MaltaToday previous editions

MALTATODAY 28 July 2019

Issue link: https://maltatoday.uberflip.com/i/1148959

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 28 of 51

29 EGAN Bernal is poised to be- come the first Colombian to win the Tour de France after finishing yesterday's penulti- mate stage in the yellow jersey. Tradition dictates that the race leader is not challenged on today's largely processional final stage to Paris. Bernal, 22, will become the youngest Tour winner for 110 years, with Ineos team-mate Geraint Thomas in second. Dutchman Steven Kruijswijk moved up to third as Julian Alaphilippe faded on an Alpine stage won by Vincenzo Nibali. Italian Nibali, winner of the Tour de France in 2014, was in the day's break and attacked again on the climb to the finish at Val Thorens, winning by 10 seconds from Spain's Alejan- dro Valverde. Bernal and Thomas, who won last year's Tour, finished stage 20 a few seconds later, crossing the line arm-in-arm, with huge grins on their faces. They came into the race as joint leaders for Ineos and, providing they both reach the finish in Paris today, will end it first and second in the general classification. "We're now close to making it official," said Bernal. "There's one stage left but, normally, if everything goes well, I can say that I've won my first Tour. "It's incredible. I just want to get to the finish line in Paris and after I'll be calmer. "Colombia is on the verge of winning its first Tour, We al- ready had won the Giro d'Italia and La Vuelta a Espana, but the Tour was missing and it's a great honour to think that I'm the one achieving this." Welshman Thomas, who ended the stage trailing in the overall standings by one minute, 11 seconds, wrote on Twitter: "Congrats Egan Ber- nal. What a rider. The first of many." Bernal, who will also collect the white jersey as the best young rider in the race, will put to an end a run of four successive British winners - Chris Froome winning three of his four titles from 2015 and Thomas triumphing last year. The green points jersey clas- sification will be won for a record seventh time by Slova- kian Peter Sagan, who pulled a wheelie as he rode over the finish line several minutes after the stage winner, while the pol- ka dot King of the Mountains jersey will go to Frenchman Romain Bardet. That will be some consola- tion for the French supporters who had been hoping to see a home victory for the first time since Bernhard Hinault won his record-equalling fifth Tour in 1985. Alaphilippe, the world's num- ber one-ranked male cyclist, had led the race for 14 days, and after holding the yellow jersey through the Pyrenees in week two also retained it after the first day in the Alps. However, he finally cracked on Friday's storm-shortened 19th stage and he again fell away on yesterday's final climb of the three-week race. He is set to finish fifth overall. France's other big hope, Thibaut Pinot, had also looked strong in the Pyrenees, but a freak injury, caused when his thigh hit his handlebar on stage 17, saw him eventually aban- don the race from fifth place during stage 19. Why the Bernal win will not be a surprise The climbing specialist, who was born on 13 January, 1997 in Colombia's capital city Bo- gota at an altitude of 2,600m, showed his potential at last year's Tour, when he rode as a domestique to Thomas and four-time champion Chris Froome. After pacing Thomas to victory on Alpe d'Huez and ultimately the overall title, Froome said: "He's got an amazing engine. You only have to look at what he did on Alpe d'Huez, for a 21-year- old, that's amazing. "There is a lot in Egan that reminds me of myself when I was younger. It's great having him on the team and he brings a lot of young, new energy to the group." He joined Team Sky for the 2018 season, after winning the prestigious Tour de l'Avenir - a stage race for under-23 riders that has seen many of its winners go on to Tour de France success. He won the Tour Colombia and Tour of California last year before making his Tour de France debut as a domes- tique to Thomas and four- time winner Chris Froome. This year, three crashes helped Bernal arrive at the Tour as joint leader of the In- eos team. The first was his own, on a training ride in Andorra, and it ruled him out of May's Giro d'Italia, where he had been due to lead the team for the first time in a Grand Tour. Froome's season-ending crash at June's Criterium du Dauphine then pushed Ber- nal up the Ineos pecking order for the Tour de France, while Thomas' spill at the Tour de Suisse later that month saw Bernal take over as the sole leader of that team and he went on to win the race. And he twice rode away from Thomas in the Alps this week to position himself as Ineos' strongest rider at the Tour and secure his first Grand Tour win in only his second attempt. Bernal will become the third youngest winner of the Tour. The youngest is France's Hen- ri Cornet, who was 19 when he was controversially award- ed victory in the second edi- tion of the race in 1904, while Luxembourg's Francois Faber was a few days younger than Bernal when he took the 1909 title. maltatoday | SUNDAY • 28 JULY 2019 SPORTS CYCLING Tour de France 2019 Egan Bernal set to win from Geraint Thomas Thomas congratulated Ineos team- mate Bernal as they crossed the finish line together at the end of stage 20

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of MaltaToday previous editions - MALTATODAY 28 July 2019