A Spanish rider called Pedro García Fernández shared a picture behind Vingegaard, and also wrote on his Strava activity the following: "You can be professional, but you can also be humble. He was going down fast just to get rid of me and ended up on the ground. I don't make a living from this and I'm an amateur like most people, so I don't think his anger as a professional is justified because of that."
This was met with a lot of backlash on social media as the amateur rider was seemingly uncaring for the incident he has seemingly stirred. A second report from another rider adds more detail to the story:
"He must have taken a hard hit to end up dragging his face along the ground," the second rider said. "I also stopped and asked if he needed help and he told me no, to go away, very angry. Now I understand why.
Do other riders put pros at risk?
Former Uno-X Mobility rider Magnus Kulset took to social media to argue this can be the case. "After reading about Vingegaard crashing on training yesterday and the total amount of random riders jumping onto pro’s wheels, I have a question: How would you feel about a random person breathing down your neck at work? Without asking if you are fine with it," he questioned.
"I’ll happily let people ride on my wheel if they ask, but if they don’t I feel uncomfortable, and to some degree unsafe. I don’t know how good of a bike handler you are, I don’t know how aware you are, I don’t know how safe in traffic you are. I have personally been crashed into by someone jumping onto my wheel, and that is so unnecessary and unfortunate for everyone".
Whilst Vingegaard is not currently training in the Costa Blanca, he did during the two team training camps, as did Tadej Pogacar and most of the other world's best. The region is swarmed with pro and amateur cyclists alike during the winter months and the constant flow of footage circling on social media suggests the riders are constantly the center of attention, even with no racing on the schedule.
With the potential for the Dane's crash having been caused by an amateur rider on the road; as well as Tadej Pogacar's efforts to avoid attention and pictures during last summer; it makes a strong case for the top riders seeking less active locations for which to train.