At times, Richie Porte's Tour de France has been a frustrating and disappointing affair. On other ocassions, it has given him hope and seen him climbing with the best in the world. It closed with mixed emotions as the BMC rider rolled into Morzine following the Tour's final mountain stage 20 to seal his fifth place in the overall classification.
Less than a minute from the podium, there surely must be a feeling for Porte that it could have been so much more. Nevertheless, he comes away with his best-ever Tour de France performance and first Grand Tour top 10 since the 2007 Giro d'Italia.
"I'm happy but it's a bit bittersweet. It felt like I was throwing time away, even yesterday. I'll move on and now I've got the Olympics to look forward to. Hopefully, I'll take some good form out of this race and I'll have a good go there," Porte said, standing just outside the door to his team bus, his lips tinged with a hint of blue from the cold weather conditions. "It does. A few times I had a little bit of bad luck but you know, it's exciting for next year and hopefully I'll be back to give it another crack and see what I can do."
- Froome set to win 2016 Tour de France ahead of procession to Paris
- Tour de France: Stage 20 finish line quotes
- Tour de France stage 20 highlights - Video
The Australian certainly got his fair share of bad luck at this year's Tour de France with a poorly-timed puncture losing him almost two minutes on the second stage and a crash with a motorbike on Mont Ventoux. He fought back and chipped away at the deficit with an aggressive ride in the Pyrenees and Alps but had one last hurdle thrown in his way on the penultimate mountain stage.
A crash on the rain-soaked Alpine roads en-route to Mont Blanc, effectively ended his hopes of stepping onto the podium. There was still a slim chance that he could have moved up the overall classification but the weather conditions, combined with the incessant pace set by Team Sky made it all but impossible to have a go.
Tour de France stage 20 highlights video
You can read more at Cyclingnews.com
via Cyclingnews Latest News http://ift.tt/2a6vKzI
No comments:
Post a Comment