San Francisco Chronicle

For Froome’s gang, Team Sky’s the limit

- By Andrew Dampf Andrew Dampf is an Associated Press writer.

DUSSELDORF, Germany — One stage into the Tour de France was all it took for Chris Froome and his Team Sky to answer all the prerace talk about how they are not as dominant this year.

Geraint Thomas, Froome’s most loyal support rider in his three Tour victories, won the wet and slippery opening stage and claimed the yellow jersey.

“It’s still about Froomey,” Thomas said. “It’s obviously a big boost of morale but the goal is still Froomey. But if I end up staying up there on GC that would be great.”

Averaging 32 mph, Thomas required little more than 16 minutes over the almost entirely flat 8.7-mile individual time trial up and down the banks of the Rhine River in downtown Dusseldorf. Stefan Kueng of BMC finished second, five seconds behind, and Vasil Kiryienka of Sky was third, seven seconds back. Froome was sixth, 12 seconds behind.

It was a banner day for Sky, which placed four riders in the top eight with Michal Kwiatkowsk­i in eighth. And Froome gained time on all of his expected challenger­s — 35 and 36 seconds on Richie Porte and Nairo Quintana, respective­ly.

Romain Bardet, the Frenchman who finished second overall behind Froome last year, and seven-time Grand Tour champion Alberto Contador lost even more time.

Meanwhile, there were numerous crashes. Two involved key support riders for the overall favorites; Alejandro Valverde, who assists Quintana at Movistar, and Nicolas Roche, who aides Porte with BMC.

Valverde slammed into the barriers at high speed after falling off his bike and was forced to abandon the race in a neck brace with a suspected broken left kneecap. Roche lost control while traversing tram tracks.

Sky had no such problems, which was a welcome change after a difficult start to the year for cycling’s powerhouse team.

Thomas aimed for overall victory in the Giro d’Italia, but was forced to abandon that race because of injuries in a crash caused by a police motorbike. Froome entered the Tour without having won a single warm-up race — or even a stage — for the first time since he began dominating four years ago.

With neither a long time trial nor many mountainto­p finishes, many observers suggested this Tour doesn’t suit Froome’s strengths.

“I heard in my ear that Geraint Thomas had won. That’s super, super,” Froome said.

 ?? Philippe Lopez / AFP / Getty Images ?? Geraint Thomas tries on his new threads — the overall leader’s yellow jersey he figures to keep warm for teammate Chris Froome.
Philippe Lopez / AFP / Getty Images Geraint Thomas tries on his new threads — the overall leader’s yellow jersey he figures to keep warm for teammate Chris Froome.

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