Froome concedes ground to rivals at Valdelinares
“Eve🍰ry🦹 second here and there is going to count,” says Sky leader




Right up until two kilometres from the summit of Valdelinares, it seemed as though Team Sky’s normal programming had been resumed. A flotilla of men in black had dictated terms through the final two hours of stage 9 of the 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Vuelta a España, and in the dwindling red jersey group, the overall contenders seemed almost to be bracing themselves for the ferocity of 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Chris Froome’s inevitable attack.
Instead, however, it was 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Alberto Contador (Tinkoff-Saxo) who emerged from behind the heavy curtain of rain that wa🍨shed over the mountainside, responding to an attack from Dan Martin (Garmin-Shar💦p) and then bounding past him on the last steep ramps of the climb.
Nairo Quintana (Movistar) and Joaquim Rodriguez (Katusha) eventually thrashe꧑d their way up to Contador’s wheel, while Froome – not quite floundering, but not exactly treading waℱter either – reached the summit 23 seconds down on the trio.
As Froome warmed down outside his team bus after the st൩age, he managed to raise a half smile as a local fan posed for a picture in front of him, and by the tꦬime he spoke to a small group of reporters, he looked to put a positive slant on what was a trying day.
“It was really tough conditio🃏ns but I think we can take a lot of good away from that stage in terms of how we rode as a team,” Froome said. “They kept me at the front throughout the stage but in the final I didn’t have the legs to follow the top guys, Quintana, Contador aᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚnd Rodriguez when they went.”
Froome scaled the Vuelta’s first summit finish at La Zubia on Thursday at the same remarkable rate of knots as Contador and Alejandro Valverde (Movistar), suggesting that he had already brought himself back up to r🌞acing sharpness following his early abandon at the Tour de France. It was a surprise, therefore, to see the Briton o🧜n the back foot on the steadier slopes of Valdelinares.
“I think given where I’ve come from on the back of the Tour, on the back of the buil🌳d-up into this race, I’m really happy with how things have gone so fꦐar,” Froome said. “I can definitely feel I’m starting to pick up that race rhythm again back into my legs so I’m looking forward to the second half of this race.”
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Froome endured a difficult start to the Vuelta when his Sky team coughed up 27 seconds 🌠to Quintana and Movistar in the opening team time trial. Curiously, after clawing back much of that time during the first week, Froome reaches the first rest day in more or less the same situation – he lies 5th overall, 28 seconds down on the n🦹ew red jersey Quintana and 25 behind Contador.
“Obviously I’d prefer not to lose time but I’ll take time where I can get it as will any of the GC riders,” Froome said, a🌜cknowledging that Tuesday’s 36km time trial to Borja might provide him with a quick opportunity to respond. “It’s relatively short compared to time trials elsewhere but I enjoy time trialling and I’m hoping to make the most of it, for sure.”
At Valdelinares, howe💎ver, it was Contador who made the most of the terrain on offer. The Spaniard began the Vuelta claiming that he was a mere outsider in what is his first race afte🍎r fracturing his tibia at the Tour just over six weeks ago, but as of Sunday, it seems, his startling recovery is complete.
While 📖on the one hand, Froome said that his own lack of explosiveness in the finale was to be expected given his pre𒁏-Vuelta lay-off, he insisted that he was not surprised by the intensity of Contador’s acceleration.
“I think we’ve come to see that Contador’s going extremely well. He’s got over his injuries pretty quickly and he’s go༺ing really well, as is Nairo Quintana and Rodriguez, the usual guys we suspected for the general classification,” Froome s൩aid. “There’s a huge fight here, it’s going to a big race all the way to the end, hence every second here and there is going to count, I think.”

Barry Ryan was Head of Features at Cyclingnews. He has covered professional cycling since 2010, reporting from the Tour de France, Giro d’Italia and events from Argentina to Japa꧒n. His writiꩵng has appeared in The Independent, Procycling and Cycling Plus. He is the author of , published by Gill Books.