Froome emerges "relatively unscathed" from Vuelta a España crash
Sky rider gains🍎 two seconds on rivals in Alcaudete
168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Chris Froome's sole exchange with reporters in Alcaudete after stage 7 of the168澳洲5最新开奖结果: Vuelta a España was short and to🍎 the point. "I'm okay," he said as he was guided by his soigneur through t✤he throng at the finish line, and those words had already been borne out by his actions in the closing metres.
Froome: Mentally I feel a lot more re💜laxed than at the Tour de France
Fr🦹oome is a꧒ctually enjoying his racing, says Brailsford
Froome: La Zubia is the first big test a𓆉t the Vuelta a España
Froome pleased with sensations on Vuelta a Espa&ntildജe;a’s first summit finish
Vuelta a Espa&nti♈lde;a: Brailsford believes Froome can fight for the win
Froome's day had begun w♛ith a familiar sense of foreboding when he crashed just 25 kilometres into the stage, but it ended with an act of defiance, as he picked up a brace of seconds on his overall rivals by following Philippe Gilbert and Dan Martin's accele🤡rations on the final rise to the line.
The168澳洲5最新开奖结果: Team Sky leader remains in fourth place overall, now 20 seconds down on Alejandro Valverde (Movistar), but the psychological value of those two seconds gained far outweighs their material worth.
Immediately after the fall, Froome was left with a gap o𒉰f a minute to make up on a peloton led by the Movistar andও Tinkoff-Saxo teams, and even though he safely rejoined the pack shortly afterwards, he was carrying cuts to his right elbow, hip and knee.
Froome's lengthy trip back to the race doctor's car for treatment to his injuries conjured𒉰 up memories of his premature abandon at this year's Tour de France, but the air of déjà vu was dissipated when Sky's men in black hit the head of the peloton in the closing kilometres to position him for the finale.
After crossing the line in𝔍 7th place on the stage, Froome made his way to a tent beside the podium area for an on-the-hoof assessment of his injuries before he pedalled back down the finishing straight to the Team Sky bus. On the finish line, meanwhile, teammate Mikel Nieve offered greater detail on the backgro♋und to Froome's latest crash.
The accident took place before live television picturꦚes began, and a degree of confusion stemmed from race ꦗradio's account of the incident, which seemed to suggest that the Movistar and Tinkoff-Saxo teams had upped the pace after the accident.
Nieve, however, ex꧑plained that both teams were already at the head of the bunch before Froome crashed, as Nairo Quintana (Movistar) was attempting to infiltrate the day's early break ahead of the first climb, the Alto de Illora.
The latest race content, 🐲interviews, features, reviews and expert buying guides, direct to your inbox!
"The speed was high and the peloton was already quite stretched out. We were closing the gaps when two or three riders crashed in front of us, and Chris went down," Nieve said. "We had to work hard🐲 to get Chri🥂s back on but I think he's okay now."
Briton relatively unscathed
An hour after the stage, Sky published Froome's own take on the afternoon's racing on the team website. He confirmed that he had 🌊not sustained any significant injuries in the crash although he acknowledged that his repeated ill for𒅌tune was a concern.
Froome's spate of crashes began at th🅺e Critérium du Dauphiné in June, and he fell three times at the Tour prior to abandoning. His Vuelta, meanwhile, was preceded by a crash while training for the opening team time trial in Jerez de la Frontera.
"I'm feeling okay but you definitely get the feeling that when bad luck comes it comes more than once," Froome said. "But all things considered I'm feeling all ri🎀ght and I think I got off 🐭relatively unscathed.
"When the crash happened, a Gian🌄t-Shimano rider went down in front of me just to my left♎. I swerved to try and avoid that and went down. Then the guys paced me back. It took us a good 15 kilometres before we got back into the peloton."
Froome's two-second gain at Alcaudete will not necessarily prove decisive come the final reckoning in G🥂alicia, but it seemed a welcome boost to morale. What is more, after losing 27 seconds to Quintana on the opening night, Froome is now just five seconds down on the pre-race💟 favourite after a week of racing.
"I'll definitely take that after a stage like today," Froome said of his final acceleration. "At the end🧔 of the race you might need all the seconds you can to defend your place. I'll keep chipping away and get closer to the time trial."

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 Japan. His writing has appeared in The Independent, Procycling and Cycling Plus. He is the author of , published by Gill Books.