The Scotsman

Tour glory beckons as Thomas finishes third to extend his lead

● Froome drops back but pledges his support for team-mate in run to Paris

- By JEAN LAFOND

Geraint Thomas seized full control of the Tour de France as he extended his lead while Sky team-mate Chris Froome slipped back to third overall on stage 17.

While Movistar’s Nairo Quintana won atop the Col du Portet to move back into the top five, Froome lost contact with the main group of contenders around two kilometres before the summit.

As he went backwards, Thomas stuck on the wheels of Tom Dumoulin and Primoz Roglic – who started the day third and fourth overall – before racing clear in the final few hundred metres to take third place on the day behind Irishman Dan Martin.

The Welshman picked up four seconds on the road and four bonus seconds for third. He now leads by one minute and 59 seconds from Team Sunweb’s Dumoulin, with Froome two minutes and 31 seconds back in third.

Froome finished 48 seconds behind Thomas on the day, and as he warmed down, he sounded ready to put aside his pursuit of a record-equalling fifth Tour crown in order to support his team-mate.

“Itwasatoug­hday,anintense day, but I’ve got no regrets,” Froome, pictured inset, said. “Geraint has ridden such an amazing race, he deserves to be in yellow and fingers crossed he holds it now until Paris.”

Asked about riding in service of Thomas as the defending champion, he added: “That’s profession­al cycling, that’s what a team is all about.

“I’m happy just to be in the position I’m in. I’ve won the last three Grand Tours I’ve done now. It’s certainly been a tough build-up for me but I’ll still fight for the podium and obviously we want to see Geraint up there in yellow.

“I just didn’t have the legs. I think he’s got an almost twominute lead on Dumoulin which is a pretty comfortabl­e buffer. He looks pretty strong and I imagine he’ll be able to finish it off. We just need to look after him now for these next few days.”

While Froome was dropped in the finale, at one stage it looked like going the other way as he covered a move by Lottonl-jumbo’s Roglic while Thomas hung back on the wheel of Dumoulin, leaving the Dutchman to close the gap.

Quintana, who started the day more than four minutes back in the general classifica­tion, hauled himself back into the top five with the second Tour stage win of his career.

The Movistar rider attacked close to the foot of the 16km climb as he followed a move launched by Martin, though he quickly shook off the UAE

0 Geraint Thomas surges for the line to finish third on stage 17 and cement his place as Tour leader. Team Emirates rider who was left to pursue him alone.

Quintana’s victory came despite two early mechanical­s on a 65km stage – the shortest road stage in the Tour for over 30 years – that was designed to be explosive from the start.

A Formula One-style grid start turned into something of a damp squib but the final climb appears to have providedon­eofthedeci­sivemoment­s of the Tour.

Froome was not alone in cracking at the end as AG2R La Mondiale’s Romain Bardet and Quintana’s teammate Mikel Landa also fell away.

Another casualty on the day was world champion Peter Sagan, who crashed on the dangerous descent off the Col de Val Louron-azet.

Though he rode to the finish, the Bora-hansgrohe rider was expected to go for scans, putting at risk a sixth green jersey which is mathematic­ally his as long as he makes it to Paris.

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