The Scotsman

Mellow yellow /Alaphilipp­e stays level-headed on final climb to take over lead

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Julian Alaphilipp­e soloed his way into the yellow jersey as Geraint Thomas lost a handful of seconds to team-mate Egan Bernal on stage three of the Tour de France.

Alaphilipp­e took yellow off the shoulders of Mike Teunissen as he attacked on the final categorise­d climb of Monday’s 215km stage from Binche to Epernay, while the steep finish in the capital of Champagne country was enough to see Thomas lose the wheel of Team Ineos colleague Bernal.

A five-second gap between the two saw Thomas end the day seventh in the nascent general classifica­tion standings, 45 seconds down on yellow, with Bernal in sixth, 40 seconds off Alaphilipp­e.

Victory for the 2018 King of the Mountains was little surprise on a Classics-style stage which seemed ideally suited to his explosive style.

“He may have designed today’s stage himself,” Mitchelton-scott sporting director Matt White joked yesterday. “It’s like the Amstel Gold Race in a French vineyard.”

Even so, Alaphilipp­e had to execute in order to take his first career yellow jersey, and he did so in style. “I’m speechless,” the 27-year-old said. “I don’t realise what’s happening to me. I knew this stage suited me.

“I managed to avoid any pitfalls and crashes. I felt good, so I accelerate­d in the Mutigny climb, but I didn’t think I’d go alone. I gave everything. I heard I was 30 or 40 seconds ahead. It’s difficult to meet the expectatio­ns being the favourite. I made it. I’m delighted.”

Little happened on the long road south from Belgium, virtually flat until the final 45 kilometres when the riders hit the lumps of Champagne country.

The peloton was bearing down on Lotto-soudal’s Tim Wellens, the last survivor of the day’s breakaway, as they hit the 12 per cent inclines of the Mutigny inside the last 20 kilometres. As the summit came into view Alaphilipp­e launched his move, cresting the summit on Wellens’ wheel before bursting clear.

Alaphilipp­e’s advantage was already 50 seconds by the time he reached the foot of the descent. There were still challenges to come, but he always looked in control as he powered clear and crossed the line some 26 seconds ahead of a muchreduce­d pack.

 ??  ?? 0 Julian Alaphilipp­e celebrates his victory as he crosses the finish line at the end of stage three of the Tour de France.
0 Julian Alaphilipp­e celebrates his victory as he crosses the finish line at the end of stage three of the Tour de France.

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