Bora-Hansgrohe Sports Director Rolf Aldag has commended Jai Hindley for not sitting up and calling his fight for the Tour de France podium done after being injured in a crash that neutralized the early part of stage 14.
The Australian hurt several areas of his right leg in the mass pileup that saw many abandonments but finished the stage in sixth place behind stage winner Carlos Rodríguez (Ineos Grenadiers).
Hindley started the day third on general classification with a handy one-minute and 57-second buffer on Rodríguez, but now trails the Spaniard by a single second ahead of another tough day in the mountains on Sunday.
“Today I think we could have made a big difference, also to the direct competitors. I do feel like he had the shape to stay with Rodríguez, but a crash is a crash. You can’t turn back the clock,” Aldag said post-race.
“He was one of the many victims of the crash but considering that I do think he did fight all through the day massively, and big chapeau for his spirit and for not sitting up and saying that’s it.
“He did get a big hit. If you crash on a slightly downhill with high speed, it’s never good. I think for that he did fight through it really, really bravely, and now we have to see how we get through the days.”
Hindley showered and changed before speaking to media after the stage, unable to recall how the crash, in which riders hit the tarmac at a reported 50km/h, occurred.
“I’ve got no idea. We were just laying down before I knew it,” he said. “I had quite a bit of pain in my backside … I think it’s more like internal muscle or something. It’s quite sore at the moment. Try and sort it out in the next few days.”
Hindley despite the fall didn’t show any sign of weakness on the road, staying with the yellow jersey group of Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma), Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates), their respective lieutenants and a handful of others, long after his own teammates were dropped.
Emanuel Buchmann lost contact with the yellow jersey group on the Col de la Ramaz, some 55.8km from the finish, and Hindley navigated the decisive Col de Joux Plane alone, with a near full Jumbo-Visma compliment initially controlling the pace.
“For sure we were hoping for more. Emu [Buchmann] tried to come back but then he stuck with the [Tom] Pidcock group,” said Aldag. “A lot of guys were isolated. Rodríguez was alone. So, in that sense, other than [the guys] Pogačar and Vingegaard had, nobody else [was] there…
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