2023 Tour de France

Vingegaard Climbs Closer To 2023 Tour Title By Crushing Pogacar On Stage 17

Vingegaard Climbs Closer To 2023 Tour Title By Crushing Pogacar On Stage 17

Jonas Vingegaard climbed into a rock-solid lead in the 2023 Tour de France, as his main rival lost almost six minutes on the toughest climb of the event.

Jul 19, 2023 by AFP Report
Vingegaard Climbs Closer To 2023 Tour Title By Crushing Pogacar On Stage 17

Jonas Vingegaard climbed into a rock-solid lead in the 2023 Tour de France on Wednesday, as his main rival, Tadej Pogacar, lost almost six minutes on the toughest climb of the 21 stages.

Felix Gall won Stage 17, billed as the "Queen" stage with 69 kilometers of Alpine climbing, ahead of Simon Yates.

Defending champion Vingegaard of Jumbo Visma increased his lead in the overall standings to a crushing 7 minutes, 35 seconds, with Pogacar second and his UAE teammate Adam Yates up to third at 10 minutes, 45 seconds.

After the race, Vingegaard strolled around the paddock with his daughter in his arms, while his defeated rival sat on a pile of tires staring head down at the ground.

"I don't know what happened, I was empty at the bottom of the climb," said Pogacar, who fell early in the stage. "I'm extremely disappointed."

Vingegaard was asked if he felt he had clinched the Tour.

"I think so," said the 26-year-old who won the Tour in 2022. "I have more than seven minutes lead now, so I'm very happy. But we're not in Paris yet. Tadej will never give up. You know that."


Storm Clouds Gathered Too Early

Ineos rider Carlos Rodriguez slipped to fourth. He is 1 minute, 16 seconds behind Adam Yates and 18 seconds ahead of twin Simon Yates of Jayco Alula.

After Vingegaard pulverized Pogacar in the individual time trial the day before, the Slovenian vowed to fight back, saying he was hoping for bad weather.

But the forecast storms passed in the early hours of the morning, and the run from Saint-Gervais Mont Blanc to Courchevel took place in searing heat.

Both the leading riders and their teams were dope tested an hour before the race set off from the pretty Alpine resort.

With around seven kilometers remaining on the final climb up the Col de la Loze, Pogacar told his team radio, "I'm dead! I can't go on."

Vingegaard skipped away. Adam Yates, freed of his services pacing Pogacar, was on the Dane's tail.

On a Tour, where motorbikes have been much in the news, Vingegaard was stopped by one on the upper reaches of the last mountain after a vehicle stalled, blocking the race director's car.

Thick and excited fans packed the roadsides, as they have done throughout the Tour, leaving Vingegaard no path to ride around the stopped cars. There have been so many incidents, a review of security is likely.

The cool Dane was far from flummoxed and was even slightly annoyed that spectators then gave him a shove to help him get moving again.

The race designer Thierry Gouvenou seemed livid about the incident when he stepped from the car at the finish line.

On Thursday, the race heads back to flat terrain, after four epic stages in the Alps that will go down in Tour folklore.