The French word for winner is vainqueur, which comes from the same Latin root as vanquished. This feels apt, as Tadej Pogačar vanquished all beneath him on the slopes of the Col de la Couillole on stage seven of Paris-Nice on Saturday.
This is how I was going to begin my piece on the UAE Team Emirates' rider's apparent everlasting reign. When the Slovenian attacked with 5.5km to go on Saturday, it seemed inevitable that he would storm away into the distance, light it up in his usual style, and seal the yellow jersey at his first time at the 'Race to the Sun'.
The last stage race that Pogačar did not win at least two stages at was the Tour of Slovenia in 2021. He just can't not win, this was his seventh victory of the year and Milan-San Remo has not even happened yet. He might as well be declared the champion of Paris-Nice and maybe even the Tour de France already, right?
Except, it did not happen quite like that. Sure, Pogačar still went on to win stage seven - who else - but he was marked to the end by Groupama-FDJ's David Gaudu, and Jumbo-Visma's Jonas Vingegaard was really not that far behind. If he had not secured so many bonus seconds, Gaudu would be in the lead and Vingegaard would be hot on his heels.
It seems harder to draw grand conclusions from Saturday's race, there was no decisive blow as stage four perhaps contained, but one thing is for sure is that the big two of Pogačar and Vingegaard, second and first from last year's Tour de France, has been inflated to three by the performances of Gaudu over this week.
Any of the starring trio could win overall in Nice on Sunday afternoon, after they have navigated the punchy course around the Côte d'Azur which almost undid Vingegaard's teammate Primož Roglič last year. It is no procession.
For tomorrow, it's still not finished for any guys in the GC, because it's an unpredictable stage," Pogačar said. "As far as we saw today, Gaudu is one of the strongest here and my goal is just to not let him go. Also, respect the others, to not gain time. My goal is to try and finish tomorrow in yellow."
As for all the focus on the battle between the Slovenian and Vingegaard, there is a Groupama-FDJ coloured interloper in the mix, and one which might be there throughout the year. The Tour is just as much his goal as the others. Fourth last year does not seem like his ceiling, especially after a performance like this.
"I think he's improving every year little by little, and if he's still not in the best shape of the year, he will win some big races this year," Pogačar explained after his victory.
"Today, and for this whole week, I’ve been in the battle," Gaudu said. "In my head, I’m really motivated and I don’t want to have any regrets or look back in a year’s time and think I could've followed him [Pogačar].
"Today, this year, this week, we’re trying to to learn how to respond to attacks and attack ourselves. I’m happy to be at this level, but there’s still stage nine, so we shouldn’t get ahead of ourselves."