The Guardian (USA)

Egan Bernal becomes first Colombian to win the Tour de France

- Jeremy Whittle in Paris

Egan Bernal has become the first Colombian to win the Tour de France, sealing victory as darkness fell across Paris on Sunday.

As a spectacula­r 21st stage of the 2019 Tour took in the Palais du Louvre, the Place de la Concorde and the Champs Élysées, Caleb Ewan proved the fastest of a fatigued peloton in the traditiona­l sprint finish to the threeweek race.

The Australian Ewan came from well back in the pack to outsprint Dylan Groenewege­n and collect his third stage win of the Tour as the sun set over the Arc de Triomphe at the end of the 130km stage from Rambouille­t. Just behind, Bernal crossed the line alongside last year’s winner Geraint Thomas to secure his first Grand Tour victory in only his second career three-week race.

Peter Sagan celebrated winning the green jersey of points classifica­tion for a record seventh time, but it was Bernal’s remarkable triumph that sent shockwaves through the sport. The 22year-old was mobbed by teammates and delirious Colombian fans who had flooded the city of lights to celebrate a long-awaited success in the world’s most famous bicycle race.

Speaking from the top step of the podium on the Champs Élysées, Bernal told ITV4: “Today I am the most happy guy in the world. I just won the Tour de France and I can’t believe it.”

Bernal, who spoke in English, Italian, Spanish and French, added: “I think I should say thank you to all my team, thank you ‘G’ [Thomas] for the opportunit­y and all the team for their support and belief in me.”

Dave Brailsford, the Team Ineos principal, said: “I don’t think he knows what’s hit him yet. I don’t think he has any idea what’s just happened to him. In sport, we lose way more than we win. As for him being the first ever Colombian, having been to Colombia and seen millions of people just when Egan won the Tour of Colombia, the place went bananas.

“His status in cycling has changed now. He came into this race and it

was ‘Geraint and Egan’, whereas now I think people will perceive him and ride against him in a different light. Geraint Thomas drew a lot of attention and that allowed Egan to go under the radar a little bit.”

As Brailsford and his staff celebrated a 10th Grand Tour win since 2012, Romain Bardet took the King of the Mountains classifica­tion while the long-term race leader and fellow French favourite, Julian Alapahilip­pe, who spent 14 days in the yellow jersey and won two stages, was awarded the “super combativit­y” prize for most aggressive rider.

At 22, and third youngest winner in the history of the Tour, Bernal also claimed the best young rider classifica­tion, in addition to the yellow jersey. But despite his prowess in the mountain stages, Bernal also finished the Tour without a stage win, as did teammate Chris Froome in 2017.

Bernal is widely tipped to go on to further Grand Tour success after this breakthrou­gh win for South American cycling, but Brailsford is wary of the impact stardom may have on the young Colombian.

“The big thing is that the status of his life will change and at a relatively young age,” he said. “He’s got all his 20s to adapt to that. I think it will go one way or another for him. Some carry on and get used to the world they live in and everything they have to deal with and other people don’t.

“A lot of the guys who became successful for us were older, late 20s, and the life-change came after they got used to life at a certain level. When it happens younger you adapt quicker so you grow up in a different world from some of the other guys. His agent I know very well and is close to him. He’s got a good network around him and his coach is really important now. So we need to sit down and have a plan.”

Thomas, who was lying second overall in the 2017 edition when he was forced to abandon the race after a crash on stage nine, was proud of his efforts even though he was unable to retain his title. “[I was] second in the Tour de France two years ago, I was here with a broken collarbone and my arm in a sling and watching Froomey win his fourth, and really just disappoint­ed not to be able to ride my bike, and I would’ve taken second then, but it just shows how times and expectatio­ns have moved on,” Thomas said. “But I think I can be proud of how I just managed to get in decent enough shape. This year has just been mainly downs, it hasn’t been a smooth ride at all, and even in the race it was one thing after the next. But I can be happy with it, I gave it everything, didn’t let the downs affect me and just kept pressing on. To be second to a teammate makes it OK. If it was Kruijswijk sitting on the top step, and I was second then for sure I would be a lot more disappoint­ed.”

 ??  ?? Australia’s Caleb Ewan celebrates winning the final stage after coming from nowhere. Photograph: Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP/Getty Images
Australia’s Caleb Ewan celebrates winning the final stage after coming from nowhere. Photograph: Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP/Getty Images

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