Pogacar takes fresh momentum into Tour de France third week

Despite a two minute and 22 second-deficit, the UAE Team Emirates rider can still hope to win a third consecutive Tour

By Reuters

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The UAE Team Emirates rider Tadej Pogacar. (AFP)
The UAE Team Emirates rider Tadej Pogacar. (AFP)

Published: Tue 19 Jul 2022, 12:19 AM

Jonas Vingegaard holds a commanding lead ahead of the final week of the Tour de France, but with the Dane reeling from a crash and having lost two key team mates, the UAE Team Emirates rider Tadej Pogacar is taking a fresh momentum into the Pyrenees.

Defending champion Pogacar was toppled last week in a gruelling Alpine stage after coming under sustained fire from Vingegaard and his Jumbo Visma teammates, but the Slovenian has vowed to fight until the end.


Despite a two minute and 22 second-deficit, the 23-year-old can still hope to win a third consecutive Tour.

On Sunday, Vingegaard hit the deck and sustained bruises on his left side while Steven Kruijswijk crashed out and Primoz Roglic abandoned after failing to recover from a back injury.


It leaves Jumbo Visma down to six riders and with one of them, Tiesj Benoot, battered and bruised after also crashing on Sunday, the Dutch outfit could struggle to control the aggressive Pogacar.

“I need to grab every chance, use every climb there is. I need to try and attack,” Pogacar told reporters on Monday.

“I will give everything and I hope I don’t have any regrets.”

Pogacar tried last Thursday on the climb to l’Alpe d’Huez but after being greatly helped by his team’s fast tempo in the first part of the ascent, Vingegaard followed easily.

With Kruijswijk and Roglic out, the 25-year-old will be less protected.

“It’s going to be a crazy third week,” Groupama-FDJ sports director Philippe Mauduit, whose leader David Gaudu is gunning for a top five finish in Paris, told Reuters.

Tuesday’s 16th stage features two brutal category-one climb before the 17th and 18th stages take the peloton into some of the toughest climbs of the Pyrenees.

Vingegaard said he felt good after his crash.

“I slept well. I’m a bit bruised but I’m good. It stings a little but I’m not hurting,” he said on Monday.

“I still have a two-minute and 22-second lead so we’re good, even if losing two team mates is not a good thing.”


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