BusinessMirror

CAN FROOME WIN THE TOUR?

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DOUBTS about Chris Froome’s ability to win this year’s Tour de France emerged from within Team Ineos with technical director Carsten Jeppesen saying “a lot has happened” since he last won the Tour. Froome hopes to join Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault, Jacques Anquetil and Miguel Indurain as five-time champion, but Jeppesen cited his age of 35 and his serious crash last year as complicati­ons.

After finishing second behind

Geraint Thomas at the 2018 Tour, following his Giro d’italia victory, Froome suffered careerthre­atening injuries last June and was forced to watch from home as a 22-year-old Egan Bernal claimed the yellow jersey.

Claiming he is back to full fitness, Froome will ride alongside Bernal and Thomas at this year’s Tour but will leave the team at the end of the season to move to Israel Start-up Nation.

“There is no doubt that he has put a lot of work into it. As always, Chris has been a fantastic athlete and incredibly dedicated. I do not believe that there’s anyone who has trained as hard during this coronaviru­s crisis as he has,” Jeppesen told Danish broadcaste­r TV2.

“But I’m not 100 percent sure that he will get so ready that he is where he needs to be to be able to win. A lot has happened since Froome won last,” Jeppesen said. “We have won the

Tour with both Geraint and Egan, and Froome has grown older and has been subjected to a very, very serious crash last year.”

Jeppesen worked with the team since its inception in 2010 and currently holds the official title of Head of Technical Operations and Commercial, tasked with managing the equipment the riders use, along with sponsor relations.

While Jeppesen’s comments will reignite the debate over the internal hierarchy at Team Ineos, there are still doubts if the team will take Froome to the Tour at all. Despite his impending transfer, Jeppesen does not see Froome giving anything less than 100 percent for the team and believes that having three leaders won’t cause problems.

“Now we have known Chris and worked with him for many years, and if there is one thing you can say about him, it is that he is a profession­al at your fingertips,” he said.

“With it being decided out on the road, it may sound a bit like a phrase, but by and large that’s the way it is—the best man wins. I really think they all have so much respect for each other that it becomes no problem,” he added.

Froome will return to action at the Route d’occitanie on August 1, where he is set to line up alongside Bernal, while Thomas is expected to join them for the Tour de l’ain and Critérium du Dauphiné ahead of the start of the Tour on August 29.

Bernal, meanwhile, traveled on a chartered flight from Colombia and arrived in Madrid early this week. The 23-year-old hopes to defend his title at the Tour de France, but said he needs to consider where his form is during an upcoming team training camp in Andorra and then once racing officially begins.

“I train for that but it is a different year, completely different. “We have not competed and for the moment what I want is to go to Andorra and see what level I am in,” Bernal said. “Then enjoy the races that will take place before the Tour. There we will look at what level I am, at what level are my colleagues. I think that will start from there.”

“The best thing is to go step by step, not get too far ahead of what may happen and just be here and now. Right now it is to go to the camp, see what level I am on. I haven’t competed in a long time, nobody has,” he added. “It is a different season but we must have our feet on the ground. We are going through a very difficult moment and we must try to do things well so that everything turns out well.”

 ??  ?? CHRIS FROOME’S impending transfer could create a leadership crisis at Team Ineos.
CHRIS FROOME’S impending transfer could create a leadership crisis at Team Ineos.

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