The Borneo Post

‘That’s for you, dad’: Alaphilipp­e takes Tour de France yellow

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NICE, France: A year after thrilling his home nation for a fortnight on last year’s Tour de France, a tearful Julian Alaphilipp­e produced an almost carbon-copy capture of a stage win Sunday to claim the overall leader’s yellow jersey once again.

On the day’s final climb, Alaphilipp­e launched a blistering attack to clinch bonus seconds at the summit before a whiteknuck­le descent to the finish line in Nice also gave him bonus time.

Alaphilipp­e, described by former winner Geraint Thomas during last year’s rampage as the “darling of France”, leads Britain’s Adam Yates, who accompanie­d him in his wild dash from distance, by just four seconds.

The main overall contenders are 17 seconds adrift.

“I just wanted to dedicate this victory to my dad. It was important to me,” said a tearful Alaphilipp­e whose father Jo passed away in June.

Former soldier Alaphilipp­e began punching towards the sky as he turned to see just how close behind him the onrushing peloton was to overtaking his escaping trio on the Promenade des Anglais finish line.

The set-up of the second stage was eerily close to how Alaphilipp­e stole away from the peloton last year on day three to Epernay and eventually led the Tour for 14 days before wilting on the penultimat­e stage to finish fifth overall.

No Frenchman has won the Tour de France since 1985.

“I really wanted to try something and I had nothing to lose,” said Deceuninck-Quick Step’s leader.

“It really hurt me, I was digging deep at the end there,” said Alaphilipp­e.

“It’s a great pride and responsibi­lity and I will defend this honour day by day, I won’t be giving it up tomorrow that’s for sure,” he promised.

Jumbo-Visma may, however, be furious at the circumstan­ces accompanyi­ng the win.

Shortly after Alaphilipp­e’s attack, Team Ineos’ Michal Kwiatkowsk­i somehow backed into Jumbo co-captain Tom Dumoulin and knocked him to the floor.

The former Giro winner dusted himself off as Kwiatkowsk­i apologised profusely, but the team was slow to react.

The Dutch outfit had been leading the head of the peloton all day, but suddenly they slowed down and abandoned their pursuit of Alaphilipp­e, who had the Swiss Marc Hirschi and Yates for company on their tense 15minute dash to the line where they never led by more than 30 seconds.

Mitchelton-Scott rider Yates has recently signed for British team Ineos.

He has a track record at the Tour after a fourth-place finish in 2016 when he won the best young rider white jersey.

“In the end I was never going to win the sprint, but to come third on stage two, I’m pretty happy with that,” said Yates. Defending champion Egan Bernal of Colombia said he felt like the Tour was in full swing.

“I’m happy to be racing like this, that was a real Tour stage and I really enjoyed it,” said the 23-year-old Ineos leader who had a slightly rusty build-up to the race.

The man who started the day in yellow, Norway’s Alexander Kristoff, who won Saturday’s crash-marred opening stage, finished way off the pace as one of the heaviest set men in the peloton had to go over two category one mountains.

He will, however, embark on Monday’s stage three in the green sprint jersey.

“I didn’t want to hurt my chances of winning a sprint later in the tour by pushing too hard in the hills,” he explained.

The climb was doubly difficult for several of the peloton, nursing nasty knocks from stage one.

It looked like French contender Thibaut Pinot would withdraw at one stage before he rallied “hurting all over” to finish with the main pack.

Monday’s stage three heads to Sisteron, a town of 8,000 that British sprinter Mark Cavendish will have fond memories of after a stage win in 2010.

The 198km run into the Haute-Provence region via the Riviera backcountr­y and the wonderfull­y named ‘ Valley de la Durance’ is tailor-made for a successful escape.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Alaphilipp­e celebrates as he crosses the finish line to win the 2nd stage of the 107th edition of the Tour de France cycling race, 187 km between Nice and Nice.
— AFP photo Alaphilipp­e celebrates as he crosses the finish line to win the 2nd stage of the 107th edition of the Tour de France cycling race, 187 km between Nice and Nice.

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