The Freeman

Froome quits as Nibali widens lead

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ARENBERG DU PORTE HAINAUT, France— Defending champion Chris Froome left the Tour de France a broken and devastated man as Vincenzo Nibali reached new heights on Wednesday.

Froome crashed twice in Wednesday's stage to add to another fall he'd had on Tuesday and it all proved too much for the 29- year- old Kenyan-born, British rider.

After his last spill he didn't even try to climb back on his bike and headed for a Sky team car instead.

"Devastated to have to withdraw from this years TDF. Injured wrist and tough conditions made controllin­g my bike near to impossible," he said on his Twitter feed.

Sky team manager Dave Brailsford said their attentions would now turn to Richie Porte.

"It's not to be (Froome's) year but in Richie Porte we've got a very capable guy who will now lead the team," said Brailsford.

"I think like anything else, on a day like today when you have a setback, you've got to roll with it.

"It's part of sport, you've got to recalibrat­e your goals and go again. You might take a punch but you get up and go again."

Froome himself gave his backing to Porte and wished the Australian well for the rest of the Tour.

"Thanks to the team & support staff for trying to get me through today. Wishing @richie_porte & @TeamSky the best for the rest of Tour!" he added on Twitter.

Another Sky teammate, Geraint Thomas, said contingenc­y plans had already been put in place before Wednesday's gruelling 152.5km stage from Ypres in Belgium to Arenberg Porte du Hainaut that included 13km of cobbleston­es over seven sectors.

"We knew going into today we had Richie as well and it was a kind of twopronged attack. They were both on an equal footing in the team," he said.

None of the overall contenders, however, were on an equal footing with Nibali.

The Italian rode a stunning race and came home in third behind stage winner Lars Boom.

But while Boom, a former cyclo-cross racer, is a specialist on the cobbles, Nibali had hardly any previous experience.

Yet he handled the roads that normally grace the Paris-Roubaix one-day Classic with incredible ease.

"It was exciting, you've got to say that," said a gracious Brailsford. "It might not have worked out for us but if you're a bike fan and watched the way that Nibali rode today, that was pretty impressive.

 ??  ?? Britain's Christophe­r Froome injured arrives at his hotel in Marcq-en-Baroeul. Defending champion Chris Froome crashed out of the Tour de France today after falling twice on a wet and treacherou­s 152,5 km fifth stage of the 101st edition of the Tour de...
Britain's Christophe­r Froome injured arrives at his hotel in Marcq-en-Baroeul. Defending champion Chris Froome crashed out of the Tour de France today after falling twice on a wet and treacherou­s 152,5 km fifth stage of the 101st edition of the Tour de...

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