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Drunk Tour de France spectator who threw bag of crisps at Tadej Pogačar and Jonas Vingegaard arrested for aggravated assault, with riders’ union set to take legal action “with pleasure”

The spectator had allegedly spent the afternoon drinking alcohol and was immediately taken away by the French police, as CPA President Adam Hansen called the incident “disrespectful”

As the knife was twisted further in the battle for the yellow jersey on stage 14’s final climb of Pla d’Adet, broadcast cameras caught the footage of a spectator shoving a bag of crisps in the faces of the two main protagonists of the 2024 Tour de France, UAE Team Emirates’ Tadej Pogačar and Visma-Lease a Bike’s Jonas Vingegaard. It’s now been reported that the man has been taken in custody by the French police on grounds of aggravated assault.

The incident happened with just two kilometres left as the race ventured into the high mountains of the Pyrenees yesterday. Pogačar, after a brilliant decoy attack by his teammate Adam Yates, launched one of his trademark bursts with five kilometres to go, catching the duo of Yates and EF Education-Easy Post’s Ben Healy, before quickly leaving them behind.

Jonas Vingegaard, the defending champion from Denmark along with Soudal-Quick Step’s Remco Evenepoel, managed to stay close to Pogačar’s consecutive accelerations initially. But soon, two became one as Evenepoel was also dropped, and it was only Vingegaard, who like the persistent shadow he’s been throughout this Tour so far, kept tailing Pogačar with a few seconds' gap.

And while carb-loading has been a big discussion of this Tour, seen as one of the reasons behind the superhuman performances from Pogačar and Vingegaard day in day out, a spectator with the flag of Brittany draped around his torso, decided to take matters into his own hands by shoving a bag of crisps first in the face of Pogačar, and then of Vingegaard seconds later.

Thankfully, the actions didn’t lead to any adverse conclusions for the riders, although Pogačar could be seen shaking his head annoyingly, and Vingegaard questioned why would someone come to a bike race to do this, speaking after the stage.

> “We don’t need a stage ruined because of a basic photo taken on a phone”: Tour de France fan almost brings down Jonas Vingegaard while stepping into road to take photo of speeding peloton

French news website Le Parisien now reports that the man has been taken into custody by the French police and will have his case heard today, with authorities waiting for him to sober up after he had allegedly spent the entire afternoon drinking alcohol.

Alexis, another cycling fan who had travelled from Brittany to witness the Pyrenees summit finish and was standing close to the perpetrator, who's been dubbed 'Dorito man' on social media, said: “He was with a group of very nice friends, cycling fans, like us. We got to know each other well, talked about everything, about cycling, Brittany and played the puck… But he spent the afternoon with a good amount of drinks”.

He added that a police officer who saw the scene intervened immediately after he repeated the same thing with Vingegaard and removed him from the roadside. A police car arrived five minutes later to take him away.

Alexis claimed that he didn’t understand why the man decided to throw the chips, but attributed it to his excessive drinking.

“The gesture did not look premeditated. After the riders passed by, his friends were surprised. They were obviously not on their first Tour but it’s the first time he’s done bullshit like that,” he said, adding that the man’s friends were worried about him after his inappropriate behaviour.

Pogacar wins stage 14, Tour de France 2024 (ASO/Billy Ceusters)

Tadej Pogačar wins stage 14, Tour de France 2024 (ASO/Billy Ceusters)

Images and videos of the incident, which took away some attention from the otherwise completely captivating GC battle in the Tour, were circulated widely on social media, drawing heavy criticism from fans.

Adam Hansen, former pro and president of the riders’ association CPA said that they will take “legal action against this guy with pleasure” due to what he did to both Pogačar and Vingegaard. “This is disrespectful and will not be tolerated,” he added.

However, the Tour organiser ASO has reportedly confirmed to Le Parisien that they wouldn’t be filing a complaint against the man.

> Jumbo-Visma willing to sue Tour de France spectator who caused huge crash while taking selfie

While Vingegaard did manage to keep up with Pogačar initially, he would continue the grow the gap and finish 39 seconds ahead of the winner of the last two Tours, gaining four more bonus seconds at the finish line and extending his lead to almost two minutes in the general classification.

Evenepoel, meanwhile dropped down to third position behind Vingegaard, after the Belgian failed to keep up with him on Pla d’Adet, and now sits 2:22 behind Pogačar, with the Slovenian’s teammate João Almeida in fourth place, 6 minutes behind.

In other news, British rider for Ineos Grenadiers Tom Pidcock became the latest person to withdraw from the Tour due to Covid, joining Pogačar’s teammate Juan Ayuso and Sir Mark Cavendish’s leadout man Michael Morkov.

This marks another incident at this Tour de France where spectators' unseemingly actions have come to the fore. Even before the race started, a fan reportedly “jumped a barrier” and tangled with Soudal-Quick Step rider Jan Hirst as he was making his way back to his team bus area following the sign-on, resulting in the Czech rider falling over his handlebars and landing face-first, breaking three teeth in the process.

Quick-Step's typically outspoken boss Patrick Lefevere said: "What happened is unacceptable. We have so many rules and we have to pay for everything. And then the collision happens with that stupid spectator and his backpack.

"Yesterday he couldn't eat during the ride, not even gels. He survived the entire ride on water bottles. I arranged for him to have surgery yesterday in a private clinic. Fortunately, in the evening he was back at the hotel with three repaired teeth."

And then on the second stage, a spectator filming the second stage of the Tour de France from the roadside had their mobile phone knocked from their hand when they inadvertently hit a rider from EF Education-EasyPost as the peloton passed at speed.

It prompted the official Tour de France account on Twitter to post the video as a warning to spectators, urging roadside fans to "respect the riders" and "stay away from the road".

And then in the fifth stage — the stage in which Cavendish managed to break the all-time record for Tour de France stage wins with an incredible sprint, an oblivious spectator encroached onto the road to take a photo, almost bringing most of the Visma-Lease a Bike team, including Vingegaard, down.

“The bloke’s taking a photo on the side of the road and putting himself amongst the peloton, they’re ducking under his elbow – another close call,” an exasperated Robbie McEwen, a 12-time Tour de France stage winner, said while commentating for Eurosport, while cycling writer Mathew Mitchell wrote on Twitter: “We don't need a stage ruined because of a basic photo taken on a phone.”

Adwitiya joined road.cc in 2023 as a news writer after graduating with a masters in journalism from Cardiff University. His dissertation focused on active travel, which soon threw him into the deep end of covering everything related to the two-wheeled tool, and now cycling is as big a part of his life as guitars and football. He has previously covered local and national politics for Voice Wales, and also likes to writes about science, tech and the environment, if he can find the time. Living right next to the Taff trail in the Welsh capital, you can find him trying to tackle the brutal climbs in the valleys.

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15 comments

Avatar
Aberdeencyclist | 4 months ago
4 likes

The peleton rode too close to the Walkers that day

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lesterama replied to Aberdeencyclist | 4 months ago
1 like

The Walkers got too close to the peloton, more like!

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brooksby replied to lesterama | 4 months ago
0 likes

Whilst I do understand the joke, I've got to say that the scenes of Pogacar climbing during his breakaway at 5km on Saturday…: The crowd are practically standing right in front of the cyclists, it's insane.

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Rapha Nadal | 4 months ago
0 likes

If the crisps in question were Bret's then wasting them should be a chargeable offence in its own right!

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ktache | 4 months ago
2 likes

Did I see Didi the Devil on the lower slopes of Saturday's final mountain?

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Rendel Harris replied to ktache | 4 months ago
2 likes
ktache wrote:

Did I see Didi the Devil on the lower slopes of Saturday's final mountain?

Yes, he's been on every stage this year I think after having his knees and hips replaced. Looked to be on fine form.

Avatar
ubercurmudgeon | 4 months ago
10 likes

The Tour de France really is a curious spectacle. In the centre of the TV screen, you watch the world's greatest professional endurance athletes performing extraordinary physical feats, and waging psychological and tactical war on each other. Meanwhile, to their left and right, there are scenes straight out of the movie Idiocracy: people either half-naked or wearing clothes covered in corporate logos, bellowing, shaking their fists, nearly tripping and falling into the path of the riders, and waving meaningless flags in their faces. And, the big change from past decades, recording it all on their mobiles. What do these people do with the footage? Do they plan to one day show it with great pride to their grandchildren? "Look at this, this is your pop-pops, dressed in a day-glo mankini for reasons lost in the mists of time, running alongside the great Tadej Pogacar, while carrying a lighted flare that is pouring smoke into his lungs as he climbs a mountain. It is my greatest ever achievement."

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Hirsute replied to ubercurmudgeon | 4 months ago
2 likes

Don't forget the chain saws !

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S.E. replied to ubercurmudgeon | 4 months ago
1 like

Introvert...  3

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hawkinspeter | 4 months ago
12 likes

Assault and vinegar?

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chrisonabike replied to hawkinspeter | 4 months ago
1 like

It's blatant cheating! Everyone knows that if you dip cyclists in vinegar they last longer before they crack. At least, that's how it works in conkers.

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Cayo replied to hawkinspeter | 4 months ago
7 likes
hawkinspeter wrote:

Assault and vinegar?

Surely Assault on Vingegaard?

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mdavidford | 4 months ago
8 likes
road.cc wrote:

Pogačar could be seen shaking his head annoyingly

Presumably resulting in a €200 fine.

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Rendel Harris | 4 months ago
4 likes

Disgraceful. I'm appalled. So very, very wrong. I trust this will attract the strongest possible sanction. I refer of course to the unconscionable Americanism of referring to a bag of crisps as "chips".

(Yes I am aware that the French for crisps is also chips, still no excuse)

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NotNigel replied to Rendel Harris | 4 months ago
1 like

Haha, beat me to it...I was expecting to see a big white parcel, the contents going all over the place.

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