Tour de France 2021: Tadej Pogacar wins stage 17 to extend overall lead
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Defending champion Tadej Pogacar took a sublime victory atop the Col du Portet on stage 17 of the Tour de France to extend his lead in the yellow jersey.
The Slovenian, 22, kicked clear of Jonas Vingegaard and Richard Carapaz with 150 metres to go to win his fifth Tour stage overall and second of 2021.
UAE Team Emirates' Pogacar now leads Vingegaard by five mins 39 seconds, with Carapaz four seconds further back.
Rigoberto Uran slipped from second to fourth after cracking at 8km remaining.
Pogacar, who won the stage five time trial before taking the yellow jersey on stage eight, has four days left to defend it, though Sunday's final stage is a processional run to Paris where convention dictates the leader is not attacked.
"We were 50-50 - do we go for the win stage or just defend? - but in the end we tried and I am super-happy," he said.
A gruelling day in the Pyrenees featured three long and steep climbs in the final 60km, but Pogacar's UAE Team Emirates team-mates were always in control of the race.
They set a fierce pace to reel in Anthony Perez, the last of six early escapees to stay clear, and then launched Pogacar to go it alone halfway up the 2,215m Col du Portet.
Only Vingegaard and Carapaz could stay with him, ensuring they both replaced Uran in the podium places, before the stage win was decided at the very top of the highest finish of this year's Tour.
'Jonas said to me that he thought Carapaz was bluffing'
Carapaz had appeared exhausted and stayed on his rivals' wheels for most of the climb before trying a surprise attack in the final kilometre, but he could not catch Pogacar out.
"Jonas said to me that he thought Carapaz was bluffing and I knew it also," Pogacar explained. "It was nothing unusual - this is the tactic in cycling and he tried to attack. I had the drive to catch him but it was super hard.
"It was a fantastic day. To win in yellow is something I cannot describe."
Earlier in the stage, Britain's Mark Cavendish had kept his grip on the green jersey by limiting his loss to his closest rival, Australian Michael Matthews, to just one point.
Cavendish tracked Matthews over the line in the intermediate sprint that came after 113km of the 178.4km route, and now leads the points category by 36 points.
The Manxman was quickly dropped by the main peloton once the riders entered the mountains, but he still finished safely within the time limit for the stage.
Stage 17 result
Tadej Pogacar (Slo/UAE Team Emirates) 5hrs 03mins 31secs
Jonas Vingegaard (Den/Jumbo) +03secs
Richard Carapaz (Ecu/Ineos Grenadiers) +04secs
David Gaudu (Fra/Groupama-FDJ) +1min 19secs
Ben O'Connor (Aus/AG2R Citroen) +1min 26secs
Wilco Kelderman (Ned/Bora-Hansgrohe) +1min 40secs
Pello Bilbao (Spa/Bahrain-Victorious) +1min 44secs
Sergio Higuita (Col/EF Education Nippo) +1min 49secs
Rigoberto Uran (Col/EF Education Nippo) Same time
Pello Bilbao (Spa/Bahrain-Victorious)
General classification after stage 17
Tadej Pogacar (Slo/UAE Team Emirates) 71hours 26minutes 27seconds
Jonas Vingegaard (Den/Jumbo) +5mins 39secs
Richard Carapaz (Ecu/Ineos Grenadiers) +5mins 43secs
Rigoberto Uran (Col/EF Education Nippo) +7mins 17secs
Ben O'Connor (Aus/AG2R Citroen) +7mins 34secs
Wilco Kelderman (Ned/Bora-Hansgrohe) +8mins 06secs
Enric Mas (Spa/Movistar) +9mins 48secs
Alexey Lutsenko (Kaz/Astana) +10mins 04secs
Guillaume Martin (Fra/Cofidis) +11mins 51secs
Pello Bilbao (Spa/Bahrain-Victorious) +12mins 53secs
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