Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Barguil wins stage, Froome keeps yellow

- Agencies sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

French rider Warren Barguil triumphed on the barren slopes of the fearsome Col d’Izoard climb, winning his second stage of the 104th Tour de France while Chris Froome successful­ly defended his overall race lead on Thursday.

Froome lost a handful of seconds to French rider Romain Bardet, who moved up to second in the overall standings, relegating Rigoberto Uran of Colombia to third.

But Froome still leads Bardet by 23 seconds, a margin that the French rider will find hard to close now that the Tour is heading out of the Alps. The last opportunit­y is in a time trial Saturday, but Froome excels at that discipline.

Barguil set off in search of the stage victory when there were still six kilometers left to climb to the top of the Izoard pass, a moonscape of scree and rockslides in thinning air at an altitude of 2,360 meters.

He sped away from Froome’s group and gradually reeled in riders ahead of him on the climb - the last being John Darwin Atapuma of Colombia, with about 1.5 kilometers (1 mile) left to ascend.

From there, Barguil laboured on alone to win the first stage to finish at the summit of Izoard in the 114-year history of the Tour.

Only the hardiest pines survive at such high altitudes. And only the hardiest riders, too.

The climb showed again what was already becoming apparent on the first day of Alpine climbing on Wednesday: that Froome is super-strong and only Uran and Bardet are capable of staying with him.

They are now the only riders within a minute of Froome overall, after Italian Fabio Aru faded again and continued his slide down the overall rankings.

Going into the Alps, Aru was second overall, breathing down Froome’s neck. He is now fifth overall, nearly two minutes behind Froome.

Monaco will be Neeraj’s second Diamond League competitio­n. Earlier, he had also participat­ed in the Paris leg, where he finished fifth with a throw of 84.67 metres.

Davinder Singh is other thrower who has qualified for the Worlds, and is likely to get the selection committee nod. Though the AFI panel met on Thursday, it didn’t announce the team.

Bardet outsprinte­d Froome in the final ramp of the climb, and got four bonus seconds for finishing the stage in third place behind Barguil and Atapuma.

As a consequenc­e, Bardet moved a tiny bit closer to Froome overall, having been 27 seconds behind him at the start of the stage in Briancon.

Annemiek van Vleuten made up for her Olympic heartbreak by winning the first stage of the women’s Tour de France on Thursday.

The 34-year-old Dutchwoman was leading the Olympic Games road race in Rio last year and 12km from the gold medal when she crashed spectacula­rly on a perilous descent, suffering fractured vertebrae.

But the renowned climber broke clear on the Col d’Izoard climb at the end of the 67.5km opening stage of two in La Course by Tour de France to take victory by 43 seconds from Briton Lizzie Deignan.

Doping disgraced Lance Armstrong, stripped of seven Tour de France triumphs in an epic fall from grace, is giving his perspectiv­e on this year’s race on a daily podcast called “Stages.”

The 45-year-old American, who crossed the finish line first in the famed cycling race from 19992005 but later admitted taking banned performanc­e-enhancing drugs after years of denials, also writes an accompanyi­ng blog for Outside magazine. It’s a comeback that has drawn controvers­y from some corners of a cycling world he badly damaged with a long-running doping saga, but Armstrong’s Facebook page with videos and photos from his podcast boasts more than 2.2 million “likes.”

The podcast, co-hosted with radio personalit­y JB Hager, follows a weekly podcast called “The Foreword”.

 ?? AP ?? France's Warren Barguil (left) won Stage 18 of the Tour while Chris Froome continues to lead.
AP France's Warren Barguil (left) won Stage 18 of the Tour while Chris Froome continues to lead.

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