Pogacar drops Vingegaard to claim stage 6 of the Tour

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Just 24 hours after losing more than a minute to his biggest rival at the Tour de France, Pogacar showed he was not ready to give up, and revived the suspense at cycling’s biggest race.

Pogacar claimed a 10th career stage win on Thursday after a stunning counterattack that dropped the reigning champion in the finale of the second and last stage in the Pyrenees.

“I would not say revenge, but it’s good to win today and take back some time,” Pogacar said after an epic day of racing in thin air. “I feel a little bit of relief and feel much better now.”

Vingegaard crossed the finish line 24 seconds behind Pogacar following their pulsating duel and seized the yellow jersey, 25 seconds ahead of his Slovenian rival.

“I would say it’s almost perfect the gap, and it’s going to be a big, big battle until the last stage,” Pogacar said.

Overnight leader Jai Hindley dropped to third place overall, 1 minute 34 seconds off the pace.

The brutal 145-kilometer stage 6 with a mountaintop finish from the southwestern city of Tarbes to the Plateau of Cambasque featured three tough climbs including the legendary Col du Tourmalet.

It was on the steepest part of the famed mountain pass, in thin air, that Vingegaard, riding behind a small group of breakaway riders, started the battle.

After his Jumbo-Visma teammates asphyxiated competition with a frenetic pace that made most of the other contenders crack, Vingegaard launched a sharp attack about 1.5 kilometers from the summit. Pogacar was the only one able to follow.

“The display Jonas showed yesterday was incredible and I was thinking when they started pulling on the Tourmalet, ‘If it’s going to happen like yesterday we can pack our bags and go home,’” Pogacar said. “Luckily I had good legs today and could follow on the Tourmalet quite comfortably.”

Vingegaard’s teammate, Wout van Aert, who was part of the early breakaway and rode furiously throughout the day, waited for his leader in the downhill as a group of eight riders gathered at the front before the final grind with some steep sections with an 11% gradient.

The tireless Van Aert accelerated again with five kilometers left to set up Vingegaard’s second attack of the day, with Pogacar and Michal Kwiatkowski taking his wheel.

The Polish rider was quickly dropped and the duelists were on their own for the last three kilometers of the stage, spurred on by the vociferous cries of buoyant fans lining up the road and lighting flares. Pogacar then placed his explosive counterattack with 2.6 kilometers left and never looked back.

Friday’s 170-kilometer stage from Mont-de-Marsan to Bordeaux is mainly flat and should offer some relief to the main contenders, with sprinters expected to fight for the win.

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