POLIGNY, France — Matej Mohoric fought tears of relief after edging Kasper Asgreen to win the Tour de France´s closest ever stage finish.
The Slovenian rider broke down after winning, fought tears during the award ceremony for the 19th stage, and again struggled with his emotions as he spoke about his perfectly timed race – the fifth fastest stage in Tour history.
Few watching were certain who won as Mohoric finished only four thousandths of a second ahead of Asgreen in the tightest finish ever recorded.
Mohoric covered his face and sobbed when confirmation came that he clinched his third ever stage win.
“It means a lot because it´s just hard and cruel to be a professional cyclist,” Mohoric said. “You suffer a lot in preparation, you sacrifice your life, your family. You do everything you can to get ready. And then after a couple of days, you realize that everyone is just so incredibly strong, that it´s just hard to follow the wheels sometimes.”
Mohoric referred to his Bahrain teammates’ hard work, to his own suffering, to rivals´ suffering, and to teammate Gino Mader, who died after crashing into a ravine at the Tour de Suisse last month.
“Sometimes you feel like you don´t belong here because just everyone is so incredibly strong that you struggle to hold wheel sometimes,” Mohoric said according to AP. “You know that the guy who is pulling is suffering just as much as you do. It´s just cruel to then be able to follow the decision to attack when Kasper went.”
Australian cyclist Ben O´Connor had been first among the three breakaways to attack for the line but he was overhauled by Asgreen and Mohoric, who seemed to cross at the same time.
“He was so incredibly strong,” Mohoric said of Asgreen. “I knew I had to make everything perfect. And I tried my best, not just for myself, also for Gino and for the team. And then you almost feel like you betrayed them because you beat them.”
Both Mohoric and Asgreen were clocked at 3 hours, 31 minutes, 2 seconds. O´Conner was third, 4 seconds behind.
Defending champion Jonas Vingegaard protected his commanding lead on the hilly 173-kilometer (107-mile) route from Moirans-en-Montagne to Poligny, which is known as the capital of comté cheese.
The curving roads up and down around the lakes of the Jura department invited riders to attack from the start. Many tried, few succeeded.
Some riders´ hopes were undone by ill luck. Nils Politt´s chain broke, Simon Clarke pulled up with cramps, Warren Barguil´s pursuit was ended by a flat tire, and Corbin Strong crashed while chasing the three leaders,
Vingegaard played it safe. The yellow jersey holder finished among his Jumbo-Visma teammates and remained the clear favorite to claim his second Tour victory. The Danish rider enjoys a lead of 7 minutes, 35 seconds over two-time champion Tadej Pogacar after taking control of the race in the Alps.