Cycling: Froome makes history as he is crowned Vuelta champion
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[September 11, 2017]
By Richard Martin
(Reuters) - Chris Froome became the
first Briton to win the Vuelta a Espana and the third rider to win a
double of the Tour de France and Vuelta in the same season when he
finished the race by retaining his advantage over Vincenzo Nibali on
Sunday.
Froome and Nibali crossed the Madrid finish line together, allowing
Team Sky rider Froome to stay two minutes 15 seconds ahead of the
Italian after the processional, 117.5-km stage.
Italian Matteo Trentin took the stage victory, his fourth of this
year's Vuelta, but narrowly missed out to Froome on the green jersey
for the points classification.
Froome is the third cyclist to win the Tour and the Vuelta in the
same year, after Jacques Anquetil in 1963 and Bernard Hinault in
1978.
He is also the first to win both races since 1995 when the Vuelta
was shifted from its old start date in late April to late August,
when temperatures in Spain are at their highest and put an extra
strain on riders.
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"What Chris Froome has achieved over the last 12 months has cemented
his place as one of Britain’s greatest sportsmen," said British
Cycling's chief executive Julie Harrington.
"To win the Tour de France and Vuelta a Espana in the same year puts
him up there with the best Grand Tour riders in the history of the
sport. The cycling community in this country and indeed the whole
nation are extremely proud of him."
Although the general classification victory was in the bag, Froome
did not let up in the final stage and joined the bunch sprint at the
end, coming 11th, the best finish of the general classification
group, with Russian Ilnur Zakarin, third overall, 18th and runner-up
Nibali 22nd.
CONTADOR SERENADED
Alberto Contador came in seven seconds behind in the final
professional stage of his career a day after winning the punishing
last mountain stage at the Alto de l'Angliru to bow out in style.
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Team Sky rider Chris Froome of Britain celebrates on the podium
after winning the Vuelta Tour of Spain after the last stage of the
cycling race between Arroyomolinos and Madrid, September 10, 2017.
REUTERS/Susana Vera
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The three-time Vuelta winner was serenaded by Spanish supporters on
the podium by the Cibeles palace in Madrid, while his Trek Segafredo
team mates jokingly urged him to postpone his imminent retirement,
chanting: "One more year for Alberto".
"I don't have words to explain the feeling I have in this moment, it
was incredible, to see all the fans at the finish line, to be here
in my home city," Contador told reporters.
"I passed all the cars and the road was only for me. After 15 hard
years of fighting this is a very special day, a dream; I couldn’t
have wished for a better goodbye than this."
The Spaniard said he had no second thoughts about calling time on
his career and alluded to the daredevil attitude he is renowned for.
"I said when I started that I wanted to finish at the top level and
I think now it’s the (right) moment. I think I gave the maximum in
every race in all these 15 years, I trained very hard and I did it
with my heart," he said.
"Cycling is a sport where the most important thing is victory but I
think the spectacle is also important. I did everything I could in
this Vuelta, I thank my team mates for giving me the opportunity to
attack whenever I wanted."
(Editing by Clare Fallon) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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