Cycling-Pogacar retains Tour lead as O'Connor wins stage
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[July 05, 2021]
By Julien Pretot
TIGNES, France (Reuters) -Defending
champion Tadej Pogacar kept a close eye on his challengers as he
retained the overall leader's yellow jersey in the Tour de France
after the ninth stage, a 144.9km mountain trek from Cluses in the
northern Alps on Sunday.
Australian Ben O'Connor of the AG2R-Citroen team won the stage from
the breakaway, ahead of Italians Matteo Cataneo and Sonny Colbrelli.
Slovenian Pogacar, who claimed the yellow jersey on Saturday, was in
control all day and responded to a late attack by Ecuador's Richard
Carapaz, his main rival for the general classification, in the final
climb to the Alpine resort of Tignes (21km at 5.6%) to stay top of
the rankings.
With his maiden Tour stage win, O'Connor climbed up to second in the
overall standings, two minutes and one second off the pace, with
Colombian Rigoberto Uran in third, 5:18 behind Pogacar.
After a crash-strewn start to the Tour, last year's runner-up Primoz
Roglic abandoned the race, failing to recover from injuries
sustained in a third-stage tumble. An exhausted Mathieu van der Poel,
who wore the yellow jersey during the week, also quit ahead of his
bid to win Olympic gold in the mountain biking event.
Belgian Wout van Aert, who started the day in second place overall,
cracked on the Col du Pre, halfway through the stage, and finished
more than half an hour behind O'Connor as he dropped out of
contention.
His Jumbo-Visma team, who had been lined up to help two-time Vuelta
champion Roglic win the title, will now ride for Norway's Jonas
Vingegaard, who is fourth overall and 5:32 behind Pogacar, one
second ahead of Carapaz.
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Tour de France - Stage 9 - Cluses to
Tignes - France - July 4, 2021 UAE Team Emirates rider Tadej Pogacar
of Slovenia after stage 9 REUTERS/Benoit Tessier
The 25-year-old O'Connor went solo
with 17.5km to go and in the last 10km, Ineos Grenadiers upped the
pace in the group of favourites to set up Carapaz's attack.
Carapaz took off with four kilometres left, but the 2019 Giro
d'Italia champion was countered by Pogacar, who eventually finished
32 seconds ahead of the Ecuadorian.
"I made a little attack in the end to keep things under control,"
Pogacar told a news conference.
"They (Caparaz's Ineos Grenadier's team) made it a little bit harder
but I had good legs to counter attack.
"Yesterday was one of the best days of my career and I was more in a
survival mode today, although I was in a good shape."
Monday is the race's first rest day.
France's Arnaud Demare, who was aiming for wins in the Tour's sprint
finishes, ended the day outside the time limit meaning he is out of
the race.
(Reporting by Julien Pretot; Editing by Hugh Lawson and Ed Osmond)
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