Sunday, 3 September 2017

Nibali: When Froome is isolated, 'it gets much more difficult for him'

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Vincenzo Nibali (Bahrain-Merida) continued to pile the pressure on Vuelta a España leader Chris Froome on Saturday's ascent of La Pandera, but for the Sicilian the key to cracking the Briton is not in beating or testing Froome one-to-one. Rather, it's all about beating Froome's teammates.

Nibali responded to an attack by Esteban Chaves (Orica-Scott) and Alberto Contador (Trek-Segafredo) that allowed the Italian, currently second overall, briefly to move ahead of Froome on the final climb of stage 14 by some 10 seconds. However, rather than crack, Froome limited the gaps to around 40 or 50 metres before closing that ephemeral advantage down. When Froome was joined by teammate Wout Poels, it looked as if Sky had comfortably contained Nibali and Contador's brief rebellion against the British team's domination.

However, Nibali had another card to play in the final kilometre when Miguel Angel Lopez (Astana) bounded away, an acceleration that left Froome minus Poels, again, and lacking team support. Nibali proved to be the fastest in a group of four favourites, crossing the line in third place ahead of Froome and snatching the last time bonus on offer on the stage.

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Interestingly, Nibali's snap analysis to reporters on the Pandera finish line focused on strategies for beating Froome, rather than looking at his own performance. The 2010 Vuelta winner praised Team Sky for their massive collective strength, something TV viewers could easily appreciate when Sky had no less than six support riders for Froome still in the front group of 19 as they came onto the last two climbs of the day. Perhaps as a result of that evident strength in depth of Sky's, Nibali said he was convinced that the Briton could only become very vulnerable in the Vuelta once that support was stripped away.

"He had help [because] he has a great team and he is able to control different scenarios when they happen, that's Froome's strong point," Nibali argued.

"It's clear, though, that when his teammates become a bit more tired and he's isolated, then it gets much more difficult for him.

You can read more at Cyclingnews.com



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