Pinot has unfinished business with
Tour de France
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[August 26, 2020]
By Julien Pretot
NICE, France (Reuters) - Thibaut Pinot
left 2019's Tour de France in tears after his hopes of victory were
wrecked by injury with Paris in sight, but the Groupama FDJ rider is
determined to make the most of a favourable route to become the
first French winner in 35 years.
The 30-year-old burst into the limelight when he won a mountain
stage on his Tour debut in 2012, two years before finishing third
overall, raising hopes that France had finally found a successor to
Bernard Hinault, whose 1985 win still weighs heavily on those trying
to emulate him.
Since 2014, Pinot has only completed the Tour once, a disappointing
16th overall in 2015 although he claimed victory at the top of the
iconic Alpe d'Huez that year.
Last year, he prevailed on the Col du Tourmalet and dropped all the
favourites on a punishing climb the next day.
But his Tour jinx struck again, with a thigh injury forcing Pinot to
abandon the race a couple of days before what might have been a
victory parade on the Champs-Elysees.
"Last year was a huge disappointment but I will get over it. I've
realised that I could aim extremely high," said Pinot earlier in the
season.
"That was the worst disappointment of my career. I had the best form
I've ever had in my career. To lose all of that in an instant was
too much to bear."
Still, Pinot’s epic ride in 2019 boosted his popularity in France.
“If I go to the supermarket wearing Groupama FDJ gear, I always get
stopped by an old lady asking me 'How's little Pinot doing?’”
While some cycling commentators say he can be mentally fragile when
the heat is on, Pinot relishes his fights with the big guns.
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Groupama-FDJ rider Thibaut Pinot of France before the start.
REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes
And when he wins, he usually wins big, having triumphed in stages in
all three grands tours and a 'Monument' classic, the Giro di
Lombardia in 2018.
This year's mountain-laden route appears tailor-made for the pure
climbers, with the only time trial being an uphill effort to La
Planche des Belles Filles, on roads Pinot knows well from his
training rides.
The 30-year-old geared up for the Tour with a solid showing at the
Route d'Occitanie and his form continued to improve at the Criterium
du Dauphine, where he looked poised to win but ultimately cracked
under the pressure of repeated attacks.
"I'm disappointed, that's the main feeling," he said after the
Dauphine, in which he finished second overall behind Colombia's Dani
Martinez, another who will stand in the way of his ambition to wear
the yellow jersey in Paris.
His legs, however, are good, he says.
If he is to succeed, Pinot will need his team mates at full gas,
especially David Gaudu who has been struggling for fitness in the
lead-up but who proved himself to be an invaluable asset in the
mountains last year.
(Reporting by Julien Pretot; Editing by Toby Chopra)
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