The Southland Times

Cheating accusation fuels Tour stage win

- Andrew Dampf

Arnaud Demare was rewarded for hauling his muscular frame over the Alps and through the Pyrenees yesterday.

Geraint Thomas, meanwhile, is preparing to cement his hold on the yellow jersey in the final mountain test of the Tour de France.

After many of his competitor­s were unable to get through the mountains, Demare took advantage by dominating a mass sprint in stage 18.

It marked the first victory by a French team, Groupama-FDJ, in this year’s race.

Sprinters Fernando Gaviria, of Colombia, and Dylan Groenewege­n – who had each won two stages in this Tour – called it quits during stage 12 to Alpe d’Huez. That came a day after Mark Cavendish and Marcel Kittel, who have a combined 44 Tour stage wins between them, failed to make the time cut on another mountain leg.

Demare said he was motivated by an accusation on social media from Andre Greipel, a top German sprinter, who alleged that Demare held on to his team car on the way up the gruelling Col du Portet in stage 17.

Demare finished Thursday’s stage second to last but managed to avoid the time cut as thousands of French spectators cheered him on.

Greipel, who also quit in stage 12, later apologised on Twitter, saying he had relied on ‘‘incorrect’’ informatio­n.

‘‘It hurt me enormously,’’ Demare said. ‘‘It’s a shame that people cast doubts over my performanc­e and my hard work . . . I thought a lot about [Greipel] today. It’s not in my mindset or my philosophy to [cheat]. I worked hard in the mountains before the Tour and, as a result, I made it through mountain stages when most of the sprinters did not.’’

Demare, who failed to make the cut on a climb in the Alps last year, had time to celebrate as he crossed the line with his arms wide open ahead of fellow Frenchman Christophe Laporte.

Alexander Kristoff, of Norway, crossed third in the same time.

After two gruelling days in the Pyrenees, Thomas was able to enjoy his seventh day in the yellow jersey during the less challengin­g 171km leg from Trie-Sur-Baise to Pau, which featured only two minor climbs and a flat finish.

Thomas remained 1min 59sec ahead of Tom Dumoulin with the Welshman’s Sky team-mate and four-time champion Chris Froome third, 2:31 behind.

Only two challengin­g stages remain – a lengthy leg through the Pyrenees overnight (NZT) including three major climbs, then a technical individual time trial tomorrow – before the mostly ceremonial finish on the ChampsElys­ees in Paris on Monday.

Stage 19 starts in the pilgrimage town of Lourdes and takes the peloton over legendary climbs like the Col du Tourmalet and Col d’Aubisque.

 ?? AP ?? Yellow jersey holder Geraint Thomas has an advantage of nearly two minutes on his closest rival, Tom Dumoulin.
AP Yellow jersey holder Geraint Thomas has an advantage of nearly two minutes on his closest rival, Tom Dumoulin.

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