LE GRAND BORNAND, France, (Reuters) – Defending champion Tadej Pogacar put the hammer down on the Tour de France yesterday as he claimed the overall leader’s yellow jersey with a vintage ride on the eighth stage, a 150.8-km Alpine trek from Oyonnax to Le Grand Bornand.
The young Slovenian attacked on the penultimate ascent of the day, the Col de Romme, to distance all his rivals in a long-range move reminiscent of racing in the 1980s, as Belgian Dylan Teuns won the day’s laurels from the early breakaway. Pogacar was fourth on the stage behind Spain’s Ion Izaguirre and Canadian Michael Woods, second and third respectively, 49 seconds off the pace but with an advantage of more than three minutes on all his rivals for the general classification.
Last year’s runner-up Primoz Roglic of Slovenia and Briton Geraint Thomas, the 2018 champion, were distanced early on and now have zero chance of a podium finish in Paris, after suffering crashes in the first days of racing.
Overall, Pogacar leads Belgian Wout van Aert by one minute 48 seconds and Kazakhstan’s Alexey Lutsenko by 4:38.
The stage got off to a frenzied start with attacks flying before the first proper climbs, which resulted in Roglic and Thomas being dropped as rain poured down, and the duo finished just over 35 minutes off the pace.
“The crash took out more than I thought, “ said Thomas, who hit the ground on the third stage.
“Hard stage, hard start, wet roads, up and down and they were racing in front the whole time so I had no chance to get back (after being dropped early on).
“After a lot of hard work since January finishing with the sprinters 35 minutes behind is tough on the head.”
Stage winner Teuns added: “These were horrific conditions, it was so cold and so wet.”
DRIVING RAIN
The bunch was split in two early on and, once the dust had settled, a group of a dozen riders formed the day’s breakaway in driving rain.
In the first of three first-category climbs, the Col de Romme (8.8km at 8.9%), the group of overall contenders came apart, with Mathieu Van der Poel dropped while Woods was leading solo from the breakaway before being caught and dropped by Teuns. Pogacar jumped away from the group 3.5km from the summit, some 32km from the finish line, and only Ecuador’s Richard Carapaz followed before folding when the Slovenian attacked again.
The 22-year-old Pogacar powered up the last ascent, the Col de la Colombiere (7.5km at 8.5%), swallowing up and spitting out the breakaway riders one by one, with the exception of Teuns.
Pogacar was on Teuns’s heels at the top of the climb but, with his rivals all vanishing in his rear view mirror, he took no risks on the final descent.
Van der Poel, who started the day in yellow, had no real title hopes, and the Dutchman crossed the line almost 21 minutes after Pogacar, who should now just need to avoid any major mishaps to secure a second consecutive title.
“Everybody will fight until the last day but I think he will (successfully) defend his jersey until the end,” said Teuns.