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TOUR DE FRANCE

Champion Vingegaard leads Tour de France back to Paris

Champion-in-waiting Jonas Vingegaard leads the Tour de France peloton into Paris on Sunday on the final day of a storied race animated by a tense tussle with two-time former winner Tadej Pogacar.

Champion Vingegaard leads Tour de France back to Paris
AG2R Citroen Team's Austrian rider Felix Gall (L), Jumbo-Visma's Danish rider Jonas Vingegaard wearing the overall leader's yellow jersey (R). Photo: Etienne GARNIER/AFP.

The winners jerseys for the various disciplines will be awarded — yellow for overall champion Vingegaard, white for Pogacar as best youngster, Giulio Ciccone polka dot for best climber and Jasper Philipsen the green for his four sprint finish wins.

The 150 or so remaining riders cycle into Paris along the banks of the Seine and roll past the cafes and clubs of Saint Michel towards the culminating eight laps of the Champs Elysees.

Vingegaard, the champion also in 2022, described the race as “the best in the world” after three intense weeks that started in Bilbao on July 1.

Jumbo’s sports director Merijn Zeeman told AFP ahead of the stage their star had repaid their belief in him.

“The joy was more extreme last year, it’s hard to compare wins, perhaps this time the joy is deeper,” Zeeman said.

Tour director Christian Prudhomme used boxing terms to describe the struggle between the two chief protagonists.

“They went 15 rounds and then there was a punch in the gut, a knee on the floor and a knock out punch,” he said Sunday.

Pogacar constantly attacked in the rolling hills of the Basque Country. But Vingegaard stunned the Slovenian in the Pyrenees to take a lead of just under a minute before his rival clawed back seconds here and there in the vineyards of Bordeaux and Beaujolais and on the highlight July 14 ascent of the Puy de Dome.

The race was decided over a quartet of Alpine stages in week three, where Vingegaard looked stronger but bided his time until a sizzling time trial shattered his rival.

On the Queen stage climb to the chic Courchevel ski resort Pogacar snapped, as Vingegaard skipped away to take a lead of over seven minutes.

Former champion Andy Schleck was impressed by Vingegaard’s strategy on the stage 16 time trial.

“He could have done it blindfolded. He didn’t so much prepare for the Tour de France as prepare that specific stage,” Schleck said Sunday.

‘It ain’t over til it’s over’

Vingegaard said he felt “euphoric” after surviving Saturday’s penultimate stage to virtually clinch his second successive title.

After crossing the line high in the Vosges, Vingegaard now only needs to ride into Paris to pull on the yellow jersey beneath the Arc de Triomphe as winner of the world’s greatest bike race again.

“It ain’t over til it’s over, so the feeling now is even more euphoric than when I took the big lead on stage 17,” said the Jumbo-Visma rider.

“The Tour de France is the greatest race in the world,” beamed the 26-year-old.

“There’s something so special about it and I can tell you I’ll be back again next year to try and win it again.”

Pogacar won the 20th stage but Denmark’s Vingegaard leads the Slovenian by 7min 29sec ahead of Sunday’s ceremonial ride to the finish line.

“I don’t know what happened to me. I took on too much this year and after two weeks I started to look as white as this shirt,” said runner-up Pogacar, pointing to his best under-25 rider’s white jersey.

Runner-up to Pogacar in 2021, the softly-spoken Vingegaard was the only rider to challenge the Slovenian prodigy in the high mountains.

In 2022, he went one step higher and won the title at altitude, and it proved to be the case again in 2023.

Meanwhile Vingegaard’s team confirmed he will compete in the Vuelta in Spain at the end of August, as he bids to follow Chris Froome, who won both races in 2017.

The Danish climber will share the role of team leader with Slovenian Primoz Roglic, winner of this year’s Giro d’Italia, and a three-time Vuelta champion.

Veteran British sprinter Mark Cavendish announced he will make an announcement later Sunday over a potential participation at the 2024 Tour de France.

The Astana rider crashed out in stage eight to end his bid to break the all-time record of 34 stage wins which he shares with Belgian great Eddy Merckx.

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SPORT

‘Dazzling’ finish to new-look men’s Tour de France route

High altitude, an Italian debut in Florence and a finale on the French Riviera are on the itinerary of the 3,492km route for the 2024 Tour de France unveiled on Wednesday.

'Dazzling' finish to new-look men's Tour de France route

The route embarks from Florence on June 29 and features four high altitude finishes as the race crosses the Alps twice and squeezes in two time-trials, including a potential high drama final day run from Monaco to Nice on July 21.

It is the first time the race will not finish in Paris which is off limits as it prepares to host the Olympic Games.

 As spectacular as it is atypical, the route was revealed at a Gala overseen by Christian Prudhomme, president of the organisers ASO in front of almost 4,000 guests and many of the expected competitors, mayors from along the route and a large press pack at a conference centre in Paris.

The Florence start and Nice finish were already known, prompting much excitement about not only the first ever Grand Depart in Italy, but the race’s first ever finale outside Paris.

“It’s difficult to replace Paris, so what better scenery could we give than than a dazzling Monaco to Nice time-trial,” said Prudhomme.

Instead of the traditional last day parade along the Champs Elysees, fans can instead anticipate a potentially decisive individual time trial down the Riviera coastline and in the hills between Monaco and Nice.

The scenario brings to mind the 1989 edition when American rider Greg LeMond beat Laurent Fignon by eight seconds on a last day dash.

After the Florence start, the race takes in Rimini on the Adriatic coast before cutting across Italy via Bologna and Turin and into France via the Alps on stage four.

“The Tour has never climbed so high, so early,” said Prudhomme. “The panoramas in the high Alps are just splendid.”

Stage six will catch the eye of wine lovers as it takes in the “Route des Grands Crus” between Macon and Dijon while stage seven goes through the vineyards of Nuits-Saint-Georges in Bourgogne.

There are a series of stages for the one-day specialists and for the sprinters, but the southern Alps will likely mark the start of the final battle for the yellow jersey.

“Could this herald a duel playing out between two, three, or – let’s dream a little here – even four contenders,” Prudhomme said after the 2023 Tour was marked by the two way duel between Jonas Vingegaard and Tadej Pogacar.

A more generous than usual 60km total over the two time-trials will please the fast men such as Remco Evenepoel or Primoz Roglic.

The seven mountain stages, meanwhile, and four high altitude finales with the highest at 2802m on stage 19, will be very much to the liking of defending champion Vingegaard.

After Troyes in the Champagne region the race swoops south-east toward Pau and the Pyrenees, then heads west through Nimes back to the Alps and and the mouthwatering finale on the Riviera.

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