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O'Connor climbs to 'brutal' Alpine stage win as Pogacar extends Tour lead
Ben O'Connor won stage 18 of the Tour de France with a world-class climb over three Alpine mountains on Thursday as defending champion Tadej Pogacar extended his race lead.
Australian O'Connor, 29, took off alone 15km from the finish and navigated the mist to win 1min 45sec ahead of Pogacar atop the Col de la Loze.
Vingegaard crossed the line in third place, nine seconds behind the Slovenian.
"It was brutal, I've never lived anything so hard. The team did well and we had a good plan, but I couldn't take any time off Tadej," said Vingegaard.
Pogacar now holds a 4min 26sec lead over the Dane in the general classification with three days to go before the finish in Paris.
Starting the day with a deficit of 4min 15sec, Vingegaard had attacked a massive 71km out.
Pogacar tracked him and eventually dropped the Dane to gain another 11sec on the Team Visma rider who won the 2022 and 2023 Tour de France.
O'Connor, from the Jayco-Alula team, said he was relieved to triumph again four years after his triumph in the Alps at Tignes.
"It's amazing to win here and I'm relieved to get a win for the team," said a beaming O'Connor.
- Last chance -
Team UAE's Pogacar is now on the cusp of a fourth Tour de France title, after reversing the roles and sitting on Vingegaard's wheel, wasting little energy.
German breakout star Florian Lipowitz wilted near the end in his bid for both third place and the white jersey awarded to the best young rider.
The 22-year-old British rider Oscar Onley closed to within 22 seconds.
Both riders are making their Tour de France debut.
After 10 opening days of rolling terrain in the north and west of France where Pogacar and Vingegaard kept a watchful eye on each other as emerging riders stole the headlines, the real fight began in week two.
Pogacar attacked Vingegaard on the first mountain, taking over two minutes out of him on one climb as things looked grim for the Slovenian's rivals.
It was a costly off day for Vingegaard as in retrospect this was where Pogacar made the real difference in the race.
The following day on a time-trial Pogacar whacked another 40sec into the Visma star who did however take over four minutes off the Slovenian on a single stage to win the 2023 Tour.
Friday's majestic five-mountain slog amid the imposing panoramas between Albertville and La Plaigne will be the last chance for a reversal of fortunes with 60km of steep slopes to negotiate.
The race ends Sunday in Paris with the finish line at the Champs Elysees after three climbs to the Sacre Coeur Basilica along the cobbled lanes of Montmartre.
H.Darwish--SF-PST