San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Pogacar plays it safe, protects his large lead in final time trial

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SAINTEMILI­ON, France — There was no drama this time, and Tadej Pogacar is all but guaranteed to win a second straight Tour de France. The defending champion from Slovenia just needed to play it safe in Saturday’s time trial to put the finishing touches to his summer triumph and retain his yellow jersey. That’s exactly what he did, placing eighth almost one minute behind stage winner Wout van Aert.

It was a sharp contrast to last year’s final race against the clock at the Planche des Belles Filles, where the UAE Team Emirates rider clinched the overall win with a lastminute effort in one of the most remarkable turnaround­s in the history of the race.

“Last year everything was decided on the last (time trial) and the emotions were by far stronger,” Pogacar said.

With the final day of the race on Sunday usually uneventful until the last sprint on the ChampsElys­ees, the Stage 20 time trial marked the last serious test after nearly three exhausting weeks.

Given Pogacar’s near sixminute advantage at the start, it was unlikely someone would be able to knock the Slovenian off his perch.

As van Aert claimed the 19mile stage from Libourne to SaintEmili­on, Pogacar did not take any risks, conceding 57 seconds to the Belgian champion. He will carry an insurmount­able lead of five minutes, 20 seconds into the final day, a 68mile stage from Chatou to Paris.

Pogacar won the delayed Tour last September at 21 and became the youngest champion in 116 years.

“I can’t compare both Tour de France victories. I can’t say which one is more beautiful,” he said. “This time, I took the yellow jersey quite earlier. It has been totally different.”

Pogacar routed all of his rivals during the first week of crashfille­d racing. He stamped his authority on the race in the first time trial in Laval and snatched the yellow jersey in the Alps. He reigned supreme in the Pyrenees with two consecutiv­e stage wins, and did not need to go full gas in the burning heat enveloping the vineyards of SaintEmili­on.

It was van Aert’s second stage win this year after the versatile Belgian claimed the double ascent of the Mont Ventoux.

On a course with frequent changes of direction, van Aert delivered a vintage performanc­e of raw power to claim a fifth individual stage win at the Tour.

Van Aert clocked 35:53, winning by 21 seconds ahead of secondplac­ed Kasper Asgreen. Jonas Vingegaard was third, 32 seconds off the pace.

 ?? Philippe Lopez / AFP via Getty Images ?? Tadej Pogacar maintained a lead of more than five minutes after the final time trial, and there remains but one stage.
Philippe Lopez / AFP via Getty Images Tadej Pogacar maintained a lead of more than five minutes after the final time trial, and there remains but one stage.
 ?? Debora Robinson / NHLI via Getty Images ?? Adin Hill was 991 with a 2.74 goalsagain­st average in 19 games last season.
Debora Robinson / NHLI via Getty Images Adin Hill was 991 with a 2.74 goalsagain­st average in 19 games last season.

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