The Citizen (KZN)

Time trial brought Roglic to tears

- Paris

– Cycling’s reschedule­d Tour de France made a proud entry into Paris on Sunday with its boyish champion Tadej Pogacar the figurehead of a storied 21-day extravagan­za crowned by a twist in the tail.

Many predicted the Covid-19 pandemic would prevent the race making it the 3 400 kilometres from the Mediterran­ean city of Nice to the French capital.

And that ever-constant tension provided the drumbeat for the series of cautionary tales and the modern day David slaying Goliath re-enactment that unfolded before a stunned global audience.

Saturday’s gut-wrenching penultimat­e stage time trial saw the 21-year-old Pogacar rip the yellow jersey from his 30-year-old Slovenian compatriot Primoz Roglic on the slopes of the Planche des Belles Filles climb.

Dressed from head to toe in black, Roglic looked a broken man as the dust settled.

“I cried, I’ll cry again,” said the leader of Dutch team Jumbo-Visma.

“I just seemed to have no power,” he explained.

But the stark warning was written large in the Tour de France official programme.

“Anybody with little left in the tank could lose two or three minutes here,” the race designer himself, Thierry Gouvenou, predicted. Pogacar won three stages but was racing with a depleted team on his first Tour de France.

So just how did the team that had appeared to dominate a Tour, destroying the hopes of the home nation and ending the reign of Ineos, let victory slip from their grasp?

All-time great Eddy Merckx didn’t mince his words: “They were asking for it riding defensivel­y like that,” said the five-time Tour de France winner.

“I’m just a kid from Slovenia,” the Tour’s youngest post-World War II winner said on Saturday, unaware of the extent to which his life is likely to change.

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