At the foot of the Col du Granon, Tadej Pogačar was all smiles, pretending to the camera to swallow a bowl of cereal. As if the repeated attacks of the Jumbo-Visma, about sixty kilometers earlier in the Galibier, had not reached his armor.
In perfect control since the start in Denmark, the 23-year-old Slovenian cracked for the first time in his career at the Tour de France on Wednesday during an 11e memorable step.
The dramatic moment occurred five kilometers from the summit of Granon, a killer pass that the peloton had not visited since 1986 and Bernard Hinault’s last day in yellow.
Jonas Vingegaard, runner-up to Pogačar last year, took a few lengths of the bike without the wearer of the yellow jersey, stuck in the wheel of his UAE teammate Rafal Majka, being able to react.
The Dane barely turned around before continuing his irresistible ascent on the 10% slopes. Swallowing Nairo Quintana, second in the stage, and Warren Barguil, teammates at Arkéa-Samsic, in quick succession, he sped towards his very first stage victory and, against all odds, the yellow jersey.
“It’s really amazing and difficult to describe in words,” said Vingegaard before being interrupted to receive congratulations from teammate Wout van Aert, who again contributed in his own way. “I’ve always dreamed of this: a stage in the Tour and now the yellow jersey. It’s incredible. »
Pogačar’s failure was equally stunning. Isolated, the big favorite until then was overwhelmed in quick succession by Romain Bardet (3e), old Geraint Thomas (4e) and even David Gaudu (5e) and Adam Yates (6e) whose wake he was able to enjoy for a few hectometres.
Jersey wide open, grimacing face, Pogačar crossed the line 2 min 51 s after Vingegaard, a chasm given his superiority since the first of his two coronations on the Champs-Élysées in 2020.
PHOTO DANIEL COLE, ASSOCIATED PRESS
In perfect control since the start in Denmark, Tadej Pogačar cracked for the first time in his career at the Tour de France, Wednesday afternoon, during an 11e memorable step.
At the top, the Slovenian remained prostrate for long seconds on his handlebars. As he passed Vingegaard, who was chatting on the phone on his stationary bike, he shook her hand with a big smile.
“On the Galibier, I always felt very good, he explained shortly after. Jumbo attacked me often, they were really good today. Then, on the last climb, I don’t know, I didn’t have a good end to the day. I suffered until the end. »
In the general classification, Vingegaard gave himself a cushion of 2 min 22 s on Pogačar, relegated to third place. Bardet (+ 2 min 16 s) slipped between the two, confirming his rebirth on the Tour, which he had voluntarily missed last year.
Thomas, Quintana, Yates and Gaudu follow in order at positions 4 to 7, less than a minute from second place.
This veritable overthrow is the result of an operation carefully prepared by Jumbo-Visma, which had almost all of its soldiers marching at full speed. Starting with the inevitable van Aert, who was the first to flee with his best enemy Mathieu van der Poel. The Dutchman, however, gave up, dropping on the first climb. Christophe Laporte, another key element of this crazy day, also slipped into the 20-rider breakaway.
PHOTO DANIEL COLE, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Wout van Aert
The Dutch armada hardened the tempo from the Col du Télégraphe. At the top, only Pogačar, Roglič, Vingegaard and Thomas remained. Laporte waited for them to make the descent to Valloire.
Even before the ascent of the Galibier, Vingegaard and Roglič took turns to unclamp the wearer of the yellow jersey, a high-risk maneuver that had not been seen for decades at this stage of the event. Pogačar pounced each time, giving the impression of perfect control.
The Slovenian even set the pace in the last portion of the Galibier, the highest peak of the Tour, when Roglič stalled for the first time. But Van Aert waited for his teammate on the descent to bring him back to the yellow jersey group, Majka also taking advantage of the Belgian TGV.
Roglič fizzled shortly after the kick, but Vingegaard was ready to draw 5km further.
“At the top of the Galibier, Pogačar was very strong and he let everyone go, recalled the new leader. I was a little worried. I wasn’t sure if he was going all out or not. In the last climb, I said to myself: if I don’t try, I won’t win. »
Pogačar hailed the audacity of his rivals: “They played it very smartly. It’s really difficult for us to control who goes in the breakaways because we’re not much in the team anymore. [6]. We tried, but in the end, van Aert and Laporte were in front and were very brilliant tactically. »
Small consolation, he kept his white jersey as the best young player. With 10 stages on the programme, the double winner has obviously not said his last word. Especially since the next stage this Thursday promises to be just as spectacular with the Galibier (by the other side) – Croix de Fer – Alpe d’Huez sequence.
“The Tour is not over yet. I lost three minutes today, maybe tomorrow I will gain three. I will fight until the end. »
Quebecers in time
The three Quebecers and Michael Woods survived the explosive 11e 151.7 km stage from Albertville to the Col du Granon Serre Chevalier. Antoine Duchesne, 75e almost 30 minutes away, was hard at work for its leader David Gaudu (Groupama) as they approached the spectacular bends of Montvernier, the first pass of the day. For his part, Hugo Houle (Israel-Premier Tech) rocked with the second group at the top of the Telegraph. The native of Sainte-Perpétue reached the finish at 52e rank (+ 27 min 16 s), at the same time as his teammate Woods (58e). Houle fell three places overall and is now 42e. Guillaume Boivin (IPT) finished 117e at 34 min 9 sec.
