French Alaphilippe bags stage, lead

Facebook
X
WhatsApp
Telegram
Email
French rider Julian Alaphilippe makes a last effort to win the third stage on Monday. Photo: AFP

LET’S READ SUARA SARAWAK/ NEW SARAWAK TRIBUNE E-PAPER FOR FREE AS ​​EARLY AS 2 AM EVERY DAY. CLICK LINK

French rider Julian Alaphilippe makes a last effort to win the third stage on Monday. Photo: AFP

EPERNAY (France): Julian Alaphilippe produced a magnificent show of power in stage three on Monday to give France its first win and take the overall lead in the 2019 Tour de France.

The win means a French rider has the overall leader’s yellow jersey for the first time in five years.
The Deceuninck-Quick Step rider took a huge gamble with his long range effort.

He slipped away from the pack after vying for bonus seconds on the penultimate climb, assuming a daredevil, aerodynamic crouch at the crest and breaking clear.

By the time he crossed the Marne, still an agonising 10km through the champagne vineyards from Epernay, he was almost a minute ahead.

Alaphilippe was strong enough to cling on and win by 26 seconds, despite a desperate effort from the pack to reel him in.
“I was really up for it today, so when I saw the chance I went all in,” said a red-faced Alaphilippe after his third ever stage win and his first yellow jersey.

See also  Jalil Ramli football clinic attracts many pupils in Niah

“I should have waited until the end, I know, but I just went full gas when I saw the gap.” Amazingly, it is the first time a French rider has had the overall lead since Tony Gallopin wore yellow in 2014. Alaphilippe will be the toast of France tonight (Monday).

A small break in the chasing pack saw defending champion Geraint Thomas lose five seconds to his Team Ineos co-leader Colombian 22-year-old Egan Bernal and to French hope Thibaut Pinot.
“That climb where Alaphilippe went was steep and it was hard, but I just knew I didn’t have the legs to go for the bonus sprint,” Thomas said.

“Then it was just a case of getting to the finish and being safe,” said Thomas, whose Ineos team did much of the chasing.
The crowd on the last hill had been expecting a bare-knuckle struggle, but went wild as Alaphilippe came up alone and rose in his saddle to swagger over the last steep climb.

See also  Register for Sarawak Skills charity run on Nov 3

At the line, the 27-year-old former soldier had maintained enough power to establish a 20 second lead over Belgian prodigy Wout Van Aert in the overall standings.

“It’s actually only starting to sink in now that I have the jersey,” said Alaphilippe, who was close to tears.
The Tour crossed into France earlier in the stage after opening with two stages in Belgium. – AFP

 

Download from Apple Store or Play Store.