At first, it looked set to be another Remco Evenepoel exhibition. When the world champion attacked with 6km of the climb to Villars-sur-Ollon remaining, he seemed destined to put his stamp on the Tour de Suisse.
By the summit, however, Evenepoel would find himself in damage limitation mode after he surprisingly struggled on the upper reaches of the summit finish to stage 3. He would recover slightly in the final kilometre to place fourth on the stage, 21 seconds behind winner Mattias Skjelmose (Trek-Segafredo).
“We have to be content, we tried,” Evenepoel said afterwards, according to Het Nieuwsblad. “Nothing is lost yet, so no drama. I haven’t lost the general classification here. Now it’s onto tomorrow, it’s another chance.”
On a day of steady rain, Evenepoel had set his Soudal-QuickStep team to work on the lower slopes of the final climb, with Mattia Cattaneo and James Knox bringing him to within 6km of the finish.
Only Mattias Skjelmose (Trek-Segafredo) and Felix Gall (AG2R Citroën) could follow Evenepoel’s initial acceleration, which splintered the yellow jersey group and distanced race leader Stefan Küng (Groupama-FDJ). It was striking, however, that the best of the chasers were able to keep Evenepoel within touching distance after his initial onslaught.
After sitting on Evenepoel at first, Gall and Skjelmose felt emboldened by what they saw. When Gall attacked with 3km to go, Skjelmose followed immediately, while Evenepoel was left to chase alone, and he was later caught and passed by chaser Juan Ayuso (UAE Team Emirates).
“I had to try something to get rid of Küng, which I did,” Evenepoel said. “However, there were two riders with me who were also very strong, and maybe I took a little too much work on my shoulders. I paid for that on the tricky part of the climb.”
Evenepoel suggested the day had confirmed he was still short of his best after COVID-19 had forced him to abandon the Giro d’Italia last month while wearing the maglia rosa.
“I felt it wasn’t in top form yet. Normally I should be able to add another acceleration in that stretch, but that wasn’t on the cards today,” said Evenepoel, who drew solace from his recovery in the final kilometre.
“I didn’t completely collapse either. It was only two or three bad minutes, and then I got back into my rhythm, so it must be some after-effects [from COVID-19.] But it was still a good sprint in the end.”
Evenepoel acknowledged, too, that he had taken the weight of…
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