(Morzine) Could the Tour de France be played on bonuses? Even on the most difficult terrain, defending champion Jonas Vingegaard and double monarch Tadej Pogacar could not create distance between them on Saturday after a dramatic day in the Alps.
In a class of their own, once again Pogacar and Vingegaard finished second and third respectively at Morzine ski resort after another hard-fought battle that concluded a day of attrition in the 14e stage.
Both riders were well ahead of their pursuers in the overall standings at one point on the final ascent, the dreaded Col de Joux Plane. However, they allowed eventual stage winner Carlos Rodriguez to return, while the pair watched each other like track cyclists in a velodrome, waiting for an opening to get the biggest bonus at the top of the steep climb. Vingegaard won this duel.
PHOTO BENOIT TESSIER, REUTERS
Tadej Pogacar followed by Jonas Vingegaard
Michael Woods was the best Canadian on the stage, finishing in 43e position. His compatriots Hugo Houle and Guillaume Boivin respectively took the 58e and 120e ranks.
Rodriguez, a Spaniard making his Tour debut for Ineos-Grenadiers, then moved away from the duo on the descent to Morzine. He completed the course in three hours 58 minutes 45 seconds, five seconds ahead of Pogacar and Vingegaard.
Ottawa’s Michael Woods was the top Canadian with a 43e place, 27:19 from the winner. Quebecer Hugo Houle ranked 58eat 29:03 from Rodriguez, and his compatriot Guillaume Boivin finished at 120e rank, 37:29 from the top.
Vingegaard retained the yellow jersey, increasing his overall lead by one second, to 10 seconds, after Pogacar sprinted to secure second place on the stage.
Rodriguez moved up to third place overall, 4:43 behind Vingegaard, after his first Tour stage win.
He was more than a minute late but he was able to take advantage of the duel between the two leaders to seek victory.
“I didn’t think it was possible when I was dropped into the Joux Plane,” he said.
“I tried to climb at my own pace and then descend as quickly as possible. I am a good descender, I wanted to take advantage of it. I almost fell several times. […] I took risks. »
In the cumulative ranking, Woods moved up from 34e rank at 32e, and its delay on Vingegaard is one hour 26 minutes 43 seconds. Houle (2:13:13) moved up seven places from 67e at the 60e position, while Boivin (3:27:58) now ranks 126e when he was 131e at the start of the day.
Vingegaard accumulated a total of 12 bonus seconds for his first place at the top of the climb and his third place. Pogacar had 11 – second at the top and second at the finish – as the race entered the Alps with a 151.8 kilometer stage between Annemasse and the ski resort of Morzine.
“It’s going to be really tight,” mentioned Pogacar after the race.
For Pogacar, the gloves fell definitively on the last ascent of the day. Literally. He threw them at the start of Joux Plane, the culmination of a brutal segment in the Alps comprising no less than five climbs.
Pogacar and Vingegaard began to climb into the leading group after the last rider in the breakaway was caught 58 kilometers from the finish.
Pogacar was the first to attack at Joux Plane and pulled out a small gap, but Vingegaard got into step and gradually came back to catch the Slovenian UAE Team Emirates rider 1.6 kilometers from the top.
Pogacar then tried another acceleration 500 meters from the top, but he slowed down as the racing bikes got in his way and he had to reduce his effort. His Danish rival from the Jumbo-Visma team then opened the sprint in the last corner before the summit and obtained the eight bonus seconds, against five for Pogacar.
The start of the stage was marked by a pile-up shortly after the peloton left the town of Annemasse.
Spanish rider Antonio Pedrero was evacuated by ambulance and Louis Meintjes, who was 13e overall, retired with a possible broken collarbone. Esteban Chaves, of the EF Education Easypost team, also abdicated.
Dozens of runners crashed into a bend on a slippery road and many were treated. Adrien Petit, Meintjes’ teammate in the Intermarche-Circus-Wanty team, got back on his bike with a bandage on his right leg.
The organizers decided to neutralize the stage for around 15 minutes, before local hopeful Romain Bardet and James Shaw joined the list of retirements further down the road after crashing on a descent. Bardet has been diagnosed with a concussion, the Frenchman’s team have said.
The 15e The 179 kilometer long stage to Saint-Gervais Mont Blanc on Sunday is another difficult hike with a summit finish, before the second rest day on Monday.
THE top 10 of the 14e stage
- 1. Carlos Rodríguez (ESP / IGD) the 151.8 km in 3 h 58: 45 (average: 38.3 km/h)
- 2. Tadej Pogacar (SLO / UAD) at 5 s
- 3. Jonas Vingegaard (DEN/TJV) 5s
- 4. Adam Yates (GBR/UAD) at 10s
- 5. Sepp Kuss (USA/TJV) at 57s
- 6. Jai Hindley (AUS/BOH) at 1:46
- 7. Felix Gall (AUT/ACT) at 1:46
- 8. Pello Bilbao (ESP/TBV) at 3:19
- 9. Simon Yates (GBR/JAY) at 3:21
- 10. Guillaume Martin (FRA/COF) at 5:57
- 43. Michael Woods (CAN/IPT) at 27:19
- 58. Hugo Houle (CAN/IPT) at 29:03
- 120. Guillaume Boivin (CAN/IPT) at 37:29
THE top 10 of the general classification
- 1. Jonas Vingegaard (DEN/TJV) 57:47:28
- 2. Tadej Pogacar (SLO / UAD) at 10 s
- 3. Carlos Rodríguez (ESP / IGD) at 4:43
- 4. Jai Hindley (AUS/BOH) at 4:44
- 5. Adam Yates (GBR/UAD) at 5:20
- 6. Sepp Kuss (USA/TJV) at 8:15
- 7. Simon Yates (GBR/JAY) at 8:32
- 8. Pello Bilbao (ESP/TBV) at 8:51
- 9. Felix Gall (AUT/ACT) at 12:26
- 10. David Gaudu (FRA / GFC) at 12:56
- 32. Michael Woods (CAN/IPT) at 1:26:43
- 60. Hugo Houle (CAN/IPT) at 2:13:13
- 126. Guillaume Boivin (CAN/IPT) at 3:27:58
