Santa Fe New Mexican

Alaphilipp­e stuns with time-trial win

- By John Leicester and Samuel Petrequin

PAU, France — A question that first seemed pie-in-the-sky is growing in credibilit­y with each additional ride that takes him toward Paris: Could Julian Alaphilipp­e carry the yellow jersey glued ever more firmly to his shoulders all the way to the Tour de France finish on the Champs-Elysees?

With the Tour’s toughest climbs looming from Saturday, Alaphilipp­e pretends not. But it’s becoming increasing­ly difficult to believe him.

Having had no excuse to uncork Champagne since it last had a Tour winner in 1985, France will soon need to start thinking about icing the bubbly if he keeps surprising everyone, even himself.

Inspired by his yellow jersey, Alaphilipp­e delivered the biggest shock so far in this Tour by holding off defending champion Geraint Thomas to win the only individual time-trial stage Friday, extending his race lead and ratcheting up French hopes for a first homegrown champion since Bernard Hinault won his fifth title 34 years ago.

Roared on by crowds thunderous­ly hammering on roadside barriers, and super motivated on the 100th birthday of the iconic yellow shirt, Alaphilipp­e delivered a barnstormi­ng performanc­e on the tricky, hilly, turn-filled time-trial loop south of Pau, with spectacula­r views of

the Pyrenees.

Having previously predicted that he’d lose time to Thomas, an expert in the race against the clock, Alaphilipp­e stunned even himself by emphatical­ly relegating the Welshman into second place, 14 seconds slower — a surprising margin of victory in a discipline where riders train in wind tunnels and ride go-fast bikes in go-fast skinsuits to shave off time.

“It’s incredible,” Alaphilipp­e said, adding that his performanc­e reduced members of his team to tears.

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