Pogacar wins Tour de France summit duel with Vingegaard

UAE Team Emirates' Slovenian rider Tadej Pogacar cycles to the finish line to win the 6th stage of the Tour de France cycling race, 145 km between Tarbes and Cauterets-Cambasque, in the Pyrenees mountains in southwestern France on Thursday. (AFP)
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Updated 07 July 2023
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Pogacar wins Tour de France summit duel with Vingegaard

  • Defending champion Vingegaard and two-time winner Pogacar were billed as the stars of the Tour and so it is proving to be
  • Team UAE leader Pogacar went for broke with 2km to go and finished 24sec ahead of Vingegaard

CAUTERETS, FRANCE: Tadej Pogacar unleashed a devastating turn of speed to win stage six of the Tour de France on Thursday, but defending champion Jonas Vingegaard took the overall race lead 25 seconds ahead of the Slovenian.

On the Tour’s first summit finish, Team UAE leader Pogacar went for broke with 2km to go and finished 24sec ahead of Vingegaard. Overnight leader Jai Hindley now sits in third place.

On the 144.9km run from Tarbes to Cauterets in the lush Pyrenees the Dutch Jumbo-Visma team looked to have the X-factor in Wout Van Aert acting as Vingegaard’s sherpa with Pogacar isolated from his teammates.

But with 4km to go Van Aert peeled off and almost keeled over after his efforts on a 10 percent gradient section.

Vingegaard and Pogacar powered ahead alone after dropping everyone from the day’s breakaway on the high Tourmalet pass.

When Pogacar made his move with the roadside crowds leaving the narrowest of passages Vingegaard desperately clung on as the Slovenian pulled away for a moral victory.

“I’m really happy to have just one stage win, you can’t get cocky,” said the 24-year-old Pogacar.

“When Jumbo started pulling I was ready to pack my bags and go home,” he said.

“Wout (van Aert) goes faster than the race chief’s car. But I played it smart and told myself I mustn’t give up, at that point I just held on.”

Pogacar started the Tour strongly but Vingegaard struck back on stage five before this new enthralling instalment of their internecine duel offered up some more gripping fare.

Defending champion Vingegaard and two-time winner Pogacar were billed as the stars of the Tour and so it is proving to be.

“This is an exciting Tour de France,” said Vingegaard. “The first six days have been hard, the start in the Basque Country has made it amazing.

“First of all I’m happy to be back in the yellow jersey,” said the Dane.

“Tadej was just stronger today and he deserved to win.”

Overnight leader Hindley’s 15 minutes of fame were sealed on the 17km slog up the highest peak of the Tour so far, the Col du Tourmalet.

The Australian paid for his efforts in the breakaway on stage five and dropped off the pace as Vingegaard put the hammer down.

One interested onlooker was Emmanuel Macron, the French president joining Tour director Christian Prudhomme in the car following the race leaders.

American rider Neilson Powless of the Education First team retook the polka dot climb jersey thanks to being in the mix as far as the Tourmalet.

The climbs of Col d’Aspin and Col du Tourmalet marked out stage six as the toughest test so far.

Stage seven on Friday takes the Tour away from the Pyrenees and through the world renowned vineyards of the Bordeaux region.

“It’s flat, superflat and easy for the teams of the sprinters to control,” race designer Thierry Gouvenou told AFP Thursday.

There is a 2km long pancake flat home-straight guaranteeing a mass bunch sprint finish at Bordeaux where British sprinter Mark Cavendish could write a chapter of his own by claiming a record-breaking 35th stage win.
 


Unfancied nations face up to challenges in T20 World Cup

Updated 26 February 2026
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Unfancied nations face up to challenges in T20 World Cup

  • Seeding process had a predestined feel to it
  • Dice loaded against associates, even unseeded full members

COLOMBO: Seven weeks prior to the 2026 ICC T20 Men’s World Cup, each of the 20 teams were pre-assigned a fixed label by the International Cricket Council. In each of the four groups, those teams considered to be the top ranked were numbered 1 and 2. In Group A, for example, India were A1 and Pakistan A2. Given that the tournament is co-hosted by India and Sri Lanka, the labels provided a basis for the ICC to allocate venues and teams for the Super Eight stage, as well as assisting fans and broadcasters to plan travel and schedules. My focus was on attending matches in Sri Lanka.

This seeding process had a predestined feel to it, as if those teams labelled 3, 4 and 5, nine of which are associate ICC members, were not expected to qualify for the Super Eight stage. Undeterred, several of them have provided surprises and near shocks in the group stages. Leading the way have been Zimbabwe, as Australia found out to their cost, being the only seeded team not to qualify for the Super Eights.

If there were to be an award for the most devoted and inspiring set of supporters it would surely be those of Zimbabwe. A hard core of six, the Castle Corner group, dressed in the national colours of red and yellow, chanted and danced their way through Zimbabwe’s matches. Zimbabwean cricket has experienced dark days in the last 25 years, including suspension by the ICC in 2019, largely because of political interference. 

After the team’s qualification, their players saluted them, singing in unison across the small divide between the dressing rooms and the terraces. The chants of the supporters, backed by drums and horns, have been much more resonant than the muzak which is belted out between overs or when boundaries are scored. Success has come at price because Zimbabwe have to play their Super Eight matches in India. The supporters, who paid their own way, were faced with unexpected extra costs.  

Overall, support for teams other than the host nations has been limited. This has not stopped those supporters making themselves heard. Nepal are always guaranteed raucous support, Irish supporters can always be heard, while England’s barmy army is a constant source of support for the team in overseas venues. However, English voices struggled to make themselves heard above the incessant noise generated by Sri Lanka supporters in the match at Pallekele, Kandy, last Sunday, until it became apparent that Sri Lanka had crumbled to a defeat that seemed unlikely at halfway.

There was a feeling of expectancy that at least one of the associate nations would spring a shock. Nepal almost beat England. Requiring 10 runs to win in the last over, Sam Curran denied them, conceding six runs, to leave the Nepal team and their supporters in despair.

Perhaps the disappointment of that narrow loss seeped into Nepal’s next performance. Quite how they were bowled out for 123 by Italy, who then reached the target with the loss of no wickets in 12.4 overs, beggars belief. The Italian team and their supporters brought typical Italian elan to the tournament. It is obviously something that is in the genes, since the players do not live in Italy.

Several of them have never been to the country they represent. In October 2024 I was invited to an evening with the Italian Cricket Federation in London and wrote about that experience in my column at the time. Simone Gambino, a leading light for decades in the development of Italian cricket, explained to me that qualification is based on citizenship, a concept for which he fought long and hard. The majority of the squad have Italian grandparents. One of those is Marcus Campopiano, who lives and plays his cricket in southern England.

As the team were about to embark on their World Cup qualifying tournament in Uganda in 2024, I remarked to Campopiano that if the team were successful, it would join the “big boys.” His reply was that they had a good team, and so it has proved. The injury in the first World Cup match to South African-born captain Wayne Madsen, a seasoned player in English county cricket, was a setback. Throughout the group stage, the PR campaign to support the team has been excellent, especially on Instagram. It will be interesting to watch how the two weeks in the spotlight are used to build the team in the future and whether further success will be achieved.

On the surface it may appear that the gap is narrowing between full and associate-member teams. It is undeniable that there have been close finishes. On Feb. 7, in the opening match in Colombo, Pakistan required 29 runs from the last 12 deliveries to beat the Netherlands. In the 19th over, Max O’Dowd failed to catch Faheem Ashraf, who proceeded to win the game for Pakistan. In a sign of the times, O’Dowd immediately received social media abuse. Shortly afterwards, in Mumbai, the US reduced India to 77 for six by the 13th over. Suryakumar Yadav, India’s captain, who survived a dropped catch when he had scored 15, rescued his team, scoring 84 from 49 deliveries. India won by 29 runs.

Those scares may have been the result of “first night” nerves for Pakistan and India, or two associate teams running high on adrenalin. In the aftermath of England’s scrape against Nepal and an indifferent performance against Scotland, the team captain, Harry Brook, let slip that those opponents may have been underestimated. This is a dangerous stance for any full member team to adopt. Associates have shown that, on certain days, they can take their more powerful opponents to the brink. However, in the five-team group format adopted for the 2024 and 2026 T20 World Cups, consisting of two full and three associate members, only once, in 2024, have one of the latter (Canada) beaten any of the former (Pakistan).

While this meant that Pakistan failed to reach the Super Eights, it was Canada’s only win. In order to finish in the top two places, an associate probably has to beat the other two associates and hope that the full member they beat will also lose to the other full member. These scenarios can be modeled, but that would ignore the reality faced by associates. This is driven by economics. The expansion to 20 teams in 2024 has been hailed as another step toward the democratization of cricket but, under the ICC’s revenue distribution model, associate member boards receive about 1/60 of the amount received by their Indian counterpart. The reasons for this are well rehearsed: India generates over 80 percent of cricket’s global revenues and remains determined to receive what it considers to be its fair share.     

An impressive but losing performance by an associate against a full member will catch the headlines, but it will not lay the foundations to beat full members on a regular basis. This requires the opportunity to play against those teams more often. The chances are low. Instead, associates will play other associates, often in qualification pathways for subsequent World Cups. Captains of associate teams have spoken of players lacking experience in crucial moments, of lacking depth compared with full member teams, and of not playing cricket regularly enough. The Netherlands, for example, do not have another international fixture between their last World Cup match on Feb. 18 until the summer. If their players are not involved in any intervening tournaments, the top edges of their performance will atrophy.

It seems that the dice are loaded against associates and even the unseeded full members. The romance of a brave, close defeat; vociferous, loyal, but limited support; and appearances in cricket’s media channels, is tempered by economic reality.

The UAE, Nepal, the US, and Canada have each developed their own T20 franchise leagues, with a European one set to launch. These provide an opportunity for local talent to learn from established international players and coaches. Yet, without an unlikely reform of the ICC’s revenue distribution model, associates will continue to be locked into a hierarchical system that encourages expanding numbers of them to fight for places at an increasingly rich man’s table.