After the furore that surrounded him at this year’s Tour de France, Chris Froome says that he refused to apply for a TUE for an infection he picked up in the latter part of the race. Froome and his teammates endured an often hostile reaction from some members of the public during this year’s Tour. Several of them were spat at, while Froome also claimed that one fan even threw urine at him.
Froome fell ill after stage 17 of this year’s Tour but, despite the insistence of the team, he decided to not to look for stronger medication to alleviate the symptoms.
“After everything we had been through in this year’s Tour, especially the hostility from different people along the way, it just felt that if we go down this route, we are opening the door for a whole new wave of criticism and aggression. It would have been within the rules, but I didn’t want it to be the Tour de France that was won because he took this medication in the last week,” Froome told the Sunday Times.
In June 2014, French newspaper Le Journal du Dimanche reported that Froome had a TUE application for corticosteroid prednisolone fast-tracked during his race winning performance at the Tour de Romandie. The UCI responded that there was nothing untoward with the application process, but the issue dominated the press in the run-up to the 2014 Tour de France.
Froome was well his way to winning his second Tour de France title when he fell ill. The Team Sky rider went into the final week with a 3:10 lead over second place Nairo Quintana (Movistar). That would be reduced to just over a minute by the time they reached Paris at the end of the week. He lost most time on the final mountain stage to Alpe d’Huez and said afterwards that he was close to cracking.
Unwilling to show any signs of weakness, Froome resorted to holding his breath so as not to cough in front of his rivals. It wasn’t until one keen-eared journalist noticed a change in Froome’s voice following the penultimate stage that he admitted he had been ill throughout closing stages.
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