Qatar Tribune

Pogacar’s Tour triumph marks generation­al shift

-

IN a dramatic last-gasp turnaround Tadej Pogacar won the Tour de France on Saturday as the overnight leader Primoz Roglic suffered a mountainsi­de meltdown during a thrilling individual time-trial on the last day of real racing.

It was a staggering end to a bizarre Tour and the penultimat­e stage duel between two compatriot­s of different generation­s will go down as one of 2020’s great sporting moments.

The 21-year-old Pogacar will now lead the peloton into Paris on Sunday wearing the overall leader’s yellow jersey and, barring a freak disaster, will climb onto the top step of the podium.

“I cried, I’m sure I’ll cry again,” said Roglic, who led the race 12 days before wilting at the final hurdle.

Staggering­ly, the youngster Pogacar will also pull on the polka dot jersey as best climber on the Tour, and also the white one as best under25s rider.

“I’m just a kid from Slovenia,” he said. “When I started watching in 2009 or 2010 I was following Alberto Contador and Andy Schleck, watching television all day and then riding afterwards.”

“I could hear nothing on the final climb and I went for it with everything,” he said.

After the dust settled Pogacar said he had further targets. “I’ll be going to the world championsh­ips at Imola,” he said ahead of the reschedule­d event next weekend.

Often unlucky Australia’s veteran Richie Porte climbed to third overall here to make the Tour podium for the first time, while Spain’s Mikel Landa and Enric Mas rounded out the top five with strong finishes too.

“It was such a sweet moment,” Porte, 35, said. “Everyone knows the journey I’ve been on to finally end up on the Tour podium after growing up in far away Australia.”

“The two Slovenians were on another planet to us, they threw bricks at each other, there was no holding back,” said the Trek rider.

Porte said he considered staying home as his wife was expecting a baby.

“She told me to go but didn’t want to see me at the back of the peloton.”

Ireland’s Sam Bennett looks set to win the sprinter’s green jersey, but must negotiate the eight lap dash that ends the Tour along Paris’ Champs Elysees on Sunday.

Here in the time-trial Pogacar pulverised the field with his stage-winning performanc­e, and his team hugged and kissed him as they realised the 20202 Tour was theirs.

Roglic, 30, had led the Tour since stage nine and his dramatic meltdown on the final climb means even as loser he remains the big story.

“I had a bad day, he deserved his win. I’m disappoint­ed but I can be proud of second place,” said Roglic. “I don’t have a clear mind, it is how it is,” he said. “I struggled with everything, I just didnt have enough power out there.”

The defeated man was big enough to collect himself and congratula­te the winner. “He’ll be a great rider now for the next ten years,” he predicted.

The younger man also showed much empathy. “I feel sorry for Primoz, I feel his pain, losing the yellow jersey on the last day. He’s a friend of mine,” Pogacar said with sincerity.

Pogacar also is set to become the youngest postwar champion as a generation­al shift takes hold of cycling with a string of young stage winners.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Stage winner Slovenian Tadej Pogacar celebrates his white jersey of best young on the podium after winning the 20th stage of Tour de France, a time trial of 36 km between Lure and La Planche des Belles Filles, on Saturday.
(AFP) Stage winner Slovenian Tadej Pogacar celebrates his white jersey of best young on the podium after winning the 20th stage of Tour de France, a time trial of 36 km between Lure and La Planche des Belles Filles, on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Qatar