Vingegaard virtually assured of Tour de France win despite Stage 20 loss to rival Pogacar | CBC Sports
Tadej Pogacar and Jonas Vingegaard celebrated on the second-to-last day of the Tour de France.
Pogacar pipped the defending champion to take the penultimate stage on Saturday but it won’t be enough to stop his great rival from winning the race again.
Vingegaard maintained his huge lead over two-time champion Pogacar and will surely be crowned the Tour winner after Sunday’s largely ceremonial stage ends on the Champs-Elysees in Paris.
“We have to be careful not to do anything stupid but, yeah, it’s amazing to take my second victory in the Tour de France and I almost cannot believe it,” Vingegaard said.
Pogacar, who won in 2020 and 2021, claimed his second stage win in the 110th edition of cycling’s most famous race but was unable to make up for Vingegaard’s huge advantage built in the Alps. The Danish rider leads by seven minutes 29 seconds.
“I really appreciate the battle I had with Tadej,” Vingegaard said.
Pogacar had been in outstanding form this year, winning nearly everywhere he raced. But the Slovenian crashed at Liege-Bastogne-Liege in April and needed surgery on a broken wrist. It’s hard to say how much that setback impacted his Tour de France hopes.
“Today I finally felt like myself again,” Pogacar said. “It was great to feel good again after many days suffering and to pull off a stage win.”
Saturday’s 133.5-kilometre stage from Belfort to the mountain resort of Le Markstein was the last tough test for the riders and the 3,600 metres of climbing took its toll on many of them.
French cyclist crashed on descent
Young Spanish rider Carlos Rodriguez, who still harbored hopes of overtaking Adam Yates to third place, crashed going around a bend at 33 km. Rodriguez got back on his bike but with blood on his face, arm and leg.
American Sepp Kuss also needed medical attention after a bad crash. It was his second of the Tour.
David Gaudu crashed on the descent from the 1,163-metre-high Petit Ballon. The French rider also rode on in apparent pain.
Belgian rider Victor Campenaerts, wearing the bib for most combative rider for the second straight day, was the first to attack.
Italian cyclist Giulio Ciccone celebrated being crowned the Tour’s “King of the Mountains” at Col de la Schlucht.
Three French riders led by local favourite Thibaut Pinot were among a group of five leaders pushing the pace up Petit Ballon. Pinot decided to go alone six kilometers before the summit, aware that a huge fan party was waiting for him. He crested the summit some 33 seconds ahead of his chasers and 90 seconds ahead of the peloton with Vingegaard and Pogacar.
A smiling Pinot was later crowned the day’s most combative rider.
Pogacar attacked six km before the summit of Col du Platzerwasel, followed closely by Vingegaard. They were joined by Felix Gall and later by the Yates brothers — Simon and Pogacar’s teammate, Adam.
Pogacar attacked again with 2.9 km to go. Again, Vingegaard stayed right on his wheel.
With 250 metres remaining, the Slovenian rider went again. Vingegaard got in front but Pogacar powered past to get the stage win with Gall in between.
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