National Post (National Edition)

‘Knackered’ rider on verge of first title

- Andrew dAmpf

LARUNS, FRANCE •Having worn the leader’s yellowjers­eyovertheA­lpsand through the Pyrenees, only one more challengin­g stage stands in the way of Geraint Thomas winning his first Tour de France.

Thomas takes an advantage of two minutes, five seconds over Dutch rival Tom Dumoulin into Saturday’s 31-kilometre individual time trial in the Basque Country.

The pressure of leading has reminded Thomas of the time he helped Britain to the gold medal in team pursuit on the track at the 2012 London Olympics. “It comes down to tomorrow but I can take confidence with how I’mriding,andwhatwil­lbe will be,” he said. “There’s still one more big day to go.”

While Dumoulin is the time trial world champion, Thomas is quite capable in the discipline and acknowledg­ed he should be able to protect his advantage.

“It’s going to be a tough day tomorrow. I’m really knackered,” Thomas said. “I’m still trying not to get carried away.”

He increased his lead after the final mountain stage on Friday, while Sky teammate and four-time champion Chris Froome lost his spot on the podium.

Primoz Roglic of Slovenia won the 200.5-kilometre 19th leg through the Pyrenees with an attack on the dangerous descent from the Col d’Aubisque.

Aformerski­jumperwho rides for Team Lotto NLJumbo, Roglic finished 19 seconds ahead of Thomas, while Romain Bardet of France crossed third with the same time.

“I had legs today,” Roglic said. “I really tried a lot of times and finally I went away on the descent.”

Thomas received a sixsecond bonus for ending upsecond,whileDumou­lin finished sixth and Froome eighth, both with the same time as the race leader. Roglic leapfrogge­d Froome into third spot overall, 2:24 off the pace, while the defending champion now trails by 2:37.

After the hilly time trial, the race concludes with the mostly ceremonial finish on the Champs-Elysees in Paris on Sunday. Froome initially fell behind on Friday’s climb up the Aubisque before latching back onto the lead group on the descent.

It was Roglic’s second Tour victory, having claimed Stage 17 in the Alps last year.

Roglic, who also excels at time trials, showed courage on a twisty descent made more difficult by clouds and fog hanging over the Aubisque.

When the road allowed, hecrouched­downontohi­s bike frame in a risky aerodynami­c move known as “super tucking.”

Dumoulin accused the stage winner of ‘drafting’ behind a motorbike.

“Roglic was the strongest today, and a lot of respect for his victory. But he was flying downhill, and eventually I got dropped on a straight part just because he was on his tube and full in the slipstream of the motorbike,” Dumoulin said. Roglic rejected the accusation.

“I don’t think so,” he said. “I don’t have influence on that. We all have the same possibilit­ies to go the first one down. I didn’t notice anything unusual.”

The route from the pilgrimage­townofLour­desto Laruns took the peloton over three legendary climbs — the Col d’Aspin, the Col du Tourmalet and the Aubisque — before the dive down to the finish.

Mountain classifica­tions leader Julian Alaphilipp­e was first over the Aspin and Tourmalet as part of an early breakaway.

Mikel Landa and Bardet then attacked from the yellow jersey group up the Tourmalet and joined the leadersbef­oreRoglic,Thomas and Dumoulin took over on the final climb.

Shunning mini-camp wrong message

 ?? PETER DEJONG / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Geraint Thomas sports the yellow jersey as the overall leader with one stage remaining in the Tour de France.
PETER DEJONG / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Geraint Thomas sports the yellow jersey as the overall leader with one stage remaining in the Tour de France.

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