The Mercury News

Young Colombian Bernal already has look of winner

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CARCASSONN­E, FRANCE >> The youngest rider at the Tour de France is showing all the signs of becoming cycling’s next big star.

Colombia’s Egan Bernal proved his worth and more by working as a trailblaze­r for Sky teammates Geraint Thomas and Chris Froome up the zigzagging ascent of Alpe d’Huez.

Bernal’s effort set up Thomas to win the grueling 12th stage to strengthen his hold on the yellow jersey, and for Froome to protect second place in a dominant choral performanc­e by Sky.

The climb up one of the Tour’s iconic climbs promises to be a signature moment for Bernal, who at 21, is the youngest of the 176 riders to start the Tour and yet already appears to have the making of a winner.

“It felt great to be there on Alpe d’Huez, a mythic climb, and leading the group,” Bernal told The Associated Press two days after his impressive Alpine trek. “And on top of that, having Geraint, who is the leader, and Froomey, who is one of the best cyclists in history, right behind. it was important for me.”

The original plan was for Bernal to pull for 5 kilometers of the demanding ascent. But when the legs flagged on another teammate, he went on for another three kilometers and set a pace that fellow Colombian and two-time Tour runner-up Nairo Quintana couldn’t match.

Froome said he sees his younger self in his precocious partner.

“He’s got an amazing engine. You only have to look at what he did on Alpe d’Huez, for a 21-year-old, that’s amazing,” Froome said on Sunday. “There is a lot in Egan that reminds me of myself when I was younger. It’s great having him on the team and he brings a lot of young, new energy to the group.”

From the city of Zipaquira north of Bogota, Bernal inherited the love of two wheels from his father. He competed in his first race at age 8, and after excelling on the mountain bike he made the jump to road racing while setting aside plans to study communicat­ion.

His most difficult moment on a bike came during his profession­al debut in 2016 at the Tour of the Mediterran­ean in France.

“I had just moved from America to Europe, from the junior to the elite category, from mountain to road racing,” Bernal recalled. “It was my first profession­al race and it was terrible. It was very cold and raining, and it was a very hard race. But I never lost confidence.”

That self-belief was behind his victory last year at the Tour de l’Avenir, a race similar to the Tour for amateurs.

He joined Sky for this season and won the Colombia Oro y Paz race in February ahead of Quintana and last year’s Tour runner-up, Rigoberto Uran. Bernal was running a close second to Alejandro Valverde at the Tour of Catalonia before crashing on the final stage. But he rebounded by winning the Tour of California ahead of Tejay Van Garderen in May.

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