Chris Froome on Friday produced one of the great performances of his career, attacking alone on a gravel road up a grueling climb to win the 19th stage of the Giro d’Italia and claim the overall leader’s pink jersey.
The four-time Tour de France champion launched his solo attack up the three-week race’s highest climb with 80km to go and rode clear amid banks of snow above the tree line.
Pedaling furiously, Froome continuously increased his advantage over two more Alpine ascents to finish three minutes ahead of his closest challenger.
Photo: AFP
The victory put Froome in position to win his third consecutive Grand Tour.
“I don’t think I’ve ever attacked 80km from the finish, riding on my own and going all the way to the finish,” Froome said. “I knew there was a long way to go, but to win this Giro d’Italia I had to do something extraordinary. I couldn’t wait for the last climb. I had to do something crazy.
“Colle delle Finestre was the perfect place to do it. Gravel roads remind me of Africa,” added Froome, who races for Britain with Team Sky, but was born and raised in Kenya.
Froome leads defending champion Tom Dumoulin of the Netherlands by 40 seconds in the overall standings. Frenchman Thibaut Pinot is third overall, 4 minutes, 17 seconds behind.
There was one more mountainous stage yesterday, a 214km leg from Susa to Cervinia, before today’s mostly ceremonial finish in Rome.
Froome had started the day fourth overall, more than three minutes behind previous leader Simon Yates.
Yates fell far behind up the grueling climb on Colle delle Finestre, as Froome launched his audacious attack and finished nearly 40 minutes behind.
It was Yates’ 13th day wearing the pink jersey.
Richard Carapaz of Ecuador crossed second in the stage, exactly three minutes behind, and French challenger Thibaut Pinot finished third, 3 minutes, 7 seconds back.
Froome arrived at the Giro with big hopes, but had not really been a threat after crashing in training before the opening time trial, losing time in a split on the fourth stage and injuring himself again in a second crash four days later.
“It was a very, very tough start for me after the fall, but I kept up my morale for the finish and I knew that if I did everything right the time to attack would come. That moment came today,” Froome said.
Only two riders have ever won three or more consecutive Grand Tours. Merckx won four straight between 1972 and 1973, and Hinault took three in a row in 1982 and 1983.
However, Froome is racing under the cloud of a potential ban, after a urine sample he provided at the Spanish Vuelta in September last year showed a concentration of the asthma drug salbutamol that was twice the permitted level. It remains unclear when the International Cycling Union is to rule on the case.
Froome denies any wrongdoing.
The 185km leg from Venaria Reale to Bardonecchia in the Piedmont region was considered the race’s toughest.
Passing through the region where the 2006 Turin Olympics were held, the route contained more than 4km of climbing and traversed the highest point of the race — the Cima Coppi (Coppi peak) — at an altitude of 2,178m.
Froome attacked shortly after the road turned to gravel halfway up the Finestre.
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