag at 50kph, achieved through a reshaped head tube, a redesigned fork with wider blades to smooth airflow across yaw angles, and a keel-like structure at the bottom bracket that channels air toward the rear wheel. The rest of the saving comes from what Orbea calls its "total system approach", treating the bike and rider as one aerodynamic object rather than optimising a frame in isolation.

One unique feature of the bike is its low bottom bracket. Normally, this figure is lowered for handling benefits. Moving the centre of gravity down improves weight distribution and corner feel, but it has another benefit, too. Orbea says the Orca Aero's 78mm bottom bracket drop reduces frontal area as well as improving control at speed and through corners. Precisely the conditions Veistroffer would have faced alone in the wind on the run into Pau, with nobody's wheel to shelter behind or follow through the technical sections.
That positional benefit is worth an additional 14 watts at 50kph on the flat, according to Orbea's figures, which matters enormously when every one of those watts has to come from a single rider's legs rather than being shared among a chasing group of loyal domestiques.

There's a practical dimension too. Orbea has paired that low bottom bracket with 37mm of tyre clearance, the widest in the WorldTour peloton. Offering more comfort and allows the team to use whatever width rubber they feel is best suited to the stage. Being aero and comfortable no doubt played a part in helping Baptiste stay away for as long as he did.

Weight has also been addressed, an area where the old Orca Aero was often criticised. A size 53 frame with Dura-Ace Di2 now comes in at around 7kg, a weight that puts it firmly in line with rival aero platforms without resorting to using superlight trick parts, meaning riders like Veistroffer no longer have to choose between an aerodynamic bike and one light enough to survive a lumpy transitional stage.

It is worth remembering why any of this matters. Modern WorldTour racing has made the lone break something of an endangered species. Team budgets have deepened, sprint trains are more disciplined, and the old habit of letting a break dangle for sponsor exposure has sadly largely disappeared. Sprinters' teams have worked out that controlling even harmless breakaways tightly is more physiologically and no doubt psychologically efficient than flat out for the final 50 kilometres, which is exactly why gaps rarely stretch beyond a few minutes anymore, much to the dismay of the poor TV commentators desperately trying to fill the time till the finale.

That context makes Veistroffer's ride more than just a piece of individual theatre. Days without any breakaway at all have become more common on flat sprint stages, and in going up the road alone he preserved the shape and tradition of the race itself. He described Tadej Pogačar's and Mads Pedersen's gestures of appreciation afterwards, along with acknowledgement from other riders in the bunch, showing it's not just us as viewers who appreciated his efforts.
None of that changes the physics, though. A lone rider generates all his own aerodynamic drag, with no draft to hide in, for hours on end, in temperatures that pushed the race towards its extreme-weather protocols. If there was ever a scenario built to justify every gram and every watt Orbea's engineers chased in developing the new Orca Aero, it was this one – a rider alone against the wind, the road, and 181 riders quite content to let him have it his own way.