Rome News-Tribune

Barguil delivers Bastille Day win to France; Aru still leads

- By John Leicester and Samuel Petrequin Associated Press Sports Writers

FOIX, France — After the setback, the fightback.

The day after losing the Tour de France lead to Fabio Aru, Chris Froome and his Team Sky showed on Friday they still have cards up their sleeves.

On the shortest stage of the 104th Tour, barring the two time-trials, Sky brought Mikel Landa into play — sending Froome’s Spanish teammate racing off ahead on a fast and furious Stage 13 that became part-chess, part a test of speed and endurance over a closepacke­d succession of three climbs in the Pyrenees.

End result: Sky has two riders — Froome and Landa — in the top five. From here to the July 23 finish in Paris, Aru will have to watch both like a hawk and not let either race off ahead of him in order to keep the famed yellow jersey.

“It’s perfect for us,” Froome said.

At just 63 miles, less than half the distance of some of this Tour’s longest stages, the up-down, up-down, up-down route through the Ariege region of mountain cheeses and peak-perched fortresses delivered exactly what Tour organizers were hoping for: Full-on racing.

They even got a cherry on top, with French rider Warren Barguil winning the stage on Bastille Day — the first tricolor victory on France’s national holiday since David Moncoutie in 2005.

“It’s incredible,” said Barguil, Peter Dejong / The Associated Press

France’s Warren Barguil, wearing the best climber’s dotted jersey, celebrates as he crosses the finish line Friday.

The Sunweb team rider sped into the finish in Foix, overlooked by its imposing 11th century castle decorated with a French tricolor of red, white and blue, as part of a four-man group that included Landa, two-time Tour champion Alberto Contador, and Nairo Quintana, a podium finisher at three previous Tours.

Contador accelerate­d first in the final sprint, but Barguil reacted immediatel­y and adeptly negotiated the last U-bend on a bridge over the Ariege river, holding off Quintana to the line.

Contador placed third. Testifying to the brevity and relentless racing action of the stage, Barguil covered the distance in just 2½ hours, half the time of longer stages with twice as much road to cover.

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