'My best should be enough,' says Vingegaard on verge of Tour de France triumph
Jonas Vingegaard insists he will not take any risks and that his "best should be enough" on Saturday's key time-trial as he stands on the verge of being crowned Tour de France champion.
The Danish rider leads two-time defending champion Tadej Pogacar by 3 mins 26 secs.
Two years ago, Pogacar famously overturned a 57 second deficit on the penultimate day time trial on La Planche des Belles Filles to snatch Tour de France victory from Primoz Roglic.
But Vingegaard is confident he has enough in the bank for Saturday's 41km individual time-trial to keep Pogacar behind him with just Sunday's ceremonial run into Paris to come.
The Dane also dismissed any comparison with Roglic's penultimate day collapse in 2020.
"That day, I was in the hospital, my daughter had just been born. I watched the race in the hospital," said the 25-year-old Jumbo Visma rider.
"In the team, we don't talk about it much. For me, this time is not a reference point. What matters is to give everything to keep this beautiful yellow jersey.
"I went to recon the course in April, I remember that the first 10km are very technical. I will not take risks in the bends. I will do everything I can, I will give my best and that should be enough."
Pogacar is the stronger time-trial rider of the two, and is ready to take risks too, as he showed on the opening day when he rode agressively in the Copenhagen time-trial.
This Tour de France however has been marked by Vingegaard simply shadowing the performnce of the Slovenian, and he will go down the ramp at the start gate exactly 60sec after of him.
Meanwhile, despite trailing by over three minutes going into the deciding weekend, Pogacar said "you never know" as he plotted the unlikely downfall of Vingegaard.
"You never know," said Pogacar. "It's been a tiring Tour and it's a very long time-trial.
"I don't know what I have left in my legs, but I will give it my all.
"I'm not expecting a huge surprise, but you never know. It will be difficult and fast," added the UAE Team Emirates star.
Saturday's time-trial connects Lacapelle-Marival to Rocamadour, a small clifftop village in south-central France.
It is a major tourist site which also marks a stopover on the pilgrims' way to Santiago de Compostela.
"In itself, the course is not extremely difficult. It is rather rolling, the roads are quite winding and technical," said race director Thierry Gouvenou.
"In the last 10 kilometres, there are two real climbs, the last of which, the Rocamadour climb, is almost eight percent average over 1.5km. The end is formidable, in a magnificent setting."
Rocamadour welcomes the Tour for the first time in the race's 109 editions.
Yellow jersey holder Vingegaard will be the last rider to start Saturday's time trial at 5:00pm (1500 GMT) with a finish round 49 minutes later.
D.Adrovic--LiLuX