Step into a busy London street with Chris Froome in civvies, even with a photographer in tow, and chances are life will go on around the two-time Tour de France rider unperturbed. Not that he cares much. Fame and popularity are not high on his agenda. “That’s not what I’m about,” he’d told us earlier in the boutique hotel where he was staying. “It’s not about the recognition or the glory.” It sounds like a stock line from a world-class athlete but then there is nothing about his appearance to suggest the contrary: old-fashioned navy blazer over a green polo shirt, slim-fit black jeans and skateboarder’s trainers.
It’s the follow-up line, delivered with a passion that fans don’t readily associate with Froome the two-time Tour winner, that is striking.
“What really drives me is the actual performance. I’m driven. I’m driven to try and win as many Tour titles as I can throughout my career; to have the biggest impact on youngsters wanting to have a good role model. Ninety per cent of everything I do, the training, the mental focus, it’s geared towards trying to be the best athlete that I can be.”
With those words still resonating, there’s time to reflect on a successful year for Froome, even if it wasn’t quite of the same vintage success as 2013. All the pre-Tour talk was that he was no longer the same rider. His abandonment through injury at the 2014 Tour, Alberto Contador’s ability to contain him at the subsequent Vuelta, illness this spring and team insiders saying he simply wasn’t as punchy as 2013 all contributed to a general marking down of the Kenya-born Briton.
Then he confounded the consensus in June. He added another Dauphiné success to his palmarès and, of course, a month later triumphed at a Tour that was notable for the abundance and quality of his rivals. Not since the early 1990s had such a glittering array of riders been in contention for the yellow jersey. Arguably, the deciding factor wasn’t Froome but a team which squeezed the fight out of his opponents over three weeks. After a very strong opening week and a stinging attack on the first day in the mountains, Froome started cracking up towards the end as he battled illness and his rivals ratcheted up the pressure.
In victory, he enhanced his standing as the pre-eminent stage racer in cycling. Of the 27 stage races he started since the 2011 Vuelta, he’s abandoned four and finished in the top five of 18 of the rest. Ten of those were victories. Nibali, the best figure for comparison, has started 31 stage races, finished in the top five 12 times and won six of those.
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