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Denmark celebrates home-grown Tour de France winner Vingegaard

Jonas Vingegaard was crowned Tour de France champion on Sunday after a gruelling 3,350km, 21-stage race, ending a journey which had its roots in the mundane surroundings of a fish factory in his native Denmark.

Denmark celebrates home-grown Tour de France winner Vingegaard
Jonas Vingegaard celebrates on the podium wearing the overall leader's yellow jersey after winning the Tour de France. Photo: Christian Hartmann/Reuters/Ritzau Scanpix

He follows compatriot Bjarne Riis who won the world’s most famous bike race — although later admitted to doping — in 1996, the year Vingegaard was born.

“Every day was quick, fast, it’s been rough. There has been a lot of attacking. It must have looked good on television,” said the champion.

It is a stunning success for Vingegaard, three weeks after the race pedalled off from Copenhagen for the first of three stages on home ground.

Over 35,000 paying fans had packed into Copenhagen’s Tivoli Gardens to greet the Tour de France riders before the race.

When it came to the turn of Dutch outfit Jumbo Visma, a roar went up which seemed to overwhelm the 25-year-old co-captain of the team, a quiet, unassuming rider.

Fighting back tears, Vingegaard looked far from a future champion of one of sport’s most difficult endurance tests.

On the opening day time-trial, a wall of sound reverberated around Copenhagen, as their home hope’s progress was tracked along the downtown route.

While much of the rest of the world was unaware of Vingegaard, the man from northern Jutland was already a household name at home.

That was not only because of his cycling skills, but his mother-in-law who shot to national celebrity after competing on the Great Danish Bake Off show, and also featured on Denmark’s version of Dancing with the Stars.

Vingegaard was born in December 1996 and raised in Hillerslev, a fishing village of just 370 inhabitants, in a completely flat landscape on the shores of the North Sea.

Denmark’s previous Tour winner Riis was born in Herning, around 100km from Hillerslev.

As a child, Vingegaard played handball and football before turning to cycling after watching the Tour of Denmark pass close to his home.

With his slender frame and the windy flatlands of Denmark, his staggering climbing skills were yet to be revealed.

He joined Colo-Quick, a continental Tour team, at 19 and worked in a fish business in the mornings before training.

“I had to get up early, but it gave me something to do, and I wasn’t sure if I would become a professional cyclist,” Vingegaard said.

It was at Colo-Quick that he met his partner Trine Hansen, a marketing manager who is nine years his senior, with the couple having a young daughter Frida.

“He told me he was going to be a banker, and I thought I’d be a banker’s wife,” Hansen said this week.

Vingegaard joined Jumbo in 2019, where he says he “learned to cycle”.

He came to prominence at last year’s Tour de France, where riding under the radar he suddenly found himself team leader when Primoz Roglic crashed out, finishing second.

Shy and retiring, he refuses nearly all television engagements, relying on Trine to front the family image while he gets on with the cycling.

He relentlessly thanks her when interviewed, speaking of “his two girls at home” being the rocks of his life.

After meeting French President Emmanuel Macron following stage 18, Vingegaard was stunned.

“He knew my name,” said Vingegaard who admits he has had problems in the past with self-confidence.

On this Tour, he bettered two-time defending champion Tadej Pogacar on both the toughest mountain stages to clinch the champion’s yellow jersey that will make him a hero in his homeland.

“I don’t know how this will affect our lives, but I grew up somehow,” said Vingegaard. “But I feel better than ever”.

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SPORT

How you can still get a ticket for the sold-out Öresund Bridge Run

The Bridge Run 2025, a half-marathon across the Öresund Bridge from Denmark to Sweden, sold out within hours when tickets went on sale on February 1st. But disappointed runners who missed out may still be able to toe the starting line.

How you can still get a ticket for the sold-out Öresund Bridge Run

The 21.1-kilometre Bridge Run will be held on June 15th, 2025 to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the bridge’s opening in 2000. Runners will set out from Copenhagen suburb Tårnby and cover the full 16 kilometres of the tunnel and bridge sections of the crossing, finishing in Swedish city Malmö.

Some 40,000 race bibs were available to participants when registrations for the unique running event opened on February 1st, but massive interest and technical issues with the ticketing platform frustrated many as the event sold out in just two hours.

Over 100,000 people were in the queue to buy tickets on the day, according to the Bridge Run website.

READ ALSO: Denmark-Sweden bridge half marathon sells all 40,000 tickets in two hours

Race organisers MAI (Malmö Allmänna Idrottsförening) in Malmö and Sparta Athletics & Running have now confirmed a waiting list system for those who would like the chance to be offered a ticket if somebody else decides to sell their registration, for example due to injury, illness or other plans.

Registration for the waiting list is open on the Sportstiming platform, which was also used for race registration.

“We always experience a level of buying and selling of bibs at big races,” the Bridge Run website states.

Once a participant sells their ticket back to the event through the exchange platform, a buyer is found from the waiting list via ballot, it explains.

That person will then receive an email with a link to register for the event. They have 24 hours to respond before the bib is offered to the next person.

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