The Phnom Penh Post

French delight as Alaphilipp­e bags Tour lead

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JULIAN Alaphilipp­e produced a magnificen­t show of power in stage three on Monday to give France its first win and take the overall lead in the 2019 Tour de France.

The win means a French rider has the overall leader’s yellow jersey for the first time in five years.

The Deceuninck-Quick Step rider took a huge gamble with his long range effort.

He slipped away from the pack after vying for bonus seconds on the penultimat­e climb, assuming a daredevil, aerodynami­c crouch at the crest and breaking clear.

By the time he crossed the Marne, still an agonising 10km through the champagne vineyards from Epernay, he was almost a minute ahead.

Alaphilipp­e was strong enough to cling on and win by 26 seconds, despite a desperate effort from the pack to reel him in.

“I was really up for it today, so when I saw the chance I went all in,” said a red-faced Alaphilipp­e after his third ever stage win and his first yellow jersey.

“I should have waited until the end, I know, but I just went full gas when I saw the gap.”

Thomas loses time on last hill

Amazingly, it is the first time a French rider has had the overall lead since Tony Gallopin wore yellow in 2014. Alaphilipp­e was the toast of France on Monday night.

A small break in the chasing pack saw defending champion GeraintTho­mas lose five seconds to his Team Ineos co-leader Colombian 22-year-old Egan Bernal and to French hope Thibaut Pinot.

“That climb where Alaphilipp­e went was steep and it was hard, but I just knew I didn’t have the legs to go for the bonus sprint,” Thomas said.

“Then it was just a case of getting to the finish and being safe,” said Thomas, whose Ineos team did much of the chasing.

The crowd on the last hill had been expecting a bare-knuckle struggle, but went wild as Alaphilipp­e came up alone and rose in his saddle to swagger over the last steep climb.

At the line, the 27-year-old former soldier had maintained enough power to establish a 20 second lead over Belgian prodigy Wout Van Aert in the overall standings.

“It’s actually only starting to sink in now that I have the jersey,” said Alaphilipp­e.

The Tour crossed into France earlier in the stage after opening with two stages in Belgium.

“What a beautiful way to start the tour here in France,” he said. “Having this on my back is something I’ll never forget, its the recompense of everything I have done since I first got on a bike.”

Overnight leader and surprise winner of the opening stage Mike Teunissen, was dropped by the main pack at the moment of Alaphilipp­e’s attack and drifted home five minutes off the pace.

Slovak Peter Sagan took the sprint points green jersey in his bid to win it a record seventh time.

In the mountain classifica­tion Lotto-Soudal’s Tim Wellens, part of a group who broke at Binche, made a solo bid 50km from home that saw him garner enough hilltop points to take the polka dot jersey.

RookieVan Aert, who has converted from cyclo-cross, held on to the best under-25’s white jersey as the buzz around him on his debut Tour increases.

Five-time Tour de France winner Eddy Merckx was on hand as fans gave him and the Tour a noisy send off at the small start town of Binche as the 2019 race took it’s Belgian bow.

The world-renowned vineyards here produce 362 million bottles of champagne a year. Half of them are drunk in France and now the French have a great excuse to crack open a bottle or two in celebratio­n.

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