The Commercial Appeal

Froome keeps overall lead

- By Jerome Pugmire Associated Press

LYON, France — Italian cyclist Matteo Trentin timed his finish perfectly to win the hilly 14th stage of the Tour de France, while Chris Froome preserved his overall lead by staying in the pack on Saturday.

Froome and the other main contenders were more than seven minutes back when Trentin crossed the finish line in Lyon to become the first Italian to win a stage this year.

Froome managed not to lose any more time to his main rival Alberto Contador ahead of Sunday’s daunting 21- kilometer (13-mile) ascent of Mont Ventoux — one of cycling’s toughest climbs, where Britain’s Tom Simpson collapsed and died during the 1967 Tour.

“I’m concentrat­ing on the GC (overall classifica­tion), but of course it would be great to win tomorrow,” Froome said. “In cycling terms it would be like a dream come true.”

Froome, the Tour favorite, lost more than a minute to Contador, the two-time former champion, and Dutchman Bauke Mollema in Friday’s incident-packed sprint stage.

This time, he thanked his teammates for keeping him out of danger on the 191-kilometer (119mile) leg from the winemaking town of SaintPourc­ain- sur- Sioule in central France to the eastcentra­l city of Lyon, one of the gourmet capitals of France and home to the seven-time French football champion.

“My teammates controlled the stage and did a great job,” Froome said. “Just keeping an eye on things.”

Froome remains 2:28 ahead of Mollema, considered an outsider, and 2:45 clear of Contador, the 2007 and ‘09 champion who was stripped of his 2010 title for doping.

“A lot of people have reason to attack now,” Froome said. “A lot of people spent energy in the last couple of days, so it will be an interestin­g one.”

Meanwhile, Trentin was overjoyed with his first stage win in a major race.

“I knew that if I started from 200 meters I could win,” he said. “For sure a win in the Tour, this means something. I want to enjoy this because the next days are going to be hard.”

As they contested the sprint outside Stade Gerland stadium, Trentin surged from the back to beat Swiss rider Michael Albasini by half a wheel. American Andrew Talansky was third.

It was the second straight stage win — and third in the last four — for the Omega Pharma Quick- Step team after Mark Cavendish won on Friday and Tony Martin clinched Wednesday’s time trial.

“To be part of this team is incredible,” Trentin said.

The first three were followed 7 minutes, 17 seconds later by the heaving mass of riders in the peloton, with Froome’s Sky and Alberto Contador’s SaxoTinkof­f teams forming a shield around their star riders.

An 18-man breakaway set off early, with Jens Voigt, Jan Bakelants and British rider David Millar driving it hard to get Garmin-Sharp teammate Talansky — the group’s highest-placed rider in the general classifica­tion — in a good position.

Voigt’s first Tour was in 1998 and Saturday’s was his 303rd day of racing in the showcase race in his 16th Tour.

“To be honest, five years too many,” Voigt said when asked why he couldn’t last. “I’m 41, that’s nature.”

The yellow jersey group was about five minutes behind when the frontrunne­rs had all completed the second category 3 climb. Those two were the biggest ones of the day but only moderate ascents compared to what awaits the riders on Sunday.

Millar calls the Ventoux climb “horrible” and Polish rider Michal Kwiatkowsk­i is dreading it.

“It’s such a legendary mountain that I’m a little bit scared about it,” said Kwiatkowsk­i, seventh overall but nearly five minutes behind Froome.

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