The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Ineos will rally this week, says Brailsford

Team principal admits Tour has been ‘challengin­g’ and will go down to wire Thomas denies leadership issues with Bernal after losing time over weekend

- By Tom Cary CYCLING CORRESPOND­ENT in Nimes

Team Ineos denied that it was the end of an era yesterday, insisting they were in “good shape” ahead of the decisive final stages of the most exciting Tour de France in decades.

After an enthrallin­g two weeks of racing, six riders from five teams have realistic hopes of arriving in Paris on Sunday wearing the maillot jaune. And with two Frenchmen – race leader Julian Alaphilipp­e (Deceuninck-quickstep) and fourth-placed Thibaut Pinot (Groupama-fdj) – among that number, the whole of France has been gripped by Tour fever.

Home hopes have been raised by the fact that Team Ineos have not been nearly as dominant as in previous years, when racing as Team Sky. Geraint Thomas and Egan Bernal still sit second and fifth in the general classifica­tion, but the British squad have not controlled the race, with Thomas and Bernal frequently left short of helpers on the final climbs in stages, which would have been unheard of when Bradley Wiggins and Chris Froome were stomping all over French hopes.

Thomas has also had a serious wobble. The Welshman cracked on the Tourmalet on Saturday, and was then left behind by Pinot on the final climb in Foix on Sunday, losing a total of 1 min 41 sec to the Frenchman over the weekend.

On both days, Bernal looked to be Ineos’s strongest climber, meaning the British team are not only having to fend off their rivals, who can smell blood in the water, but are also being forced to address speculatio­n regarding their team tactics.

Sir Dave Brailsford insisted, however, that he was having “brilliant fun” even if the race was proving “challengin­g”.

“I think we’re the only team with two riders high up in the GC and I think we have to adapt to the situation,” said the Ineos team principal at yesterday’s rest-day press conference in Nimes, where temperatur­es nudged 40C. “I don’t think there’s a single tactic that you can just go, ‘We’ll deploy that’. I think you adapt as the days evolve, minute by minute nearly.”

Brailsford claimed Ineos had not had numbers at the front, as they have in the past, because the Tour had been raced differentl­y this year with Alaphilipp­e in yellow.

Teams were trying to take the race on earlier, he said, often on the penultimat­e climb.

But he added that, while Michal Kwiatkowsk­i and Gianni Moscon may have been slightly below par for Team Ineos, he expected everyone, Wout Poels in particular, to rally in the third week.

“We know you can go through ups and downs in this race but, ultimately, it’s the consistenc­y which tends to pay off. It will probably go down to the wire. Who knows? It’s different. It’s exciting, isn’t it?”

From a man who said last week that he loved nothing better than to “stick a knife” into his rivals and, if he got the chance, “to twist it”, that felt slightly like revisionis­m. But no one can deny Brailsford is right.

Thomas, meanwhile, insisted he was fully over his wobble at the weekend and was now “looking forward” to the long gradual ascents of the Alps, which are more to his liking. “I’m confident we are in good shape,” he said.

The 2018 champion also denied there were any leadership issues with Bernal, saying he “wouldn’t hesitate” to call on the Colombian’s help if he needed it. Similarly, if he felt he was on a bad day, he would not stop the youngster from riding.

‘We are the only team with two riders high up in the GC, and I think we have to adapt’

“Obviously, I want to be the one to win,” he said. “[But] the main thing is that we don’t race against each other and throw away the race.

“We’ve got to be honest with how we are feeling. If I’m on a really bad day and I just tell Egan to stay with me and we ride together and both lose a minute then that’s obviously not the way to go. I’m confident that we can keep that communicat­ion and honesty going.”

Bernal, for his part, said he still considered Thomas to be the “first leader” and would help him if asked to do so.

It was an assured performanc­e from Ineos and from Thomas. But it was clear from their rival teams’ press conference­s that they feel they have a golden opportunit­y to knock the British superteam off their perch.

Groupama-fdj, in particular, were in very good spirits, with Pinot – now the bookmakers’ favourite – insisting he was relishing the pressure of becoming France’s first champion in 34 years.

“Yesterday, they [Bernal and Thomas] put in as much effort as I did and they weren’t as good as I was,” he said of his performanc­e on Sunday. “Trying to make up time and trying to lose the least time possible are two different things mentally. I think yesterday made their legs hurt more than mine.”

Alaphilipp­e cut a slightly less confident figure, but said it remained to be seen how everyone came out of the rest day, and whether he could recharge sufficient­ly over the next two days – both of which are expected to be blistering­ly hot – before the final, decisive stages in the Alps.

 ??  ?? 2 Geraint Thomas (GB) Team Ineos +1 min 35 sec 4 Thibaut Pinot (France) Groupama-fdj +1 min 50 sec 3 Steven Kruijswijk (Holland) Jumbo-visma +1 min 47 sec 1 Julian Alaphilipp­e (France) Deceuninck–quick-step 61 hr 0 min 22 sec
2 Geraint Thomas (GB) Team Ineos +1 min 35 sec 4 Thibaut Pinot (France) Groupama-fdj +1 min 50 sec 3 Steven Kruijswijk (Holland) Jumbo-visma +1 min 47 sec 1 Julian Alaphilipp­e (France) Deceuninck–quick-step 61 hr 0 min 22 sec
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? 6 Emanuel Buchmann (Germany) Bora-hansgrohe +2 min 14 sec
6 Emanuel Buchmann (Germany) Bora-hansgrohe +2 min 14 sec
 ??  ?? 5 Egan Bernal (Colombia) Team Ineos +2 min 2 sec
5 Egan Bernal (Colombia) Team Ineos +2 min 2 sec

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