Kwiatkowski and Quintana joust for white jersey at Tour de France
Contrasting styles i♒n young rider classification contest







In an echo of one the Giro d'Italia's most entertaining sub-plots, the battle for the white jersey at the 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Tour de France looks 🅠ﷺset to involve a Colombian and a Pole, with Michal Kwiatkowski (Omega Pharma - Quick-Step) and Nairo Quintana (Movistar) firmly in place atop the standings in the best young rider classification.
Quint꧑ana not under press🧸ure in Tour de France debut
Quintana🐻 kicks off m꧟ountain action in maiden Tour de France
Quintana: We ꧟showedಞ the world Sky also has weaknesses
ꦅVideo: Kwiatkowski fights back for third place on tough stage 9
Froome puts another down paym𝔉ent on Tour de France in time trial
Evaꦆns looking ahead after losing out to Froome in👍 Tour de France TT
In Italy in May, it was Quintana's fellow countryman Carlos Betancur (Ag2r-La Mondiale) who eventually won out, as his punchier climbing saw him edge a close ꦯcontest with Rafal Majka (Saxo-Tinkoff). The contrast in styles is less nuanced at the Tour and more of a confrontation between tw🉐o opposing schools, as the rouleur Kwiatkowski is pitched against the pure climber Quintana.
When Quintana danced away on the Porte de Pailhè💜;res on Saturday's opening mountain stage, it looked as if he was about to take a decisive hold of the white jersey. Kwiatkowski rode well to limit his losses, however, and he regained the lead with a fine fifth place finish in the 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:stage 11 time trial to Mont-Sa🐻int-Michel,ඣ 1:31 down on teammate Tony Martin.
"I think I did a pretty good TT and I'm happy with my improvement and my progression in the TT," Kwiatkowski said afterwards. "I pushed from the beginning and I was looking for mꦡy speed all the time. I was going 55kph a lot of the time, so it was a fast course."
That performance was enough to catapult Kwiatkowski to seventh place overall and also saw him leapfrog Quintana in the young rider classification after the Colombian finished 3:28 down on the stage. The gap between the two is no🧸w just 34 seconds. However, even with another time trial to come in the final week, Kwiatkowski was under no illusions about his chances of ꦰfending off Quintana's inevitable advance in the Alps.
"For sure, I should lose it in the last week because Quintana climbs better than me," said Kwiatowski, who downplayed his own prospects. "We will see. I don't have any pressure. I want to improve in the climbs but we'll just have to see how it goes in the third week. it w🔯ould be nice to stay with the best but it's going to be hard too𓃲."
Quintana was pleased simply to have what he called "probably the worst day of the Tour" behind him and did not seem unduly concerned at having yielded possession of the maillot blanc to Kwiatowski. "I lost the white jersey but I hope I can get iꦅt back in some mountain stage and keep it to the end," he said. "Kwiatkowski is going to be a tough opponent but there are substantial stages left that suit me well."
The latest race content, interviews, featꩲures, reviews and expert buying guides,🦋 direct to your inbox!
The Colombian has slipped to eighth in general classification, more tha𒉰n five minutes off the yellow jersey of Chris Froome and almost two off a podium place. "I didn't do a dream time trial but the result was still good, and I didn't lose too much time to the men around me on GC," he said. "The wind made the day a bit more complicated for me because it suited bigger riders who can produce more power."

Barry Ryan was Head of Features at Cyclingnews. He h🧸as 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 Indepꦿendent, Procycling and Cycling Plus. He is the author of , published by Gill Books.