Two-time Tour de France champion Tadej Pogacar said he was thrilled by the highly mountainous route for the 2023 edition of the world’s greatest bike race and vowed to train in the Pyrenees as soon as the winter snow melts.
The 24-year-old Slovenian won the Tour de France title in 2020 as a rookie and defended it with ease in 2021.
Last year he was edged into second by the collective force of Jonas Vingegaard’s Jumbo team.
Team UAE Emirates’s Pogacar is the highest-paid cyclist in the world with a reported yearly salary of around seven million euros, but his swashbuckling style backfired last year when he got tired towards the end of the race.
“I’m super-motivated to get the title back,” Pogacar said at yesterday’s presentation that revealed the riders are in for a tough three weeks of racing next year.
“I like the route. It’s going to be a hard race from the start with a tough first week in the Basque Country,” Pogacar said of the 2023 itinerary which takes the peloton into the Pyrenees from of stage five.
Pogacar based his 2021 title defence around the first week, stealing a march on all his rivals, especially British team Ineos who emerged from Brittany with their chances in tatters. “The first week is really hard but the third week is really, really hard,” he said. “You know me, I like attacking but perhaps on the Tour de France sometimes you need to be a little more conservative,” he said. Pogacar had promised last July to go away and consider why he had lost his title and how he could get it back.
“It’s going to be fun, I can’t wait for July,” he said. “The tough stages early on make it more exciting for sure. As soon as the snow melts in the Pyrenees we’ll be out on ‘recons’ there.”
The 3,404km Tour route embarks from Spain’s Basque Country on July 1 for a route featuring eight mountain stages and four hilly stages with just one medium length individual time trial placed early in the final week. The route however ignores almost all of western and northern France.
“Over five or six years it evens out and we eventually get everywhere,” race organiser Christian Prudhomme said.
The killer stage in the 21 day race appears to be stage 17 from Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc to Courchevel, doted with four peaks and ascending way above the tree line to 2,300m of altitude where the oxygen is thin.
That kind of mountain stage would appear tailor-made for Bernal and would give him hope against the two men who have won the title since, Pogacar and Jonas Vingegaard.