Froome new Vuelta leader after coming third in first mountain stage
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[August 22, 2017]
By Richard Martin
BARCELONA (Reuters) - Chris Froome
became the new leader of the Vuelta A Espana on Monday after
finishing third in the mountainous stage three as Italian Vincenzo
Nibali snatched the stage win in the final 400m of the race in the
Pyrenees in Andorra.
Froome, who is bidding to become the first rider to do a double of
the Tour de France and the Vuelta in 39 years, set the stage alight
with a vicious pace on the final climb of the 158.5 km stage,
chaperoned by team mate Gianni Moscon, although he was eventually
caught on the descent.
The Briton takes a two-second lead in the general classification
over Spaniard David de la Cruz, Irishman Nicolas Roche and American
Tejay Van Garderen, while Nibali, who won the Vuelta in 2010, is
fifth, 10 seconds behind the four-time Tour de France champion.
"It's a great surprise but I think it's the result of a lot of hard
work today from my team mates as well," Froome told reporters.
"They did a fantastic job on the final climb. Especially a guy like
Gianni Moscon – it's his first Grand Tour with Team Sky. He was
great today, as were the rest of the guys."
Froome got to wear the Vuelta's red jersey for only the second time,
the first since he upstaged Bradley Wiggins with a shock win in the
individual time trial in 2011 and took the cycling world by storm in
coming second in the general classification.
Froome recalled his 2011 performance when explaining why he had
pushed so hard in stage three.
"I've lost a Vuelta before by 13 seconds so I'm going to fight for
every second I can at this point," he said.
"It's been a long time (without wearing the red
jersey). It feels amazing to put it back on and to be in this
position. It's something I've thought about for a long time and
obviously I worked hard to be here after the Tour, so I'm really
happy to be in this position."
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The 104th Tour de France cycling race - The 103-km Stage 21 from
Montgeron to Paris Champs-Elysees, France - July 23, 2017 - Team Sky
rider and yellow jersey Chris Froome of Britain holds a glass of
champagne after the start. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier
Frenchman Axel Domont took a 25-second lead over the escapees and a
4:40 lead over the peloton into the final 50km but his advantage
rapidly eroded in the second climb.
Sky surged ahead in the final climb, led by Moscon with Froome on
his wheel, with fellow general classification contenders Fabio Aru,
Daniel Chaves and Nibali close behind although Alberto Contador was
unable to sustain the pace.
The Spaniard trails Froome by 3:10, all but blowing his chance of an
overall win in his final professional race before retirement.
Froome led at the top of the climb with Chaves on his wheel but the
pair were soon caught by Romain Bardet and Aru on the descent, with
Nibali and Roche joining them in the final 700m.
Roche made a futile attempt at breakaway as Froome slowed, but
Nibali timed his attack to perfection to take the stage and 10 bonus
seconds. De La Cruz finished second, taking six bonus seconds along
with Froome.
The Vuelta moves into Spain in Tuesday's stage, 198.2km route from
Escaldes-Engordany in Andorra to Tarragona, Catalonia.
(Reporting by Richard Martin) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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