Smiling Pogacar ready for Tour part two and mind games with Vingegaard
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[July 11, 2023]
By Julien Pretot
CLERMONT FERRAND, France (Reuters) - Pressure seems to slide off
Tadej Pogacar like water off a duck's back as the two-time champion
heads into the second block of racing in the Tour de France locked
in a duel with title holder Jonas Vingegaard.
The Slovenian took fresh momentum into the second rest day after
gaining another eight seconds on Sunday over Vingegaard, who was
dropped twice in the final two mountain stages after being the first
to draw blood in the Pyrenees.
Five more mountain stages are on the menu and Vingegaard hinted he
would have an edge over his rival in the longer climbs of the Alps
-- a suggestion that Pogacar laughed off on Monday.
"We will see in the Alps who it suits better," the 24-year-old said
with a smile.
"I also like the Alps stages. I think every year I improve on the
longer climbs and in the heat so we need to wait and see who will
like it more."
Overall, Pogacar trails yellow jersey holder Vingegaard by 17
seconds and while the Danish rider remains confident that his
advantage should see him win another title in Paris, the UAE
Emirates rider believes the third week of the Tour could be his.
"I'm not at all worried about the last week. I actually should be
better than in the first week," said Pogacar, whose preparations
were hampered after he suffered a wrist fracture last April.
Asked if he was surprised that his form was so good despite his
misfortune in the spring, Pogacar said: "What surprised me was when
I lost time on Marie Blanque (in the first Pyrenean stage) but I
knew that I was good coming into the Tour and I should not be
surprised by my performances in the last days."
WISER THAN IN THE PAST
Vingegaard's Jumbo Visma team believe Sunday's effort in the final
part of the Puy de Dome climb (4km at 11.7%) was Pogacar's best
performance ever in terms of data, but the Slovenian hinted he had
already done better at training, saying he could also do better in
the racing environment.
"They don't know all my training or race data," he said.
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Cycling - Tour de France - Stage 9 -
Saint-Leonard-De-Noblat to Puy De Dome - France - July 9, 2023 UAE
Team Emirates' Tadej Pogacar and Team Jumbo–Visma's Jonas Vingegaard
in action during stage 9 Pool via REUTERS/Papon Bernard
"They don't know my weight and a lot (of other
things) about me so they can only assume but I can tell you this one
(on Sunday) was good but it could be better."
Pogacar will resume the race without extra pressure, and also a bit
wiser than he has been in the past when he would launch long-range
attacks and pay a heavy price for some early efforts.
"I have more pressure now that we're deeper into the Tour but racing
the Tour when you don't have to defend the title makes a big
difference," he said.
Behind Pogacar and Vingegaard, the other big guns are already racing
for the lowest step on the podium.
Third-placed Jai Hindley of Australia trails Vingegaard by two
minutes and 40 seconds with Spain's Carlos Rodriguez in fourth, 1:42
behind the 2022 Giro d'Italia winner.
Three Britons, Adam Yates and his brother Simon, and Tom Pidcock are
fifth, sixth and seventh overall, respectively.
French hopes of a podium finish on the Champs Elysees took a major
blow as David Gaudu was again unable to follow the big guns and
dropped to eighth overall, 6:01 off the pace.
(Reporting by Julien Pretot; Editing by Clare Fallon)
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