Facebook Pixel THE MAKING OF JONAS VINGEGAARD | Cycling Weekly - sports - Lisez cet article sur Magzter.com

Essayer OR - Gratuit

THE MAKING OF JONAS VINGEGAARD

Cycling Weekly

|

June 29, 2023

From Hantsholm harbour to the top step of the Tour de France podium, Tom Thewlis delves deep into what made the Danish sensation the dominant rider of today sport 

-  Tom Thewlis 

THE MAKING OF JONAS VINGEGAARD

The northernmost corner of Denmark at the top of the Jutland Peninsula is an exposed, windswept and unforgiving landscape. Surrounding the harbours of the Thy district – which were once used as staging posts for Viking raids across Europe in the ninth and 10th centuries – are vast plains, without a knoll, hill or mountain in sight.

As the local people will tell you, to be a cyclist in the area means first knowing how to fight against the wind. Local riders also don’t have the luxury of long, warm drawn-out evenings that many of their contemporaries in Europe’s southern climes enjoy.

Perhaps that’s why a young Jonas Vingegaard – who’d go on to win the 2022 Tour de France – would often require a gentle nudge to get out of the house and out on the road with his friends, Karsten Mikkelsen and Jesper Odgaard, to train.

“They often had to go to his house, knock on his door and say, ‘Jonas! now we ride,’ but he couldn’t get his ass out riding,” says EF Education-EasyPost’s Michael Valgren, a childhood friend of Vingegaard. “If it wasn’t for Jesper, Karsten and all the other guys at the old club, I’m not sure he’d have been a pro.

Along with his parents they really took care of him.”

Cycling was just for recreation for young Vingegaard. Most sports are littered with stories of young athletes making grand statements of intent in the early days, announcing their talent from the rooftops. Not Jonas.

The friendly, polite and happy-go-lucky teenager from Thy never envisaged the sporting immortality that seemed almost inevitable once he arrived at Jumbo-Visma.

PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Cycling Weekly

Cycling Weekly

Cycling Weekly

HOW TO...CHOOSE THE BIKE PATH OR THE ROAD

Often there is a choice between using a road and using a parallel bike path the latter almost always shared with pedestrians. And yes, it's a choice. You can use either.

time to read

1 min

May 21, 2026

Cycling Weekly

Cycling Weekly

Should you ride with radar?

Real-time tracking of vehicle behaviour could change your relationship to riding forever

time to read

2 mins

May 21, 2026

Cycling Weekly

Cycling Weekly

SAME TECH HALF THE PRIZE

As emerging bike brands offer ever more performance for less money, Rosael Torres-Davies asks: should your next bike be Chinese?

time to read

9 mins

May 21, 2026

Cycling Weekly

Cycling Weekly

Schreurs doubles up at The Gralloch

Pöstlberger wins the men's gravel race in Scotland

time to read

2 mins

May 21, 2026

Cycling Weekly

Cycling Weekly

AN EXPERT'S TAKE ON...METABOLIC EFFICIENCY

How to unlock your body's fuel-burning potential

time to read

3 mins

May 21, 2026

Cycling Weekly

Cycling Weekly

Farewell, Katie

As Katie Archibald retires, her former coach at BC, Monica Greenwood, looks back at her career

time to read

3 mins

May 21, 2026

Cycling Weekly

Cycling Weekly

THE MAN WHO BUILT A TWO-TIME TOUR WINNER

Ex-Visma coach outlines the training philosophy behind Vingegaard's Tour de France victories

time to read

7 mins

May 21, 2026

Cycling Weekly

Cycling Weekly

Lauren Dickson achieves WorldTour best at Itzulia

Scottish rider finishes third overall in Basque Country women's race

time to read

2 mins

May 21, 2026

Cycling Weekly

Cycling Weekly

THE RACE THAT TIME FORGOT

A radical 1947 Paris-London race

time to read

7 mins

May 21, 2026

Cycling Weekly

Cycling Weekly

"There are only a few riders I am a genuine fan of – Katie Archibald is one of them"

The Doc is always impressed by Archibald, even in the way she retired

time to read

3 mins

May 21, 2026

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size