The crash stunned everyone, including Vingegaard himself, who suddenly found he was alone out front. Far from exploiting it, the Dane made the call that defined the finale: he eased and waited for the bunch. “To be honest, I don’t know what happened,” he said in a flash interview, still shaken. “He just catapulted over the bars and I only hope he’s okay.”
The Dane stressed how tough the moment was. “It looked crazy,” he added, making clear his main concern was his rival’s condition. “I hope he’s okay.” With the win still up for grabs, Vingegaard chose not to press on solo. “Obviously, I didn’t want to take advantage of a situation like that,” he explained. “In that moment I decided to wait for the peloton.”
That act of sportsmanship proved decisive, as the main group reeled him in over the final metres, leaving victory to France’s Dorian Godon, who repeated his success and tightened his grip on the general classification lead.
Beyond the outcome, Vingegaard also assessed how such an atypical stage unfolded. The Dane admitted he hadn’t anticipated a finish like that. “I didn’t expect it this way. I thought it would be a bigger group,” he said.
Evenepoel’s attack completely changed the script. “He went, and I jumped across to him,” he recalled, underlining the Belgian’s power on the flat. “He was very strong on the flat. He’s very aerodynamic.”
Vingegaard pleased with the attack
Even so, Vingegaard was happy to have matched the move and worked in the break. “I’m glad I could jump across and do a bit of work with him,” he noted.
During those kilometres off the front, tension also surfaced between the two. The Dane acknowledged there were moments of friction. “I think at some points he wasn’t too happy with me,” he said of Evenepoel, though he played it down. “But that’s cycling, we all have our tactics.”
The episode offers several takeaways: Evenepoel’s ambition, Vingegaard’s solidity, and above all the Dane’s sporting gesture at a key moment. While France’s Dorian Godon celebrated his win and consolidated the lead, the peloton and fans focused on the Belgian champion’s condition after a crash that completely reshaped the stage finale.
Dorian Godon won Stage 3 of the Volta a Catalunya 2026..