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At the 2017 Tour de Hongrie, he took part in the second three-week race of his third Slovenian super talent race, and last year’s Vuelta became the second-youngest winner in Tour history at 21 years and 364 days later. to finish third in Spain. Celebrating his 22nd birthday on Monday, Pogacar said Saturday after the time trial that his dream was to participate in the Tour de France.
During the time trial, Pogacar instructed his compatriot, Primoz Roglic, winner of Vueltan last year, with a great translation. Third – achieving the best Grand Tour result of his career – The Australian Richie Porte closed.
The first Pogacar in the three stages also won the polka dot jersey for best mountaineering and the best jersey for the youngest of the 107th French circuit. With this, the legendary Eddy Merckx finished second in three categories in battle history.
Sprinter Points Race Winner – and so a green jersey – the Irishman became Sam Bennett. In the team competition, Movistar took the lead.
He started from the final stage of Mantes-la-Jolie on Sunday – in which, as usual, the contestants were only “celebrated” – In the Paris sprint on the Champs Elysees, Bennett proved to be the fastest ahead of world champion Mads Pedersen of Denmark and Peter Sagan of Slovakia. Bennett was able to celebrate his second stage success on this Touron.
This year’s 3,470-kilometer French circuit was held at an unusual time rather than mid-summer due to the coronavirus epidemic, but it was still the first three-week race of this year, as the Giro d’Italia, also postponed, usually in May, will only be in October and will continue. partially overlapping the Vuelta with Spain.
TOUR DE FRANCE
Section 21 (last), Mantes-la-Jolie – Paris, Champs-Élysées, 122 km:
- 1. Sam Bennett (Irish, Deceuninck – Quick-Step) 2:53:32
- 2. Mads Pedersen (Danish, Trek-Segafredo) at the same time
- 3. Peter Sagan (Slovak, BORA-hansgrohe) acting
The final result of the complex:
- 1. Tadej Pogacar (Slovenian, United Arab Emirates) 87:20:05
- 2. Primoz Roglic (Slovenian, Jumbo-Visma) 59 seconds behind
- 3. Richie Porte (Australia, Trek-Segafredo) 3:30 min behind
- 4. Mikel Landa (Spain, Bahrain-McLaren) 17:58 h.
- 5. Enric Mas (Spanish, Movistar) 6:07 pm.
Tour Champions since 2010:
- 2010: Andy Schleck (Luxembourg)
- 2011: Cadel Evans (Australia)
- 2012: Bradley Wiggins (British)
- 2013: Christopher Froome (British)
- 2014: Vincenzo Nibali (Italian)
- 2015: Froome
- 2016: Froome
- 2017: Froome
- 2018: Geraint Thomas (British)
- 2019: Egan Bernal (Colombia)
- 2020: Tadej Pogacar (Slovenian)
Distribution of Tour de France victories so far by country:
- 36: France
- 18: Belgium
- 12: Spain
- 10: Italy
- 6: Great Britain
- 5: Luxembourg
- 3: United States
- 2: Holland, Switzerland
- 1: Australia, Denmark, Ireland, Germany, Colombia, Slovenia
Lance Armstrong of the United States was subsequently deprived of his first place of the week due to doping, and no new champions were retroactively announced for the competitions involved (1999-2005).
The youngest winners of the Tour:
- 1. Henri Cornet (French, 1904) 19 years, 352 days
- 2. Tadej Pogacar (Slovenian, 2020) 21 years, 364 days
- 3. Francois Faber (Luxembourgish, 1909) 22 years, 187 days
- 4. Egan Bernal (Colombia, 2019) 22 years, 196 days
- 5. Octave Lapize (French, 1910) 22 years, 280 days
Multiple Tour Winners:
- 5: Jacques Anquetil (France) 1957, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964
Eddy Merckx (Belgian) 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1974
Bernard Hinault (France) 1978, 1979, 1981, 1982, 1985
Miguel Indurain (Spain) 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995
- 4: Chris Froome (UK) 2013, 2015, 2016, 2017
- 3: Philippe Thys (Belgian) 1913, 1914, 1920
Louison Bobet (france) 1953, 1954, 1955
Greg LeMond (US) 1986, 1989, 1990
- 2: Lucien Petit-Breton (France) 1907, 1908
Firmin Lambot (Belgian) 1919, 1922
Ottavio Bottecchia (wavesz) 1924, 1925
Nicolas Frantz (Luxembourg) 1927, 1928
André Leducq (france) 1930, 1932
Antonin Magne (france) 1931, 1934
Sylvere Maes (Belgian) 1936, 1939
Gino Bartali (Italian) 1938, 1948
Fausto Coppi (Italian) 1949, 1952
Bernard Thévenet (France) 1975, 1977
Laurent Fignon (france) 1983, 1984
Alberto Contador (Spain) 2007, 2009
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