‘We will fight to the end’ - How Visma-Lease a Bike still can win the Tour de France

‘We will fight to the end’ - How Visma-Lease a Bike still can win the Tour de France

The Dutch team remains optimistic despite Tadej Pogačar’s demonstration on stage 15


You cannot fault them for trying. In the wake of a rider like Tadej Pogačar, it would have been easy for Visma-Lease a Bike to have felt defeated at the Tour de France before it had even begun. Their leader, Jonas Vingegaard, had suffered in his preparation for the three-week stage race, battling to recover from his brutal injuries after a catastrophic crash in Itzulia two months ago. Pogačar, on the other hand, had been in Italy winning the Giro d’Italia, looking every bit the Grand Tour champion. The scales were not balanced.

Yet, when the start of the Tour rolled round, Vingegaard was able to surprise. He could follow Pogačar during the opening hilly stages of the race in Italy, and didn’t lose too much time to the Slovenian in the time trial either. He kept stating that he wasn’t in the best form of his life due to the broken bones he’s spent the last two months recovering from, but his performances on the bike – for the first week of the Tour at least – were saying otherwise. He even outsprinted Pogačar after an attacking stage 11 to Le Lioran. It looked like the playing field was level.

That was until the real mountains loomed. Two important general classification days came on stages 14 and 15 of the race, rounding out the second weekend with a bang. On stage 14, Vingegaard limited his losses, only conceding 39 seconds to Pogačar when the UAE Team Emirates rider made his attack on the Pla d'Adet. On stage 15, however, the claims that Visma-Lease a Bike had been making regarding Vingegaard’s subpar form began to somewhat ring true.

The Danish rider tried his utmost to play Pogačar at his own game on the 197 kilometre challenging stage from Loudenvielle to the summit of Plateau de Beille. His team took initiative and controlled the stage from the start, riding at an eye-wateringly high tempo to slim down the peloton and set-up their leader, Vingegaard, for a trademark attack. That move eventually came early on the final climb, still with 10 kilometres of incline remaining. To the Dutch team’s dismay, Pogačar was able to follow Vingegaard with relative ease. Their efforts were not going to pay off.

I never doubted our plan. We had a good plan and it’s been working for the last two years. We know I could handle a lot of fatigue, and I could also today, so  I’m not disappointed and I don’t regret anything. We did the plan perfectly, and even better than the plan. He was just better, that’s how it is. Congrats to him,” Vingegaard commented dryly after the stage when questioned about if his team could have done anything differently.

“We talked about it, Matteo [Jorgenson] had to do a 15/20 minute effort from the bottom, and that’s what he did. He did a better effort than we spoke about, all the guys did today, the team did super, super well. As I said, I can’t be disappointed at all.”

Vingegaard’s relative positivity was understandable after the stage. Himself and his team had done all that they could, but it just wasn’t enough against a stronger man. They had planned and worked to perfection during the stage, but Pogačar had the better legs when it mattered.

“We finished second. We were coming to win the stage and to take back some time on GC, but it didn’t happen, and Pogačar took some time on Jonas. I’m super proud of the team, and Jonas did a super good job, but we had an opponent who was even stronger, so chapeau to Tadej, chapeau to UAE,” Grischa Niermann, Visma-Lease a Bike’s sports director, added. “They have a good margin now. We have to accept that, and for the moment we can only be happy and proud of the performance we put in.”

So what comes next for the team of the defending two-time Tour de France champion? This year’s race has just under one week remaining and there still are opportunities for Visma-Lease a Bike to make a difference. The Dutch squad have come back from this sort of defeat before, and their mentality will be the most important thing when it comes to continuing the battle for yellow.

“We will fight to the end, absolutely. But right now, everyone sees that Tadej is the strongest in the race,” Niermann added. “Tadej has shown the last days too. We are not surprised, we hoped for a different outcome, but that’s not the case. I’m not disappointed, because the guys did a super, super good job. The last two years it was the other way round, but for now Pogačar is the strongest rider here. There is still a week to go.”

Niermann and Vingegaard know better than anyone else how quickly the scales can shift in a three week stage race. One bad day, one mistake, one oversight, could spell the end of Pogačar’s current reign. At the moment, the odds are in the favour of UAE Team Emirates, but if Visma-Lease a Bike still holds on to the dream, the race for Tour de France victory is not over until the line is crossed in Nice.

“The dream remains winning the Tour de France,” Niermann concluded.

READ MORE

Question Time: Greg LeMond on gravel,  Pogačar, and modern cycling

Question Time: Greg LeMond on gravel, Pogačar, and modern cycling

The three-time Tour de France winner on his LeMond Carbon start-up, the team he nearly built, his Eurosport days, and why he rates this as...

Read more
Illustration of Isaac del Toro in a UAE Team Emirates-XRG cap, set against the green, white and red of the Mexican flag

"People are thinking about their kids being the next Mexican top rider": Del Toro and the New Wave

Mexican cycling's decades in the doldrums look set to end, with 22-year-old superstar Isaac del Toro leading the charge and a reinvigorated federation aiming to...

Read more
Africa Rising: The next young riders chasing the wheels of giants

Africa Rising: The next young riders chasing the wheels of giants

African cycling has already given the sport Biniam Girmay and Kim Le Court. Jeremy Ford picks the Next Ten – ten riders aged 23 or...

Read more
Illustration of Lance Armstrong in cycling kit holding yellow jerseys, standing in a dark archway — by Enric Adell

Lance Armstrong's Hollywood return: inside the Austin Butler biopic

A forthcoming Austin Butler biopic puts Lance Armstrong centre stage once again. The man the Tour de France would rather forget refuses to go quietly....

Read more
Amy and Kyle Hudson sit together on a sofa with their dog, looking at a laptop.

'A few years ago I didn't want to be here, now I'm riding around the world': Amy and Kyle Hudson's record-breaking ride

Amy Hudson got a bike four years ago to lift her depression. And it changed her life. Now she and husband Kyle are attempting to...

Read more
Like, share, subscribe: How social media is reshaping professional cycling

Like, share, subscribe: How social media is reshaping professional cycling

Social media posts from pro riders are part and parcel of the job these days — but not all of them get it right. What...

Read more

READ RIDE REPEAT

JOIN ROULEUR TODAY

Get closer to the sport than ever before.

Enjoy a digital subscription to Rouleur for just £4 per month and get access to our award-winning magazines.

SUBSCRIBE