Bangkok Post

Tour is mine to lose now, says leader Froome

Brit rider confident ahead of final two stages

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>> SALON-DE-PROVENCE: Chris Froome said he could only lose the Tour de France now on the eve of the decisive time-trial in Marseille.

Following Friday’s 19th stage, the longest of the race at 222.5km, yellow jersey leader Froome admitted that with only yesterday’s race against the clock and today’s procession to Paris left, he should wrap up a fourth overall victory.

“Tomorrow I have to not lose the race, I can’t win it but I mustn’t lose it,” said Froome, who leads by 23 seconds from France’s Romain Bardet and 29sec to Rigoberto Uran of Colombia.

But he is widely regarded as a better time-trialist than both of those two and it would be a major shock were he not to sew up victory on yesterday.

“I have to treat it like any other time-trial that I’ve done before,” said Froome of the 22.5km stage.

“I have to do everything right. I’m not going to go out there and take any big risks.”

On the opening stage, a 14km time-trial in Dusseldorf, Froome beat Bardet by 39sec and Uran by 51sec, although heavy rain at times made the conditions treacherou­s.

“It’s the same as in Dusseldorf. I wasn’t going to take risks in the corners,” said Froome, 32.

“When I can push, I will push. It’s not a course where I’ll be going out to risk everything.

“I’d now much rather be in this position than second, third or fourth and having to make up time on someone else.”

Bardet is usually the slowest of the three contenders against the clock, and he says there will be no pressure on him.

“There’s nothing to think about. You just have to give it everything and not ask any questions,” said the 27-year-old.

The time-trial will start and finish in Marseille’s iconic Velodrome football stadium, which began life in 1937 as a multi-sport arena hosting track cycling, athletics and rugby, as well as football, to which it has since become dedicated as the home ground of Olympique Marseille.

“At the Velodrome, at the finish, it will be as if we’re seeing the Champs Elysees,” added Bardet, in reference to the traditiona­l finish to the Tour on Paris’s historic avenue.

“I’ve had a great Tour, it’s my desire to finish it as well as possible.

“I’m thinking about riding the 22 kilometres as fast as possible and we’ll see at the finish.”

Norway’s Edvald Boasson Hagen won his third Tour de France stage and first in six years on Friday, from Embrun to Salon de Provence.

Boasson Hagen, who was edged out in a photo finish by Marcel Kittel on the seventh stage, was part of a 20-man breakaway but made a winning solo bid inside the final 3km as Nikias Arndt came second and Jens Keukeleire third.

“I’m so happy, it worked out really well. I didn’t have to do the photo finish this time, so it’s really good,” said Boasson Hagen, 30.

It was his third Tour stage win following another two in 2011 when riding for Froome’s Sky team.

 ??  ?? Team Sky’s Christophe­r Froome, left, and AG2R La Mondiale’s Romain Bardet cross the line at the end of the 19th stage.
Team Sky’s Christophe­r Froome, left, and AG2R La Mondiale’s Romain Bardet cross the line at the end of the 19th stage.

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