The Citizen (Gauteng)

‘Such a privilege’ to join Tour greats

FROOME: HONOURED TO BE MENTIONED IN SAME BREATH

- Paris

Four-time Tour winner sits fifth overall in all-time list.

Briton Chris Froome secured his fourth Tour de France title at the end of the 21st and final stage won by Dylan Groenewege­n yesterday and said it was a huge honour to be amongst cycling’s greats.

Sky’s Froome had previously won the 2013, 2015 and 2016 editions and sits fifth overall in the all-time list of Tour victors behind five-time winners Eddy Merckx, Jacques Anquetil, Bernard Hinault and Miguel Indurain.

“It’s a huge honour to be talked about in the same sentence as those guys with their place in the history of the Tour de France,” 32-year-old Froome, who will aim to match them next year, said.

“It is just a privilege to even be in the position to be going for that kind of record.

“Each time I’ve won the Tour it’s so unique and so different and it is such a different battle to get to this moment.

“So they’re all special in their own ways and this year I think will be remembered for being the closest and most hard-fought battle between the GC rivals.”

At the end of three weeks, 21 stages and more than 3,500km, Froome rolled over the line on the Champs Elysees in Paris with a broad grin alongside his Sky teammates, who wore a special kit for the occasion with their usual blue stripe replaced by a yellow one.

It was Froome’s closest Tour struggle yet as his final winning margin was less than a minute for the first time, Colombia’s Rigoberto Uran finishing second at 54sec with Romain Bardet of France, the runner-up last year, third at 2min 20sec.

The 103km final stage began with a nod to history in Montgeron, where the very first stage of the inaugural Tour in 1903 also began, at a leisurely pace giving Froome, his team-mates and the winners of the other distinctiv­e jerseys the chance to celebrate with glasses of champagne as they rode out of the town and towards the French capital.

By the time they got there the tempo had risen to the opposite scale of the spectrum and it was a full pelt bunch that rode to the finish, where 24-year-old Groenewege­n struck out for home from a long way out and held off the hard-charging Andre Greipel, winner on the Champs Elysees in the previous two years, with Edvald Boasson Hagen third.

“This is an amazing place for the sprinters. To win on the Champs-Elysees makes it a perfect day,” said Dutchman Groenewege­n of the Lotto NL Jumbo team.

“This is my first stage win at the Tour. When I was young, I was looking at the Champs-Elysees stage on TV. Now I’m the winner here, it’s wonderful.”

It was the biggest victory of Groenewege­n’s young career but the day undoubtedl­y belonged to Froome. – AFP

 ?? Picture: EPA ?? CHRIS FROOME
Picture: EPA CHRIS FROOME

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