The Scotsman

Barguil rises to second stage win as Froome tightens grip on race

● Prospect of Paris triumph now likely ● Final time trial could increase lead

- By IAN PARKER

Chris Froome conceded four seconds to rival Romain Bardet on the Col d’izoard but neverthele­ss took another step towards his fourth Tour de France title as Warren Barguil won stage 18.

Froome was alongside Bardet on the finish line but it was the Frenchman who finished third behind Barguil and Darwin Atapuma to collect four bonus seconds and trim his deficit in second place to 23 seconds.

Colombian Rigoberto Uran, who began the day level with Bardet in the general classifica­tion, was a further two seconds back on the road, and now trails Froome by 29 seconds overall.

Though Froome has seen his advantage cut slightly, the main goal was to retain yellow on the final summit finish of this year’s Tour.

“It was a really hard stage especially in the final kilometres,” Froome said. “But I’m really happy with today. I tried to drop Bardet and Uran, but it was almost impossible today.”

The Team Sky rider must now defend his lead over relatively flat territory in today’s stage to Salon-de-provence before tomorrow’s time trial in Marseille, where he is expected to gain time.

Only six riders have won the Tour without claiming a stage along the way – and Froome will aim to avoid joining that list on Saturday.

“I’m pleased to get through the Alps without any problems this year, because it’s always the Alps that I find the hardest,” he said.

“I’ll do my best to win the stage and to keep the yellow jersey in Marseille. I’ve seen the route, it’s fast and as it’s only 22 kilometres, it’s not that long. I’ll give it my best shot.”

For Barguil, the stage victory – his second of this year’s Tour – underlined his superiorit­y in the king of the mountains competitio­n, which he has mathematic­ally wrapped up, needing only to make it safely to Paris.

“I’m living inside my dream at the moment, it’s crazy,” he said. “After all my bad luck I can show another side to everybody.”

But others suffered on the climb. The Italian national champion Fabio Aru was dropped again, conceding more than a minute as the former yellow jersey in this race slipped to fifth in the general classifica­tion, behind Froome’s team-mate, Mikel Landa, and almost two minutes adrift of the race lead.

Bury’s Simon Yates conceded another 25 seconds to South African rival Louis Meintjes in the young riders’ classifica­tion but the Orica-scott rider still holds the white jersey by a margin of two minutes and six seconds.

“I’m pretty happy,” Yates said. “I had much better legs than yesterday and didn’t lose as much time. I think it was a positive day.

“I’ m more confident( of keeping white) after today but there are still hard days to come, and the time trial, so we will have to see.”

Irishman Dan Martin was active in forcing the pace on the Izoard, and finished within 19 seconds of Bardet and Froome to retain sixth place overall.

The 179.5km stage from Briancon saw a 54-man breakaway go up the road early on, but did not come to life until the imposing climb of the Izoard, 14.1km long at an average gradient of 7.3 per cent, which it took the peloton to a height of 2,360 metres.

Sky tried to tease Bardet (AG2R La Mondiale) and Uran (Cannondale-drapac) into making a move as they sent Landa up the road shortly after.

Bardet took the bait with three kilometres to go, but Froome followed him and briefly dropped him on the short descent at Casse Deserte, two kilometres from the top.

For a moment it appeared the fight for yellow was over as he swiftly opened up a gap on the others, but the distances were deceptive and instead the decisive move came when Bardet attacked with 400 metres left.

That was enough to get Bardet – runner up to Froome 12 months ago – four extra seconds and sole ownership of second place.

 ?? PICTURE: PHILIPPE LOPEZ/AFP/GETTY ?? 0 King of the Mountains leader Warren Barguil crosses the line in triumph at the top of the Col d’izoard.
PICTURE: PHILIPPE LOPEZ/AFP/GETTY 0 King of the Mountains leader Warren Barguil crosses the line in triumph at the top of the Col d’izoard.

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