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Cort Nielsen hands Astana second win in row as Thomas holds lead

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What a Tour de France debut Magnus Cort Nielsen is having. The Dane handed Astana their second consecutiv­e victory by winning Stage 15 in Carcassonn­e yesterday.

Welshman Geraint Thomas, of Sky, maintained his 1min 39sec race lead over teammate and compatriot Chris Froome after a 181.5-kilometre ride from Millau in which the yellow jersey holder’s rivals failed to launch a challenge.

Thomas and the main peloton trailed over the finish line just over 13 minutes in arrears on what, for them, was a comparativ­ely easy stage ahead of today’s rest day.

“I’ve been feeling pretty good. Days like today are always a bit funny because you don’t really want to push. You want to recover as much as possible,” Thomas said.

The 32-year-old Welshman, however, refused to speculate on whether he, and not Froome, will lead their charge over the following, decisive stages into the Pyrenees mountains. “No, honestly, I’m not thinking about that,” Thomas added. “I’m taking each day as it comes. I’m looking forward to the rest day, then the next stage, the next climb, and just keep on doing what we’re doing.”

Astana, meanwhile, took full advantage of what was set to be a transition stage ahead of three tough days in the Pyrenees mountains starting tomorrow.

Nielsen was one two Astana riders who fought hard to get in a breakaway group of 29 riders, along with compatriot Michael Valgren.

And when it came to the final kilometres, the race debutant seized the day.

Nielsen first underlined his ambitions 8km from the finish when he quickly countered Italian Domenico Pozzovivo’s effort to break clear.

And two kilometres further on, Nielsen was quick to join Dutchman Bauke Mollema (Trek) and Jon Izagirre (Bahrain) when they left five of their breakaway companions behind.

A lack of cooperatio­n in their wake meant the trio were allowed to build an insurmount­able advantage over the closing kilometres.

But Nielsen was simply unbeatable after launching his sprint just under 300m from the finish, where Izagirre finished second and Mollema third.

It is Astana’s second consecutiv­e win on the race after Spaniard Omar Fraile capped an audacious attack on the final climb of stage 14 to triumph in Mende.

“I knew I had the legs to win, and that I would be fastest at the line, but I still kept some powder dry in case,” the 25-year-old Dane said.

It is Astana’s second consecutiv­e win on the race after Spaniard Omar Fraile capped an audacious attack on the final climb of stage 14 to triumph in Mende.

But both Fraile and Nielsen could now be called upon to put their personal ambitions aside to help their podium contender, Jakob Fuglsang, who is ninth overall at 6:14.

“We made the decision to target stage wins in these past two days, but trying to keep Jakob up as high as possible in the general classifica­tion is our priority,” said Nielsen.

After today’s rest day, the race resumes when the 16th stage takes the peloton from Carcassone over five categorise­d climbs and 218 km to the downhill finish in Bagneres-De-Luchon.

 ?? Reuters ?? Danish rider Magnus Cort Nielsen celebrates after winning Stage 15 of the Tour de France
Reuters Danish rider Magnus Cort Nielsen celebrates after winning Stage 15 of the Tour de France

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