Marysville Appeal-Democrat

FRANCE Froome flies into ditch in opening Tour stage

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Tribune News Service Four-time winner Chris Froome gets back on the road after crashing during the opening stage of the Tour de France on Saturday.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (TNS) – There were sparks and smoke, billowing up and out of Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway, taking with them any semblance of normalcy from an always irregular race. So typically Daytona. As NASCAR’S most prestigiou­s track has become known for, Saturday night’s Coke Zero Sugar 400 was a mess.

The Big One, twice over – and one driver, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., controvers­ially behind both of them. Huge slabs of car ripped from their frames and sprayed all over the field, taking out nearly half the field in the process. There was collision after collision, and just when the smoke cleared (literally), it all began over again.

But once the wreckage was done, the shootout began. Roughly 20 laps to go, and it was an all-out battle to the end. Martin Truex Jr. led, and then Kasey Kahne took it right from him, with Kevin Harvick in the mix all along.

A late caution with 11 laps to go (from a Stenhouse wreck) only upped the intensity in an already highstakes contest, and then another with three laps to go magnified it again.

And then, once it hit overtime, finally there was clarity, albeit in the form of a third Big One: another wreck took out Harvick and other competitor­s, leaving a battle between Truex and Erik Jones for the win. And with a final burst on the outside, Jones swooped in front of Truex and won his first-ever Cup Series race.

Race breakdown Stage 1: Not a single crash in the first section of the race, and not a ton of lead changes, either. Chase Elliott started on the pole but eventually gave up the lead to a charging Ricky Stenhouse Jr., who dominated

Tribune News Service photos Joey Logano (22) hits the wall as he is involved in a multi-car crash also involving Kasey Kahne (95), Kurt Busch (41), Daniel Suarez (19), Erik Jones (20) and others during Saturday night’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway.

for the rest of the stage.

Stage 2: The Big One finally came on Lap 55 when Brad Keselowski got loose into the wall, thrashing 20 cars in the field, including many of the top contenders: Denny Hamlin, Kevin Harvick, Bubba Wallace, Joey Logano, Alex Bowman, Kurt Busch, Ryan Blaney, Chase Elliott, Clint Bowyer, Aric Almirola, Jimmie Johnson and Kyle Larson.

William Byron, who was leading at the time, escaped, as did Kyle Busch and Stenhouse, but only for a moment. Another wreck on the subsequent restart, where Stenhouse got into Kyle Busch, doomed the 18 and Byron, plus Jamie Mcmurray. Stenhouse would eventually win the second stage, as well.

Stage 3: It was a back-and-forth battle for the lead the first half of the stage, and then suddenly Kyle Larson and Stenhouse got tangled in a wreck about midway through. Multiple late cautions sent the race

to a green-white-checkered fight to the finish, and when it finally got to double overtime, Erik Jones outdueled Truex for his first win.

Three who mattered Erik Jones: A final burst on the outside wall gave him enough clearance to pass Truex in the second overtime, giving Jones his first career Cup Series victory and a berth in the NASCAR playoffs.

Martin Truex Jr.: After the first major wreck, Truex made the strategic decision to fall to the back of the pack and let things work themselves out ahead of him. That paid off well, as he was able to charge from behind and eventually come away with a second place finish.

Ricky Stenhouse Jr.: Stenhouse was arguably the catalyst behind both major wrecks in Stage 2, and he also won his first two stages of the season. Unfortunat­ely for him, karma came back and collected him in a wreck midway through the third stage.

 ??  ?? FONTENAY-LE-COMTE, France (TNS) – Down in a ditch, Chris Froome had to hoist himself and his bike back up to the road.
It was a startling scene when the Team Sky rider tumbled into a grassy field in the opening stage of the Tour de France on Saturday,...
FONTENAY-LE-COMTE, France (TNS) – Down in a ditch, Chris Froome had to hoist himself and his bike back up to the road. It was a startling scene when the Team Sky rider tumbled into a grassy field in the opening stage of the Tour de France on Saturday,...
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