Herald on Sunday

Sagan strikes again as Thomas retains yellow

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After most of the other top sprinters at the Tour de France succumbed in the Alps, Peter Sagan was in prime position to dominate yesterday’s flat finish.

Cycling’s world champion did not disappoint, timing his move to reach maximum speed as he swung past two challenger­s to claim Stage 13 by a wheel length and take his third win of this race.

Seconds after Sagan reasserted his status as the most feared finisher left on the Tour, overall leader Geraint Thomas safely crossed in the pack along with teammate — and nearest challenger — Chris Froome.

Behind about 20 riders with a kilometre to go, Sagan charged to overtake runner-up Alexander Kristoff and Arnaud Demare, who finished third, at the finish line.

Sagan’s 11th career win at the world’s biggest cycling race came after he was the fastest to the line in bunch sprints on Stages 2 and 5.

This time, Sagan was racing against a field of sprinters depleted by three gruelling days in the mountains.

Fernando Gaviria and Dylan Groenewege­n, who both won two stages, along with Andre Greipel, all abandoned the race on Thursday, while 30-stage winner Mark Cavendish and Marcel Kittel failed to make the time cut on Wednesday.

Sagan said their sprinting “messy”.

“It has changed,” he said. “Everybody wants to do a sprint now. It’s pretty messy.”

Facing no attacks on the flat stage, Thomas had no trouble maintainin­g his advantage of 1 minute, 39 seconds over defending champion Froome.

Tom Dumoulin stayed third overall at 1:50 behind. Primoz Roglic was fourth at 2:46, and Romain Bardet was fifth at 3:07 back.

After overzealou­s fans marred Thomas’ win on Friday atop the Alpe d’Huez, the otherwise complete calm of yesterday’s leg was briefly absence made disturbed by a man on the roadside who tossed a smoke bomb into the center of the peloton as it passed by with 16km left.

Thomas said he didn’t see the smoke bomb which, besides spitting out yellow fumes, appeared to do no harm.

As for the jeers directed towards him and Froome by fans skeptical of Froome’s clearance from doping allegation­s days before the start of the Tour, he said it was part of being in the spotlight. “I would rather be on the podium and be booed than be on the bus and have everyone cheering me,” Thomas said.

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? Peter Sagan dominates.
Photo / Getty Images Peter Sagan dominates.

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