The Standard (St. Catharines)

Tour de Chaos: protest, tear gas, crashes

- ANDREW DAMPF, SAMUEL PETREQUIN AND CIARAN FAHEY

BAGNERES-DE-LUCHON, FRANCE — Tear gas in riders’ eyes. A farmers’ protest blocking the road. Two key crashes on dangerous descents.

The only thing lacking from the wild 16th stage of the Tour de France cycling race Tuesday was a shakeup in the overall standings.

Frenchman Julian Alaphilipp­e took advantage of his downhill skills to win the first of three mountainou­s legs in the Pyrenees, which was briefly interrupte­d when police used tear gas to disperse a farmers’ protest that had blocked the road with bales of hay.

The overall standings were unchanged. Geraint Thomas in the yellow jersey, second-placed Chris Froome and third-placed Tom Dumoulin all crossed together nearly nine minutes behind.

The farmers’ protest occurred 30 kilometres into the 218-kilometre leg from Carcassonn­e to Bagneres-de-Luchon.

Thomas, Froome, world champion Peter Sagan and other riders were treated with eye drops due to the tear gas amid a 15minute delay.

“I just felt my throat and nose were burning, eyes were burning afterward,” Froome said. “But I think quite a lot of riders were in a similar situation.

“Thankfully the effect didn’t last long,” Froome added. “It was just a temporary thing with stinging and burning.”

It was the latest in a series of incidents involving spectators during this year’s race, with Team Sky riders being pushed and spat on and 2014 champion Vincenzo Nibali having his back broken in a crash when a fan caught their camera strap on his handlebars.

“We feel safe. Obviously on some of the climbs not everyone’s our fans, but we don’t feel threatened,” Thomas said. “It’s hard in cycling when you’re just on the open road. It’s not like football or something. Everyone’s doing the best they can and hopefully everyone can just behave and let us race.”

The small group of farmers from the Aude department were protesting a planned reduction of European Union funding, according to French authoritie­s.

“We are not going to lock the riders in a stadium or a tennis court,” Tour director Christian Prudhomme said. “People should not block the road, no matter what causes they are fighting for.”

Thomas remained one minute, 39 seconds ahead of four-time champion Froome, with Dumoulin 1:50 back.

Alaphilipp­e took the lead when Adam Yates crashed on a technical descent in the finale.

“I knew the finale was tricky,” Alaphilipp­e said. “I was sad for (Yates), but it could have happened to me, too, because I took a lot of risks . ... I went all out for

220 kilometres today. I’m exhausted.”

Belgian rider Philippe Gilbert was leading when he crashed earlier in the stage while descending from the Col de Portet-d’Aspet, hitting a wall and flipping off his bike spectacula­rly but avoiding major injury. It was the same descent where Italian rider Fabio Casartelli died during the 1995 Tour.

“I thought I was broken everywhere,” said Gilbert, a teammate of Alaphilipp­e’s on the QuickStep team. “But I ended up more or less OK.”

Alaphilipp­e also won the 10th stage and is wearing the polkadot jersey of the mountains classifica­tion leader.

Yates led Alaphilipp­e by 20 seconds at the top of the Col du Portillon climb 10 kilometres from the finish but lost control with 6K to go, falling to the pavement on a left turn and sliding across the road.

“You never know what’s coming up on some of these corners,” Yates said. “There was a bit of downforce or something and I came down, that’s all there is to it.”

Alaphilipp­e, who was already gaining ground on Yates, quickly passed the British rider and had time to celebrate before the finish, smiling at the crowd and shaking his head in disbelief.

Spanish rider Gorka Izaguirre finished second, 15 seconds behind, and Yates crossed third with the same time.

The race remains in the Pyrenees on Wednesday for what could be the most challengin­g stage of the Tour, a 65-kilometre leg from Bagneres-de Luchon to Saint-Lary-Soulan Col du Portet that features three gruelling climbs, including an uphill finish and hardly a stretch of flat road.

“It’s going to be massively decisive,” Thomas said.

 ?? PETER DEJONG
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Chris Froome treats his eyes for tear gas or pepper spray during the Tour de France on Tuesday.
PETER DEJONG THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Chris Froome treats his eyes for tear gas or pepper spray during the Tour de France on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada