Pogacar stormed to another dominant stage victory on France's Bastille Day national holiday to extend his overall lead to more than three and a half minutes.It was his 24th stage win since his debut Tour in 2020 and leaves the four-time overall winner with his largest ever lead at this stage of the three-week race.But he faced some boos on the mountainous roads around the central Cantal region."Haters gonna hate, it's always like this, even though (in) cycling (there) is not as much as... in tennis or football there is much more booing and going against one team or one player," said the 27-year-old Slovenian."If they boo me on the road, they actually boo the whole bunch because you don't know who it is, because we pass all together."I always think about tennis, Novak Djokovic, how great a mentality he has."He had one of the toughest careers about this, about getting boos and unnecessarily, because he's the greatest."When someone is booing, I look up to Novak Djokovic and think about him."Djokovic was most recently booed on the Wimbledon Centre Court after smashing a ball in frustration having lost a point and his serve.Pogacar insisted that those jeering him were just a tiny minority. "In cycling, it's actually not so much booing, it's like 99 percent of people are cheering for everybody," he said.