Tour de France: Tom Dumoulin brings the fight to Sky at La Rosiere
'Today I had a good day, and maybe I’ll pay for it tomorrow𓄧'




The sinuous descent of the Cormet de Roseland is not for the faint of heart. Johan Bruyneel – still a few years away from infamy – famously rode off the side of the mountain and into a ravine when the 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Tour de France passe🃏d this way en route to Les Arcs in 1996, on a day that heralded the end of Miguel Indurain's imperial phase.
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168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Tom Dumoulin, the man most likely to put a halt to the current dominance of Team Sky and Chris Froome, went on the offensive and forged clear of the group of favourites in the company of his Sunweb teammate Søren Kragh Andersen on the dropꦬ off the Cormet de Roseland 𒈔on Wednesday.
Moments earlier, Mathias Frank 🙈(AG2R La Mondiale) had echoed Bruyneel by riding off the road, but the Sunweb duo were🤡 either unaware or unperturbed as they built up a lead of half a minute over Froome, Geraint Thomas et al. The move, Dumoulin explained afterwards, was conceived on the hoof.
"Improvised. Intuition," Dumoulin smiled a💦fter he had composed himself past the finish line. "Søren Kragh Andersen, we had him in the break and he’s a madman in the downhills, so I tol♈d him to go in front and take it fast, but not risky."
Amid the tumult of an Alpine descent, instructions are open to interpreಌtation. Andersen seemingly felt Dumoulin's orders were delivered with the urgency of Bob Dylan growling at his band at the Manchester Free Trade Hall in 1966: "Play it fucking loud."ꦰ He duly swooped through the descents and they hit the base of the final climb to La Rosière with a buffer of 34 seconds over the Sky-controlled group of favourites.
"Suddenly we had a gap," Dumoulin said. "He did such an amazing job, I think. The whole team was amazing today. I had a lot of guys with me. Especially compared to yesterday when we were sligh⭕tly disappointed. Today they were amꦍazing."
Sky's lone challenger
Dumoulin's sense of adventure would not be fully rewarded, however, as Geraint Thomas (Team Sky) caught him and later dropped him to claim stage honours atop La Rosière. The Dutchman had to settle for second place, 20 seconds down alongside Froome. In the overa♈ll standings, he is now third overall, 1:44 behind the new yellow jersey Thomas and still 19 seconds do☂wn on Froome.
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Team Sky may give the disquieting impress𒈔ion of being in a race of their own at this Tour, but Dumoulin nonetheless made a spirited attempt to disrupt their preeminence on the 17km haul to the finish at La Rosière. On the lower slopes, he bridged up to previous escapee Alejandro Valverde (Movistar), before soloing away from the Spaniard and beginning to pick off the remnants of the day's early break.
As Dumoulin pedalled smoothly up the mountainside, never conced꧑ing an inch of his lead on the group of favourite, it looked a performance to match his defence of the maglia rosa on the slopes of the Stelvio at last year’s Giro d'Italia.
"I learned to ski in this village when I was a little kid. My uncle rented a big house here and we were there with the whole family and he taught me to ski," Dumoulin said. "This sprin𒁏g, he passed away, just two weeks after my aunt also passed away, so my dad lost his sister and his brother within two weeks. Today I really wanted to perform well for them. I hope I did them proud. It was really special for me to finish in this place."
With a little over 5km remaining, Dumoulin still had his initial advantage of half a minute on the group of favourites, but that lead suddenly crumbled when Thomas accelerated viciously and bridged across the gap with startling facility. Despite Thomas' presence at his shoulder, Dumoulin continued at his previous tempo o💛n the approach to the summit, only for the Welshman to jump past him ahead of the flamme rouge – just as Froome was about to make the juncture.
"Thomas was able manage🍸 his energy a bit better," Dumoulin said. "I faded a little bit in the last few kilometres, but I don't think that's any shame. I'm satisfied."
On a day that saw Nairo Quintana, Romain Bardet and Vincen🥂zo Nibali all underwhelm, Dumoulin has positioned himself as the man most likely to prevent Team Sky from claiming a sixth Tour in seven years. Suffice to say, he will not want for encouragement when he rides through Dutch corner en route to Alpe d'Huez on Thursday.
"I'll just try to do my best every day," Dumoulin said. "Today I had a good day and ma💞ybe I'll pay for it tomorrow. But at least I have today, which I'm very happy with."

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