Times Colonist

Froome says fourth Tour win ‘toughest yet’

- JEROME PUGMIRE

PARIS — After the champagne bubbles fade and Chris Froome drifts away from his Sunday night celebratio­ns to reflect on a fourth Tour de France win, he might do so with greater fondness than the others.

The first, in 2013, brought the bursting pride of a first success. But he won by more than four minutes, as he did last year. Although Nairo Quintana finished a little over one minute behind him in 2015, this year’s victory — by just 54 seconds — over another Colombian, Rigoberto Uran, tastes sweeter.

“This Tour has been my toughest yet,” Froome said.

Froome temporaril­y lost the race lead to the daring Italian Fabio Aru in the Pyrenees on a huge climb to the ski station of Peyragudes, and thought he’d lost it altogether two days later.

Last Sunday in Rodez, he was forced to change his rear wheel in the final 40 kilometres after a spoke broke. He got dropped, drifting way behind the peloton.

“I was just standing there on the side of the road with my teammate Michal Kwiatkowsk­i,” Froome said. “I thought it was potentiall­y game over.”

Riding with unchained fury, Kwiatkowsk­i and Froome bridged the gap.

Fast forward to Saturday’s penultimat­e stage in Marseille and a time trial. Froome was right back in the ascendency and closing in on win No. 4.

Yet the future champion was jeered by fans at the Stade Velodrome as he began his ride, and more jeers followed along the route. Froome had urine chucked over him on a previous Tour, so booing was hardly going to unsettle him. He was almost chivalrous on the podium Sunday.

“Your passion for this race makes it really special. I fell in love with this race.”

 ??  ?? British rider Chris Froome won the Tour de France by just 54 seconds Sunday.
British rider Chris Froome won the Tour de France by just 54 seconds Sunday.

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