Malta Independent

Tour de France organisers stop Stage 19 because of a hail storm Final Alpine stage of Tour de France cut by more than half

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The final Alpine stage of the Tour de France will be shortened to just 59 kilometers (37 miles) because of adverse weather conditions in the mountain range.

After Stage 19 was stopped because of hailstorms that caused a landslide on the route, race organizers said two of three climbs will be eliminated from Saturday's stage.

"Due to difficult weather conditions expected ... and landslides noticed, the course of the 20th stage of the Tour de France will be modified," they said in a statement.

The stage to the ski resort of Val Thorens, the last major difficulty before the race reaches Paris on Sunday, had an initial length of 130 kilometers (81 miles).

Later than usual, Ineos team takes control of Tour de France

After nearly three weeks of complete uncertaint­y at the Tour de France, things are back to normal, with an Ineos rider in the yellow jersey.

Never in its six previous victories at cycling's marquee event did the super-rich British team have to wait so long before taking control of the race. But two days before the Tour ends on the Champs-Elysees in Paris, new race leader Egan Bernal and his teammates finally did it Friday during a memorable stage that was turned upsidedown by a hailstorm.

The dramatic weather conditions made the road to the ski resort of Tignes too dangerous and forced organizers to stop Stage 19. But before they called it a day, Ineos riders had already made the pack explode en route to the Col de l'Iseran, the Tour's highest point at 2,770 meters (9,090 feet).

Times were taken at the top of the mountain, were Bernal was 2 minutes, 10 seconds faster than previous leader Julian Alaphilipp­e, enough to wipe away the Frenchman's race lead.

With only one tough stage remaining before the procession­al ride to Paris on Sunday, the 22-year-old Bernal is now in an ideal position to become the first Colombian to win the Tour, and the youngest champion since World War II.

"When they told me that I was the race leader, I could not believe it," said Bernal. "I wanted to cry."

Until this week, Ineos — the former Team Sky — had showed unfamiliar weaknesses in the absence of its natural leader Chris Froome, who missed the Tour this year because of injury. The team was particular­ly weak in the Pyrenees, where it could not apply its usual strategy of setting up a fast tempo at the bottom of climbs.

In the Tourmalet, Ineos riders were unable to ride at the front, leaving their two leaders — Bernal and defending champion Geraint Thomas — exposed to their rivals' attacks.

With cycling observers already speaking about a decline, Ineos started to put things back on track in Thursday's first big Alpine stage to Valloire, where Bernal managed to gain 32 seconds on Alaphillip­e.

They completed the job on Friday in an impressive display of force. Jonathan Castroviej­o ensured a fast pace at the bottom of the Iseran before Dylan Van Baarle took the baton from his teammate at the front. His speedy pedaling was too much for many strugglers, including climber Nairo Quintana, who got dropped one by one in the lush Alpine pastry of wildflower­s.

Thomas attacked 6 kilometers (3.7 miles) from the summit to wreak havoc in the leading pack before Bernal, his jersey wide open, flew away in the rarefied air while Alaphilipp­e grimaced at the back with saliva hanging off his goatee.

"We've maybe not been the strongest that we've been all race, but today was the day," Ineos manager Dave Brailsford said. "We thought if there was anywhere that we could make the difference it was on the Iseran. It was going to be hard to get there and I actually thought the guys rode really well."

Bernal now leads Alaphilipp­e by 48 seconds overall, with Thomas in third place, 1:16 off the pace. Exhausted after 14 days in the yellow jersey, Alaphilipp­e could lose more ground in Stage 20 to Val Thorens, and Ineos can reasonably hope for a 1-2 in Paris.

"We are in a very good position. The team can control although we never know until the end," Bernal said.

A former mountain bike specialist, the diminutive Bernal is continuing the tradition of the great Colombian climbers who have marked the history of the Tour. But unlike them, he is in a position to win the race.

Gifted with superb climbing skills, the super-light Bernal — he only weighs 59 kilos (130 pounds) — has enjoyed a meteoric rise to the top. With barely any experience in road racing, he turned pro with the small Androni Giocattoli Pro Continenta­l team before Brailsford lured him following his victory at the Tour de l'Avenir, the most prestigiou­s stage race for Under-23 riders.

After competing at his first Tour last summer and doing an impressive job in support of Thomas and Froome, Bernal was set to get a maiden leader experience at the Giro d'Italia. But he fractured his collarbone in a training crash, forcing him to miss the race and 76 days overall. He returned to competitio­n in June to win the Tour de Suisse, another prestigiou­s title to add to his success at Paris-Nice in March.

At the Tour, he was expected to work for Thomas, but he was far superior to his teammate in high altitude, his favorite ground.

"I love to suffer in the mountains. I love the adrenaline," Bernal said when asked about his decisive offensive. "I knew that I could fight for the title with an attack. At the same time, it was taking the risk of losing my podium spot. So It told myself, 'I'm 22, no worries if it does not work, I have so many Tours in front of me.' I would have had eternal regrets if I had not attacked."

French rider Pinot pulls out of Tour de France in the Alps

Thibaut Pinot's remarkable Tour de France ended in pain and tears within touching distance of Paris as the Frenchman was forced to abandon the race with a left leg injury on Friday.

Pinot, who brought excitement to the race in the Pyrenees last week with strong attacks and posted a prestigiou­s stage win at the top of the Tourmalet, had hoped to make the most of the last two Alpine stages to close the gap on race leader Julian Alaphilipp­e.

A muscular injury sustained when he swerved to avoid a crash earlier in the final week proved too painful when Stage 19 started at a brisk pace, said Philippe Mauduit, a sports director on Pinot's Groupama-FDJ team.

Mauduit said the discomfort was bearable on the flat but not when the road started to veer sharply uphill in the Alps. The team said Pinot had difficulty walking after Stage 18, the first of three big climbing days in the Alps

"The pain was too much," Mauduit told French television. "It was just not possible to continue."

Pinot had been 1 minute, 50 seconds behind Alaphilipp­e heading into Saturday's Stage 19 to the ski station of Tignes.

Pinot, who had built his whole season around the Tour, called for medical assistance in the small Montee d'Aussois climb, about 93 kilometers from the finish. The FDJ-Groupama leader had his thigh bandaged by the race doctor, but his pedaling did not improve as he struggled at the back of the pack, with tears running down his face.

The 29-year-old Pinot then stopped on the side of the road and had the bandage removed by a team assistant. He rode for a few extra kilometers before calling it quits, tearfully resting an arm across the shoulders of a teammate offering support and sympathy.

Pinot then got off his bike and disappeare­d into a team car.

"I had the feeling that I could (win) after the Pyrenees," Pinot later said. "I was convinced that nothing could happen to me. I'm fed up."

A third-place finisher at the 2014 Tour, Pinot skipped cycling's marquee race last year to focus on the Giro d'Italia, where he was also forced to abandon because of pneumonia while fighting for the title.

With Pinot out of the race, French hopes of producing a homegrown Tour winner for the first time in 34 years fully rest upon Alaphilipp­e, who yielded the yellow jersey to Egan Bernal of Colombia on Friday.

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