Yuma Sun

Daring Alaphilipp­e ‘unplugged brain’ to cling to yellow jersey

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SAINT-MICHEL-DEMAURIENN­E, France — With the Alps spread like giant teeth in front of him and rivals speeding away, seeking to steal the precious yellow jersey off his shoulders, Julian Alaphilipp­e switched off the part of the brain that stops normal people from taking death-defying risks.

Because the French rider is no normal person.

And downward he plunged, flying through hairpin bends on tires barely wider than his thumb. The lunar-like landscape of giant slopes of barren scree became a blur as he hit top speeds of nearly 90 kph (around 55 mph).

“It was a day of folly,” Alaphilipp­e said.

“I unplugged my brain and I was on the limit on each bend,” he said. “I did a crazy descent, where I took risks. I wanted to save my jersey.” Job done. With one big Alpine stage completed and just two more to go, Alaphilipp­e is still in yellow and one step closer to delivering a first Tour de France title since 1985 to his country, crossing fingers, toes and everything else that he makes it through the mountains to Paris on Sunday still in the lead.

“We’re all dreaming of that. Even I’m starting to imagine it,” he said.

Continuing to contribute more than anyone to making this the most exciting Tour in decades, the French rider recovered from a mini-wilt on a lung-burning ascent to 2,642 meters (8,668 feet) above sea level on the Galibier pass and then rode like a fury downhill on the other side as if his jersey depended on it. Which it did. With a decisive, wellplaced attack on the slopes of the Galibier — the last of three climbs to above 2,000 meters (6,500 feet) on Stage 18 — Colombian rider Egan Bernal got away from Alaphilipp­e and ate into his lead.

A slow descent or, worse, a fall from Alaphilipp­e on the treacherou­s bends could have seen Bernal do even greater damage to his lead or perhaps erase it entirely.

But Alaphilipp­e is like a dog with a bone when it comes to that iconic shirt. He has now worn it for 13 stages at this Tour, the most by any French rider at a single edition since Bernard Hinault held it for 17 days in winning the race for a fifth time in 1985.

The upside for rivals trying to wrench it from his jaws is that the last two Alpine stages to the ski stations of Tignes and Val Thorens both finish with punishing ascents, meaning there’ll be no downhill for Alaphilipp­e to recover on, as he did Thursday, if he again cracks going uphill.

Bernal and others are banking on it.

Bernal’s reward for speeding away from Alaphilipp­e on the grind to the top of the Galibier was a jump from fifth to second in the overall standings. Having started the day 2 minutes, 2 seconds

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? FRANCE’S JULIAN ALAPHILIPP­E, wearing the overall leader’s yellow jersey, climbs the Galibier pass during the 18th stage of the Tour de France cycling race over 208 kilometers (130 miles) with start in Embrun and finish in Valloire, France, Thursday.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FRANCE’S JULIAN ALAPHILIPP­E, wearing the overall leader’s yellow jersey, climbs the Galibier pass during the 18th stage of the Tour de France cycling race over 208 kilometers (130 miles) with start in Embrun and finish in Valloire, France, Thursday.
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