Advertisement

Tadej Pogacar turns the screw on rivals with thrilling stage seven win at Tour de France

Tadej Pogacar celebrates as a devastated Jonas Vingegaard sinks (AFP via Getty Images)
Tadej Pogacar celebrates as a devastated Jonas Vingegaard sinks (AFP via Getty Images)

Tadej Pogacar won a thrilling, agonising finish to stage seven atop the brutal Super Planche des Belles Filles, as the reigning Tour de France champion made another major statement in his quest for a third successive yellow jersey.

Pogacar (UAE Emirates) gradually came to the front of the peloton as it hunted down the breakaway, rider by rider, on a 177km route from Nancy to La Planches in the Vosges Mountains, until his teammate Rafal Majka moved aside and waved his leader through to chase the only rider left ahead, German 25-year-old Lennard Kamna (Bora-Hansgrohe).

With the finish line in sight and a wild crowd urging him through a corridor of noise, Kamna seemed set to crawl home to a hard-earned victory having launched a solo bid for home on the final climb. Yet the painfully steep finale to La Planche, up high where the asphalt road turns to gravel track, takes a toll, a price too high for Kamna, and he was overtaken in the final 100m by a surging Pogacar and his fiercest rival, last year's runner-up Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma).

Vingegaard was the one to kick hardest and with barely 10 metres remaining he led this creeping ‘sprint’ finish, grinding his tyres into the dirt as he tried to desperately to haul himself over the line, all playing out as if in slow-motion. Then came the relentless Pogacar, a luminous yellow juggernaut passing barely a bike length from the finish and glancing back over his shoulder as if to ask the Dane whether he could respond. Vingegaard's head dropped as Pogacar raised a triumphant fist in celebration.

This climb has become a modern classic of the Tour de France and it was where the prodigious Pogacar took hold of the 2020 edition. History rhymed two years on, where the increase in his overall race lead to 35 seconds was nothing compared to the psychological blow of withstanding and ultimately crushing Vingegaard's gutsy assault.

“It was really, really difficult, especially in the end, the last part when Jonas attacked," Pogacar said afterwards. "He was so strong. My boys were working all day so I had to push to the finish line, especially with my family at the bottom of the climb. We have launched a new foundation today for cancer research and I wore special shoes for it, and so I really wanted to win. It was in my mind already since the route was [announced] and it was a big goal to win today.”

Pogacar has now won the past two stages not necessarily because he needed to but because he wanted to, and he has the look of a man who will not be denied, no matter the strength and depth of teams like Jumbo-Visma or Ineos, who have four riders inside the top 10 after Geraint Thomas and co did well to keep pace for most of the final ascent.

With the Alps and Pyrenees still to come, this race is far from over. Vingegaard did indeed take time from Pogacar in the highest mountains last year, and the champion took care to praise his rival at the finish. “For sure [Vingegaard is strong]. Right now he is one of the strongest climbers in the world, probably the best in the world, with a strong team around him.”

Vingegaard's teammate Primoz Roglic finished third, though he remains almost three minutes down on Pogacar overall after crashing on stage 6. Then came a devastated Kamna (who wasn’t even compensated by the most combative rider award, given to fellow breakawayer Simon Geschke) in fourth, before Thomas in fifth.

His Ineos teammates Adam Yates, Dani Martinez and Tom Pidcock (who was wearing the best young rider's white jersey by virtue of Pogacar already wearing yellow) were not far behind and they are all within two minutes of Pogacar overall, with Thomas third in the standings at 1 min 10 sec back.

“It’s good that we’re all there just going into the next two days and the next two weeks as well," Thomas said afterwards. "We haven’t even done a proper mountain stage yet! We’re all in there, and we’ll try to use those numbers not just attacking for the hell of it but trying to use those numbers and we'll see what we can do.”

more to follow...