Business Day

Froome turns to Tour de France

- Agency Staff Rome

Chris Froome’s stunning Giro d’Italia victory should put him among the pantheon of cycling greats but the British rider’s results are likely to remain contentiou­s for a long time, perhaps beyond the Tour de France in which he intends to defend his title.

Ironically, Froome was congratula­ted on Sunday by former rival Alberto Contador as he stood on the top of the podium in Rome. The parallel between the two riders is obvious — the Briton could suffer the same fate as the Spaniard, who was stripped of his Giro 2011 victory for a positive doping control from the previous year. The 33-year-old Froome was competing in the gruelling threeweek race through Italy despite an ongoing investigat­ion after returning an adverse analytical finding during his 2017 Vuelta a Espana win.

Froome, whose lawyers have used all sorts of experts to find flaws in the antidoping test that showed double the level of the asthma drug salbutamol allowed, said on the Giro: “I hope for the fastest decision possible.”

Froome said that he was preparing for a bid to achieve a record-equalling fifth Tour de France title.

“Obviously the next challenge for me has to be the Tour de France,” he said.

“I am absolutely certain that when people have the same informatio­n as I have, they will understand why I made the decision to continue racing and riding the way I have been.

“I had every right to be here, as I’ve said before, I know I’ve done nothing wrong.”

Froome said he planned to take a short break with his wife, Michelle, who is pregnant with their second child, before returning to altitude to prepare for the Tour de France from July 7 to July 29. A win would give him a fifth title after 2013, 2015, 2016 and 2017.

If he won he would be the first rider since Marco Pantani in 1998 to achieve a Giro d’ItaliaTour de France double in the same calendar year. “I have seen riders trying to do a Giro and a Tour and I have seen their shortfalls and their mistakes,” said the Team Sky rider.

“It’s a risk, but I think it’s possible. The extra week between will be very helpful.”

Contador failed in both his attempts for the Giro-Tour double, in 2011 and 2015.

With Sunday’s win Froome became the third cyclist to hold all three Grand Tour titles simultaneo­usly, with Eddy Merckx and Bernard Hinault.

“This is the dream to have all three jerseys in the space of 10 months. It’s an incredible feeling. When I thought about going for it, it was a big undertakin­g. I am not regretting it now.”

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