FROOME ON BRINK OF FOURTH TOUR DE FRANCE TITLE
▶ Solid time trial sets up victory for Briton, barring catastrophe on today’s final stage
Chris Froome kept his composure in a hostile environment as he virtually secured a fourth Tour de France title by extending his overall lead after yesterday’s 22.5-kilometre time trial through the streets of Marseille.
The Briton was booed by the crowd in the Stade Velodrome – where the penultimate stage started and ended – and also in the Old Port and on the climb up to Basilica Notre Dame de la Garde as he took third place behind two Poles, with Maciej Bodnar of the Bora-Hansgrohe theam winning in 28 min, 15 secs ahead of Michal Kwiatkowski.
Froome finished six seconds off the pace and five behind his Sky teammate Kwiatkowski, who has been instrumental in his leader’s ride to what should be his third consecutive, and Team Sky’s fifth, victory in the past six years.
Providing Froome avoids any calamities on the 103km trek from Montgeron to the capital he will take his Tour haul to four titles in the past five years, putting him one behind Miguel Indurain of Spain, Belgium’s Eddy Merckx, and Frenchmen Bernard Hinault and Jacques Anquetil.
“The atmosphere here is incredible, it’s huge,” Froome said of the boos. “I think it was normal with a Frenchman in second place behind me on the start line, racing in Marseille and finishing in a football stadium. Certainly I have no complaints.”
While Froome won at least a stage in 2013, 2015 and 2016, he has not raised his arms in celebration this year in a very tight race.
Froome, 32, goes on the record as the first person to win three Tours in a row since Indurain, who was unbeatable between 1991-95.
American Lance Armstrong won seven Tour titles from 1999-2005 but was later stripped of them for doping.
Colombian Rigoberto Uran of the Cannondale-Drapac team overcooked a left-hand corner in the finale but stayed on his bike and leapfrogged Romain Bardet into second place overall to wrap up the Tour with a 54-second deficit.
Bardet had a mediocre time trial and the AG2R-La Mondiale rider, runner-up last year, salvaged a podium finish by one second to finish third, 2:20 off the pace.
“I gave everything but I was not feeling well today. I rode this time trial with my head, not my legs,” Bardet said.
Briton Simon Yates secured the white jersey for the best under-25 rider. France’s Warren Barguil, who won two stages, will claim the polka dot jersey for the mountains classification and was voted the most aggressive rider in the race.
The top three riders in the general classification were all within 29 seconds of each other going into yesterday’s stage but there was little suspense as Froome is a much better time-trialist than Uran and Bardet.
He was already ahead of his rivals at the first checkpoint while Bardet’s advantage over Uran had melted after a few kilometres.