Mid-term review of the tour – the momentum is changing: who has the advantage? How are the Swiss doing? Who collected?

class=”sc-29f61514-0 fQbOYE”>

1/8
Inseparable: Pogacar (from left) and Vingegaard regularly attack each other, but literally stay together.
BlickEmployees39.jpg
Blick_Portrait_2101.JPG
Simon Stromer And Mathias Germann

The Dominators are equally strong

They are the great rivals of the Tour de France, who would probably prefer to avoid each other – and yet have to spend every day together: leader Jonas Vingegaard (26) and pursuer Tadej Pogacar (24).

The difference between them is only 10 seconds from last week. The picture at the end of the 15th stage on Sunday is correct: they cross the finish line on Mont Blanc side by side after attacking both. Unintentionally, the Dane and the Slovenian are currently inseparable.

“What they’re delivering is absolutely crazy,” Silvan Dillier (currently ranked 122nd) tells Blick before the last tour week. “We haven’t had a fight like that in a long time, where every second is fought.”

Who now has the advantage?

There are still three main stages before Paris on Sunday: the short but mountainous time trial on Tuesday (22.4 km), the mountain stage to the ski resort of Courchevel with the dangerous finish on Wednesday (165.7 km) and the final confrontation in the mountain stage on Saturday to Markstein Fellering (133.5 km).

More about the Tour de France
Vingegaard and Pogacar are inseparable
Last week will be a thriller
Vingegaard and Pogacar are inseparable
Spectators responsible for the next mass fall
On the 15th stage of the Tour de France
Spectators responsible for the next mass fall
Motor traffic jam delays Pogacar attack on Vingegaard
Spaniard wins in Morzine
Motor traffic jam delays Pogacar attack on Vingegaard
The Tour wants to save drivers after the death of Gino Mäder

Dangerous descent looms
The Tour wants to save drivers after the death of Gino Mäder
New footage has emerged of Saturday's mass fall
Tour de France up close
New footage has emerged of Saturday’s mass fall
Fourth tour joke from Philipsen
The strongest sprinter on the field
Fourth tour joke from Philipsen

Last year’s winner Vingegaard turned out to be the more solid driver, Pogacar the more explosive. After the 64 second mortgage Pogacar got on the 5th stage, he kept gaining seconds with his attacks. On Sunday, however, Vingegaard remained informed. He says, “I was more in control than usual.” Momentum is about to tip back to the leader.

So it is with the Swiss

“To be honest, my muscles are very broken,” says Silvan Dillier (122nd). Mentally it’s fine, but during the stages it’s very tough. “Especially if, like me, you were mainly a spectator of the race.”

Advertisement

Stefan Küng (currently 54th) mourns the day when he felt really good: “It was a pity that I couldn’t join the breakaway group on stage 10 because the whole team had to help the captain. I had great legs then. But it is a very, very difficult road.”

One team has won only 4000 euros so far

Thanks to sprinter Jasper Philipsen (25), Dillier’s Team Alpecin-Deceuninck has already won four stages and won 65,000 euros in prize money. More than any of the other 21 teams. Only eight have won a stage so far. At the end of the ranking: Dsm-Firmenich with only 4000 euros, where captain Romain Bardet (F) had to give up.

There may be no more mass sprint then. Dillier explains: “There are not many sprinters left in the peloton. That offers opportunities for teams that have not yet received a piece of cake. And that’s a lot. The last week is definitely going to be tough.”

Source : Blick

follow:
Emma

Emma

I'm Emma Jack, a news website author at 24 News Reporters. I have been in the industry for over five years and it has been an incredible journey so far. I specialize in sports reporting and am highly knowledgeable about the latest trends and developments in this field.

Related Posts