Just watched to final 40km in detail with some Celebrator Doppelbocks...love the goat necklace on the bottle!
The precursor to Redoute had Tadej in great position so his acceleration was pretty much unimpeded. He had 15 seconds at the top and carried his TT mode on the flat/descent and gained nearly 30 seconds by not backing off in less than 1km; which says alot about his pursuers.
They were fractured and from posture of those front 5 or 6 riders, they expected the pack to catch them. That gave Pogacar the additional 30 second gap on the narrow, single-track descent with cars parked half on the outside line of the turns. He locked into the planned effort to the finish without taking any risky lines.
Watching the groups behind them it was a drama owned by GT riders and their ability to milk work out of others. Bardet did what we've seen him do on every major GT climb; take a pull providing a slight gap to the next rider and then ceding the front of the group to that rider. Bardet knew he was racing for a podium finish and used the bike-wrestling Ben Healey like a rented tractor. Ben and EF should watch that section on video. Bardet rode with subtle Veteran confidence all the way to dropping those overworked newbies. Meanwhile, in the MvP group the real strategy was obvious. Bardet's teammate was 2nd or 3rd wheel in the group, offering nothing for effort and ahead of MvP. Trailing MvP were two of Tadej's UAE guys, spaced appropriately to deal with any aggression that might happen. It was classic team setup and a great thing to see on a long race like this.
Notable was the QS riders....trying to hang on to the back of every failing/flailing group they were stuck in. If Remco had been in this event he would have had to be glued to Tadej's jersey to accomplish a podium, IMO. His team would have not been any help when the sh*t hit the fan.
Pogacar proved that he is a very tactially disciplined guy, once again. His demeanor at the finish was a fatigued and satisfied victor.