Oman Daily Observer

Crashes prove Tour not over, says Froome

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SAINT-GERVAIS LES BAINS, France: Chris Froome said his crash on Friday’s 19th stage of the Tour de France proved the race is never over until the finish line in Paris is crossed.

Froome ended the 146km Alpine stage on team-mate Geraint Thomas’s bike with a ripped jersey, while he went up to the podium after the race with a heavily-bandaged knee.

Despite crashing on a slippery descent and finishing the stage ninth at 36sec behind Romain Bardet, who is now second overall at 4min 11sec, Froome actually extended his lead in a race most observers had already declared sewn up.

But he said events on the mountainou­s stage from Albertvill­e to Saint-Gervais Mont Blanc showed how unpredicta­ble sport can be.

“Ironically, I was trying to stay safe but I hit one of the white lines and lost my front wheel,” said Froome.

“I’m OK, I’m lucky nothing is seriously injured. I lost some skin and banged my knee a little bit but today I’m grateful to have that four minute advantage to fall on a little bit.”

Several riders crashed in the final 30km as falling rain made the roads treacherou­s.

“Today showed exactly why I thought the Tour was not over,” added Froome.

“A crash like that, I’m really grateful nothing is seriously injured but it could have gone either way. There is never a quiet day on the Tour.

“Tomorrow will be hard, I’m sure I’m going to be a bit sore and stiff from today but hopefully I can rely on my team-mates and just one last push again to get through tomorrow’s stage now.” ‘Fairytale’ - One of the worst affected riders to crash was Bauke Mollema, who also skidded off the road a second time.

“I started the climb with a gap, 20 seconds back and I couldn’t close it,” he lamented. “At the bottom, I tried to come back, I had to try and close it there as fast as I could, otherwise it would have been difficult.”

He added: “I couldn’t close it and I just exploded.”

He lost more than four minutes by the finish and dropped from second overall to 10th.

It was a rare day of excitement on an otherwise sterile Tour, although that was mostly due to the weather provoking crashes.

Bardet said he had been fed up of hearing criticism of the race.

“I felt a bit bitter hearing negative comments during this Tour, that there were no attacks, that it was soporific,” said the 25-year-old Frenchman.

“But we were all at our limits. I knew I was in the form of my life, I was just waiting for clarity, without setting a plan.

“Now I want to enjoy this and see how things go.”

Last year, Bardet won stage 18 and then held the climbers’ polkadot jersey after the following stage.

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