Shortly after, Paul Seixas crashed.
Lidl-Trek did not work immediately after, however did take part in the work later in the day, mostly through Quinn Simmons who had been in the day's breakaway and was pulled back. But this was in order to control the front group, the leader of the German team argued.
"After that, it was just full-on racing, UAE and us, we just controlled because we didn't want the break to get some time.” That work certainly did not please some in the peloton, with Decathlon's Léo Bisiaux
not hiding his dissatisfaction against the work that was done whilst Paul Seixas was making a return to contention.
Ayuso regrets his decision to attack early
Ayuso and Mattias Skjelmose remained focused on the final climb, where the differences would be made. Averaging over 10% for 8 kilometers, it was always going to be a climb where pacing would be key and also the riders' legs would be more important than their tactics.
Lidl entered the climb in front, and Ayuso quickly attacked. Confidence was through the roof, and the Spaniard maintained the momentum, whilst the likes of Paul Seixas struggled and Isaac del Toro did not respond.
It was promising, but didn't earn him a win. “I’m just disappointed because I think that was obviously too far out, too early and I threw away the win. My teammates deserved it today so I’m just disappointed.”
In good spirits however, he responded “because I’m stupid" when asked why he attacked so early on. It was nevertheless a very strong display of power, his best long climbing performance in a race of such level in a long time. Ayuso finished the stage in second place, 24 seconds off of Isaac del Toro who caught him inside the final 2 kilometers; and has climbed into fourth in the overall classification.
A podium place remains quite likely. He is 24 seconds behind Matteo Jorgenson and 17 behind Del Toro; whilst leading Tobias Johannessen by 27 and Paul Seixas by 48. Of course, Luke Tuckwell remains in the race lead, and could still hold a place in the final podium. A lot will come down to the final stage which ends at the mythical Plateau de Solaison.
Ayuso believes that with better pacing, he may have won today's stage, arguing that he blew up in the finale due to an effort that was too high too early. "... The pace was not super hard and then it was the hardest part, so I thought ‘okay, on the wheel I’m not going to save much,’ but at the end you do, and I think I just threw away a victory today.”