The Province

Emotional Froome rides to third victory

TOUR DE FRANCE: British rider pays tribute to victims of Nice attack after finishing atop podium in Paris

- ANDREW DAMPF

PARIS — After the beer and champagne celebratio­ns, Chris Froome delivered a sobering and emotional message from the Tour de France winner’s podium on the Champs-Elysees.

Ten days after the Bastille Day truck attack in Nice that killed 84 people, Froome — a Kenyan-born British rider who often trains on the French Riviera — reminded everyone what the Tour stands for.

“These events put sport into perspectiv­e but they also show why the values of sport are so important to free society,” Froome said Sunday. “We all love the Tour de France because it’s unpredicta­ble but we love the Tour more for what stays the same — the passion of the fans for every nation, the beauty of the French countrysid­e and the bonds of friendship created through sport. These things will never change.

“Thanks for your kindness in these difficult times,” Froome added, switching to French as he addressed the local fans. “You have the most beautiful race in the world. Vive le Tour, Vive la France.”

Cheered on by thousands of fans, Froome celebrated his third Tour title in four years. He finished safely at the back of the main pack in the final stage, arm-in-arm with his teammates during the mostly ceremonial leg ending on the cobbleston­es below the Arc de Triomphe.

Andre Greipel of Germany won the 21st leg in a sprint finish.

Antoine Duchesne of Saguenay, Que., finished his first Tour in 107th.

At the start of the stage, Froome dropped back to his Team Sky car to collect bottles of beer and distribute­d them to each of his eight teammates for a celebrator­y round.

Then it was time for the traditiona­l flute of champagne.

Froome rode a yellow bike to go with his yellow jersey, helmet, gloves and shoes. He also still had bandages on his right knee and elbow, the result of a downhill crash two days ago.

Froome finished with an advantage of four minutes, five seconds ahead of Romain Bardet of France, while Nairo Quintana of Colombia placed third overall, 4:21 back.

Only four men — five-time winners Jacques Anquetil, Bernard Hinault, Eddy Merckx and Miguel Indurain — now have more Tour victories than Froome.

“I’ve definitely grown to appreciate this history of the sport a lot more,” Froome said. “Being in the position that I’m in now, I’m understand­ing how tough it is to win a race like the Tour de France. To win back-to-back editions and now to be a three-time winner is incredible. It’s beyond what I’ve ever dreamed.”

Compared to his wins in 2013 and 2015, Froome has become more adept at handling speculatio­n he is doping. After facing constant accusation­s during last year’s race — including a spectator yelling “doper!” and hurling a cup of urine at him — Froome released some of his training data at the end of last year.

“I think I’ve put that to rest now,” he said. “I’ve really done a lot in terms of offering up my physiologi­cal data and trying to be open to people as much as I can while protecting a competitiv­e advantage at the same time.”

Froome took the yellow jersey with a daring downhill attack in Stage 8, padded his lead with a late breakaway in Stage 11, and overcame a motor bike crash on the legendary Mont Ventoux and a fall on a slippery descent in the Alps with two stages to go.

Tour director Christian Prudhomme compliment­ed Froome for showing “panache” after his downhill attack in the Pyrenees, and the fans have treated him better, too.

Out of respect for the Nice victims, Froome refused to discuss race details the day after the attack. But he lauded Tour organizers for deciding to keep the race going.

“It’s been a really strong sign,” he said, “that life goes on and it’s not going to be stopped by these terrorist activities.”

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES ?? British rider Chris Froome exults after finishing the final stage Sunday in Paris to claim his second straight Tour de France victory and third title in four years.
— GETTY IMAGES British rider Chris Froome exults after finishing the final stage Sunday in Paris to claim his second straight Tour de France victory and third title in four years.

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