Stage 19 of the Tour de France 2023: Highlights, Stage Victories, Level Leaders, Yellow Jersey, King of Mountains, Youth Classification

Stage 19 of the Tour de France 2023: Highlights, Stage Victories, Level Leaders, Yellow Jersey, King of Mountains, Youth Classification

Reuters Cycling: France, July 21, 2023, Stage 19: Moirans-en-Montagne to Poligny Tadej Pogacar of UAE Crew Emirates takes a picture after stage 19. Stephane Mahe of Reuters. The stage developed dramatically as Mohoric and Danish rider Kasper Asgreen, who had won the stage the day before, fought each other in a thrilling struggle. As they neared the finish line, tensions peaked as Mohoric almost missed the mark. This left all of the riders highly excited, and seconds later, a photo finish verified his triumph.

The victory is even more significant since Mohoric has now won all three major expeditions, demonstrating his adaptability and skill in a variety of challenging environments. He demonstrated his unique skill and determination as he pushed himself to the limit throughout this demanding phase. This historic triumph also honored his deceased comrade Gino Mader, whose memories will always be treasured within the Bahrain Victorious team. This victory has great significance since it is evidence of the tenacity and friendship among these accomplished riders.

Reuters Cycling:

France, July 21, 2023, Stage 19: Moirans-en-Montagne to Poligny Jasper Philipsen of Alpecin-Deceuninck is moving with cyclists during stage 19. Benoit Tessier for Reuters

Due to the peloton’s regrouping, the victorious opponent,

The 2023 Tour de France will never be the same thanks to Mohoric’s perseverance and heartfelt win, which not only celebrated his individual accomplishment but also paid tribute to the memory of an expensive comrade who rode with him in spirit the whole time.

Stage Victories Bahrain Victorious’ Matej Mohoric from Slovenia finished in 3:31:02. Kasper Asgreen of Soudal-Fast Step in Denmark was left behind. With a 4-second hole, Ben O’Connor of Australia’s AG2R-Citroën Crew took third place. Jasper Philipsen of Alpecin-Deceuninck in Belgium was 39 seconds behind. Fifth place went to Mads Pedersen from Lidl-Trek in Denmark. Jumbo-Visma’s Christophe Laporte, a Frenchman, finished in sixth place. Seventh place went to Luka Mezgec of Slovenia’s Crew Jayco-AlUla. Eighth place went to Alberto Bettiol of EF Schooling (EasyPost) in Italy. The ninth place was taken by Matteo Trentin of UAE Crew Emirates, an Italian team. Nice native Tom Pidcock The INEOS Grenadiers from Britain completed the top 10. Georg Zimmermann, Intermarché Circus, Germany Desirous Alpecin, Deceuninck’s Mathieu van der Poel from the Netherlands, trailed by 43 seconds.

Marco Haller of BORA-Hansgrohe in Austria, with a 1 minute and 41 second time difference Dylan Groenewegen from Crew Jayco-AlUla in the Netherlands finished one minute and forty-three seconds behind the winner. Nice’s Fred Wright Bahrain, a British territory triumphant Hugo Houle from Israel and Premier Tech in Canada Oliver Naesen from AG2R (Citroën Crew) in Belgium Lars van den Berg from Groupama-FDJ in the Netherlands Anthony Turgis of TotalEnergies in France Israel’s Krists Neilands, a Premier Tech employee in Latvia Reuters Cycling: France, July 21, 2023, Stage 19: Moirans-en-Montagne to Poligny Victor Campenaerts of Lotto-Dstny moves with cyclists during Stage 19.

Benoit Tessier for Reuters

Complete leaders The top finisher, Jonas Vingegaard of Denmark’s Jumbo-Visma, completed the course in 75 hours, 49 minutes, and 24 seconds. Tadej Pogacar is 7 minutes and 35 seconds behind UAE Crew Emirates in Slovenia. Adam Yates, a native of Nice Third place goes to the British team UAE Crew Emirates, with a time of 10 minutes and 45 seconds. A minute and a half behind the leader, Carlos Rodríguez of the INEOS Grenadiers in Spain, comes in second. Simon Yates, a native of Nice Fifth place goes to Crew Jayco-AlUla of Britain, behind by 12 minutes and 19 seconds. Sixth place goes to Pello Bilbao of Bahrain Victorious, a Spanish team, who is 12 minutes and 50 seconds behind the leader. Australia’s Bora-Hansgrohe team’s Jai Hindley places seventh, with a deficit of 13 minutes and 50 seconds.

Felix Gall, who has a time difference of 16 minutes and 11 seconds, is in eighth place behind Austria’s AG2R-Citroën Crew. Jumbo-Visma’s Sepp Kuss from the USA is in ninth place, 16 minutes and 49 seconds behind the leader. Groupama: FDJ’s David Gaudu, who clocks in at 17 minutes and 57 seconds, takes tenth position. Guillaume Martin of Cofidis, France, is 22 minutes and 53 seconds behind. Thibaut Pinot from Groupama-FDJ in France, with a 27-minute and 26-second difference in time Nice native Tom Pidcock Britain’s INEOS Grenadiers finished 44 minutes and 44 seconds behind Spain’s INEOS Grenadiers’ leader, Jonathan Castroviejo, with a 46-minute and 57-second time difference.

Chris Harper from Crew Jayco-AlUla in Australia, who is now behind by 54 minutes and 31 seconds Rafal Majka from Poland’s UAE Crew Emirates finished 55 minutes and 15 seconds behind Australia’s AG2R Citroën Crew leader Ben O’Connor, with a time difference of 59 minutes and 46 seconds. Mikel Landa of Bahrain Victorious, Spain, who was behind by one hour, three minutes, and one second Wilco Kelderman from Jumbo-Visma in the Netherlands, with a 1 hour, 3 minutes, and 42 second time difference After the chief, Valentin Madouas of Groupama-FDJ in France finished one hour, eight minutes, and fifty-four seconds later, Reuters Cycling: France, July 21, 2023, Stage 19: Moirans-en-Montagne to Poligny Stage 19 saw Jasper Philipsen of Alpecin-Deceuninck cross the finish line. Stephane Mahe of Reuters.

Mountain King with 88 criteria

The Mountain King With 88 criteria, Giulio Ciccone of Lidl-Trek in Italy took first place. Felix Gall, from AG2R-Citroën Crew in Austria, came in second with 82 factors. With 81 elements, Jonas Vingegaard of Jumbo-Visma in Denmark took third place. Neilson Powless of EF Schooling-EasyPost in the United States obtained 58 factors, placing him in fourth place. With 49 elements, Tadej Pogacar of Slovenia’s UAE Crew Emirates finished in fifth place. Simon Yates, a native of Nice Sixth place went to Crew Jayco-AlUla of Britain, who scored 40 elements. With 38 factors, Tobias Johannessen of the Uno-X Professional Biking Crew in Norway came in seventh place. Eighth place went to Jai Hindley of Australia’s BORA-hansgrohe, who scored 31 factors.

With 30 factors, Michal Kwiatkowski of the INEOS Grenadiers in Poland took ninth place. With 28 factors, Michael Woods of Israel-Premier Tech in Canada finished in tenth place. Pello Bilbao of Bahrain Victorious, a Spanish team, scored 21 criteria to take tenth place. Bahrain Victorious, led by Wout Poels of the Netherlands, finished in the tenth position with 20 elements. With 19 elements, Mattias Skjelmose of Lidl-Trek in Denmark took thirteenth place. With 17 factors, Julian Alaphilippe of Soudal-Fast-Step, a French team, took fourteenth place. With sixteen factors, Pierre Latour of TotalEnergies in France came in fifteenth. David Gaudu of Groupama-FDJ in France had the same grade. With fifteen factors, Alexey Lutsenko of the Astana-Qazaqstan Crew from Kazakhstan took seventeenth place.

Additionally, Maxim Van Gils from Belgium’s Lotto-Dstny got the same score. Matej Mohoric of Bahrain Victorious, a Slovenian team, finished in nineteenth place with 14 points. Additionally, Emanuel Buchmann of BORA-Hansgrohe in Germany received the same grade. Reuters Cycling, France, July 21, 2023, Stage 19: Moirans-en-Montagne to Poligny Bahrain Victorious Crew Jack Haig is moving on stage 19. Benoit Tessier for Reuters.

Leaders’ factors With 377 factors

Leaders’ factors With 377 factors, Jasper Philipsen of Alpecin-Deceuninck, Belgium, is in the lead. With 238 factors, Mads Pedersen from Lidl-Trek in Denmark takes second place. With 188 factors, Bryan Coquard from Cofidis in France comes in third. Fourth place goes to Tadej Pogacar of Slovenia’s UAE Crew Emirates, who scored 146 elements. With 125 factors, Kasper Asgreen of Soudal Fast Step in Denmark comes in fifth. With 123 factors, Jordi Meeus of Belgium’s BORA-hansgrohe ranks sixth. With 107 factors, Jonas Vingegaard of Jumbo-Visma in Denmark takes seventh place. Matej Mohoric of Bahrain Victorious, a Slovenian team, takes eighth place with 106 points. Pello Bilbao of Bahrain Victorious, a Spanish team, scores 95 criteria and is ranked ninth.

Dylan Groenewegen of Crew Jayco-AlUla in the Netherlands has the same rating. With ninety-nine elements, Biniam Girmay from Intermarché, Circus, and Wanty in Eritrea comes in tenth. With 89 factors, Jonas Abrahamsen of Norway’s Uno-X Professional Biking Crew comes in at number twelve. Michael Woods of Israel-Premier Tech in Canada scores 88 factors, enough for thirteenth place. Simon Yates, a native of Nice With 82 criteria, Crew Jayco-AlUla from Britain comes in at fourteenth place. With 80 factors, Jai Hindley of Australia’s BORA-hansgrohe takes fifteenth position. Victor Lafay of Cofidis in France has the same grade.

Groupama:

FDJ’s Thibaut Pinot from France receives 75 factors, placing it in seventeenth place. Adam Yates, a native of Nice With 74 elements, Britain’s UAE Crew Emirates comes in at number eighteen. Victor Campenaerts of Lotto-Dstny, Belgium, finishes in the nineteenth place with 70 factors. Neilson Powless from EF Schooling (EasyPost) in the United States has the same rating. Reuters Cycling: France, July 21, 2023, Stage 19: Moirans-en-Montagne to Poligny Communal perspective of the peloton before the stage 19 finish line crossing Stephane Mahe of Reuters


Youth categorization Tadej Pogacar (SLO) UAE Team Emirates finished first with a total time of 75:56:59. ESP’s Carlos Rodríguez Second place went to INEOS Grenadiers, with a time difference of +4:26. Felix Gall (AUT) Third place went to AG2R, the Citroën Crew, with a time difference of +8:36. GBR’s Tom Pidcock Fourth place went to INEOS Grenadiers, with a time difference of +37:09. Skjelmose Mattias (DEN) Trek, owned by Lidl, came in fifth with a time difference of +1:47:09. During a dramatic stage 19, Slovenian bike owner Matej Mohoric accomplished a remarkable achievement in an emotionally packed second: he won his third race in the Tour de France.

Bahrain’s victorious team

His Bahrain Victorious team, which had been struggling with Gino Mader’s catastrophic absence earlier in the race, was ecstatic to see this victory. Despite the pall of sadness hanging over the workers, Mohoric’s extraordinary productivity brought them comfort and motivation. The stage developed dramatically as Mohoric and Danish rider Kasper Asgreen, who had won the stage the day before, fought each other in a thrilling struggle. As they neared the finish line, tensions peaked as Mohoric almost missed the mark. This left all of the riders highly excited, and seconds later, a photo finish verified his triumph. The victory is even more significant since Mohoric has now won all three major expeditions, demonstrating his adaptability and skill in a variety of challenging environments.

He demonstrated his unique skill and determination as he pushed himself to the limit throughout this demanding phase. This historic triumph also honored his deceased comrade Gino Mader, whose memories will always be treasured within the Bahrain Victorious team. This victory has great significance since it is evidence of the tenacity and friendship among these accomplished riders. The fact that the peloton regrouped allowed Jonas Vingegaard, the reigning champion, to stay in the general chief’s yellow shirt throughout the race is evidence of his brilliance and consistency.

As the cyclists prepare for another demanding day of riding across steep and dangerous terrain, the challenging twentieth stage between Belfort and the Markstein begins. The 2023 Tour de France will never be the same thanks to Mohoric’s perseverance and heartfelt win, which not only celebrated his individual accomplishment but also paid tribute to the memory of an expensive comrade who rode with him in spirit the whole time.

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