Cycling News

Jonas Vingegaard: ‘Should I stab my own teammate in the back?’

Vingegaard earns a brace of 2023 Vuelta wins, closes gap on teammate Kuss

Jonas Vingegaard has spoken up about his plans when it comes to his American teammate, Sepp Kuss at the Vuelta, saying he will help him all the way to Madrid.

In an interview with Danish broadcaster, TV2, the journalist asks the Tour de France champion if he had seen some of the (many) comments that had been written about both him and his Slovenian teammate.

Explanation of what happened

“If you have to try to explain to the fans who are now complaining about this decision and think it’s a form of match-fixing because they thought you were going to win….What would you say to them?”

“Well, I really just want to ask them if they think I should stab my own teammate in the back? Because I don’t think I should,” Vingegaard responds.

Dramatic few days

During Stage 16, Jonas Vingegaard did in fact attack his own teammate in the red jersey, Kuss and made up over a minute on him, bringing him to just 29 seconds behind. He also jumped over over teammate Primož Roglič. On Wednesday, Roglič and the Dane dropped Kuss, taking 19 seconds on him. That meant Vingegaard was only eight seconds behind. This all changed on Stage 18, after an apparent heated team meeting the night before.

Cycling is a team sport

“Do you think it’s because people don’t understand that cycling is a team sport?” The journalist asks.

“Yes, it’s a team sport, and Sepp has helped me so many times, so why should I stab him in the back? That’s not who I am as a person. I don’t want to do that. Until yesterday, I was put in a somewhat difficult situation, where I perhaps felt that I was stuck between a rock and a hard place,” he says.

Plans were up in the air

The journalist then asks Vingegaard to elaborate on that.

“We had agreed that we would race for the red jersey, and it is clear that if the other two duel over it, then I also want to be involved. But if we had agreed that we didn’t do what. This is what I would have liked to have happened to begin with,” he says. “I would have liked that after the rest day. We had not fought for it the red jersey and had just ridden defensively. But we then decided that we should fight for it. In that way, I was also put in a bit of a difficult situation, I think.

Tactics changed, eventually

Was that decision made perhaps too late?

“I would have liked to see that it had been made earlier. It would mean that Sepp still wins, hopefully,” Vingegaard concludes.

Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at Canadian Cycling Magazine…