Tuesday 16 July 2019

Philippa York analysis: Ineos solidify Tour de France position as rivals toil

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After nine days of sparring, the 10th day at the Tour de France provided the first real general classification body blows. Until the final run towards Albi the race had been about fine margins, and while there were time gaps in the team time trial, the finish to La Planche des Belle Filles and on stage 8 when Thibaut Pinot soared, stage 10 felt far more significant. Rather than form or skill, it was concentration that led the likes of Pinot (Groupama-FDJ), Rigoberto Urán (EF Education First) and Richie Porte (Trek-Segafredo) to surrender almost two minutes on a nominal sprint stage.

Once again, Julian Alaphilippe was in the thick of the action with his Deceuninck-QuickStep team joining forces with Team Ineos just as the crosswinds picked up. Alaphilippe, who had formed a key alliance with Pinot on stage 8, switched from savior to executioner in the blink of an eye. Alliances in cycling, and especially at the Tour de France don’t tend to last long, so when QuickStep put the hammer down and Alaphilippe pulled through to inflict as much damage as possible – both for the stage win and his GC prospects – there would have been no room for sentimentality. In fact, when Pinot’s name crackled through the radio I’m sure Alaphilippe and his crew would have pushed even harder. At least they tried to be merciful by putting Pinot out of his misery as quickly as possible.

After the stage, we saw a few teams that had lost time try and put a positive spin on the situation, but when you lose 1:40 on a day in which you should have ticked off without hardship, there's little room for sympathy and comfort. Some of the riders who lost time like Urán, Porte and Pinot will hold up their road books and point to the bountiful number of mountain stages still to come, but before they reach those lands they still have the time trial to contend with on stage 13.

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To those that want to be brutally honest, the stage 13 individual test around Pau, with it’s 27.2-kilometre rolling terrain, could mean losing between one and two more minutes to the defending champion Geraint Thomas. Suddenly, those gaps could add up to between three or four minutes lost before the race reaches the Pyrenees. That’s not a game-over scenario by any means – a strong climber can chip away at that over a couple of mountains if the race comes down to a mano-a-mano fight, but it’s not as simple as that. It’s not just Thomas that’s in a position of authority, but his entire Team Ineos armada after they sailed to dominance on stage 10 and outmanouevred so many of their rivals.

Movistar still have Nairo Quintana in the game, and Michelton-Scott have Adam Yates, but the others are in a difficult place. Mikel Landa might have been an option for the Spanish team, but he's found himself in the position he always seems to be in when the important part of a grand tour comes along, namely chasing the race and trying to recover time he lost earlier.

What no-one will understand is the Movistar decision to send riders back to limit his loses when he was forced off the road, leaving Quintana in a precarious position with just Alejandro Valverde alongside him if anything happened. That was bizarre, and said a lot about their faith in the Colombian.

You can read more at Cyclingnews.com



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