2023 Tour de France

Jonas Vingegaard Wins Second Successive Tour de France

Jonas Vingegaard Wins Second Successive Tour de France

Jonas Vingegaard won his second successive Tour de France on Sunday after Jordi Meeus claimed the final-stage honors on the Champs-Elysees in Paris.

Jul 23, 2023 by AFP Report
Jonas Vingegaard Wins Second Successive Tour de France

Jonas Vingegaard won his second successive Tour de France on Sunday after Jordi Meeus claimed the final-stage honors on the Champs-Elysees in Paris.

Denmark's Vingegaard of the Jumbo-Visma team crossed the finish line after the 21-day race, 7 minutes, 29 seconds ahead of Slovenia's Tadej Pogacar, the champion in 2020 and 2021.

Pogacar's UAE teammate Adam Yates of Great Britain rounded out the top-3 podium.

Vingegaard's winning margin was the largest since 2014 when Italian Vincenzo Nibali took the fabled champion's yellow jersey by 7 minutes, 39 seconds.

The champion strolled around the winner's paddock with his family smiling broadly, before mounting the winner's podium and singing along to the Danish national anthem.

But the runner up Pogacar also was shining and chatting, unlike the mountain stage where he crumbled to lose the Tour.

"Considering everything, it's been a great Tour, and I have to be happy with that," Pogacar said after picking up his best young rider jersey for the fourth time. "We have two guys on the podium, and I won two stages and the white jersey. I love cycling."

The final stage was won by outsider Meeus of the Bora team, with Jasper Philipsen denied a fifth stage win on this Tour right at the line in a photo finish.

"What a wonderful finish, it's been such a high level Tour," said the surprise stage winner.


Cracked

The world's greatest bike race provided dense drama with spectacular backdrops, as Vingegaard and Pogacar remained separated by seconds until the Dane edged ahead with a sensational individual time trial last Tuesday.

The following day, on a 28-kilometer climb to the ski resort of Courchevel, Pogacar cracked, shouting "I'm gone, I'm dead," before Vingegaard killed off the race with a sensational final climb.

The event had been billed as a showdown between the defending champion Vingegaard and Pogacar, who has won the Tour twice and now come second twice.

Tour director Christian Prudhomme used boxing terms to describe the struggle.

"They went 15 rounds, and then there was a punch in the gut, a knee on the floor and a knock out punch," he said Sunday.

All time great Eddy Merckx told AFP the pair had delivered a thrilling show.

"Pogacar is a more complete rider, but in the high mountains, at least, Vingegaard remains the stronger," he said.

Pogacar tried to verbalize the situation.

"I don't know what happened to me," said Pogacar, pointing to his best under-25 rider's white jersey. "I took on too much this year, and after two weeks, I started to look as white as this shirt." 

Pogacar started well enough, taking minor advantages in the Basque hills, until Vingegaard attacked on the first mountain stage in the Pyrenees to take the overall leader's yellow jersey.

While Pogacar clawed back a few seconds here and there, the defending champion never relinquished the lead all the way to Paris.

Runner-up in 2021, the softly-spoken Vingegaard was the only rider to challenge the Slovenian prodigy in the high mountains.

In 2022, he went one step higher and won the title at altitude, and it proved to be the case again in 2023, but with a Tour of such poise and dominance his claim to be targeting a third straight title must be taken seriously.

"The Tour de France is the greatest race in the world," beamed the 26-year-old. "There's something so special about it, and I can tell you I'll be back again next year to try and win it again."