Julian Alaphilippe has ridden the individual time trial of his life to extend his lead at the Tour de France, the Deceuninck-Quick Step rider winning Stage 13 in Pau by 14 seconds from defending champion Geraint Thomas of Team Ineos ahead of tomorrow’s summit finish on the Col du Tourmalet.
It was an astonishing ride by Alaphilippe, who was the fastest man through each of the three intermediate time checks by a handful of seconds before storming up a 17 per cent ramp in the final kilometre to clinch a stage win that no-one predicted.
While many anticipated that the Frenchman would hold onto the overall lead today, expectations were that Thomas would take time from him. Instead, Alaphilippe extended his lead over the Team Ineos rider to 1 minute 26 seconds.
The outcome of the stage will see France dare to dream of a first home triumph in the race since Bernard Hinault’s victory in 1985, although there’s a lot of racing left, and leading a Grand Tour as it heads towards its third week is uncharted territory for him.
To draw a sporting analogy from the UK, it’s Tim Henman reaching the quarter finals of Wimbledon for the first time a couple of decades ago, with all the expectations of a nation on his shoulders.
By the time the top riders in the overall standings set off on the 27.2 kilometre course, Lotto-Soudal’s Thomas De Gendt was in the hot seat with a time of 35 minutes 36 seconds.
It would prove to be the third fastest time of the day, bettered only by Alaphilippe, who finished in 35 minutes dead, and Thomas, 14 seconds behind the stage winner.
The next four fastest riders were all GC men, including Jumbo-Visma’s Steven Kruijswijk, who leapfrogs Egan Bernal of Team Ineos into third place overall.
On a memorable day for Deceuninck-Quick Step, Enric Mas also moved above the Colombian, who drops to fifth place.
A reshuffling of the GC saw Mitchelton-Scott’s Adam Yates drop from seventh to tenth, with Dan Martin of UAE Team Emirates one place below him.
Not for the first time, the discipline proved to be the Achilles’ heel of one of the big French hopes, Romain Bardet of AG2R-La Mondiale, who shipped 2 minutes 26 seconds and is now almost 6 minutes off the lead.
Groupama-FDJ’s Thibaut Pinot, by contrast, finished 49 seconds behind Alaphilippe and moves up three places to lie tenth in the overall standings.
It was a day marred by crashes, one of which ended the race for Belgian national time trial champion Wout van Aert of Jumbo-Visma.
The 24-year-old, making his debut in the race and winner of Monday’s Stage 10 in Albi, collided with a crash barrier, and suffered a flesh wound to his thigh.
Stage winner and race leader Julian Alaphilippe
It’s incredible. I’m really happy. Without being pretentious, I knew I could do a good performance on such a course, I told my cousin Franck this morning that I’d do something good but I didn’t think I could win the stage, especially with such a big gap against Geraint Thomas.
The first part suited me but I surprised myself in the second part of the race. I pushed my limits. With the help of the public, I gave everything till the line. I heard that even in my team car they all cried.
Defending champion Geraint Thomas
It wasn’t too bad it just felt like I was just overheating a bit so I was trying to deal with that. It’s not an excuse it’s the same for everyone. It was okay – just in that last bit I didn’t really feel it.
It was controlled, but in the last 8km or so I felt like when I really wanted to step on it I didn’t quite have that last five per cent. It’s still a decent ride but you always pick it apart a bit.
[Alaphilippe] is obviously going really well. He’s certainly the favourite and the one to watch at the minute. There’s a long way to go and a lot of hard stages to come now.
Points classification leader, Peter Sagan
I was doing wheelies because some people from the public were asking me to put some. I guess everyone was happy about them.
Of course, Julian Alaphilippe can try and win the Tour de France. The race it’s only starting, but I for one am crossing fingers for him. He is surprising everybody and can continue to do so.
Enric Mas, who takes over the best young rider’s classification from Egan Bernal
I’m very happy because of my result today, and also because of Julian’s. I’m pretty happy about the white jersey: from now on, it will be a war between Egan Bernal and me for the white jersey.
At Deceuninck-Quick Step, we can play different cards from now on. It is a big advantage to have two guys in the top 5 of the GC. As for the yellow jersey, our aim is to defend it for as long as possible. I think Julian can keep the yellow jersey until Paris.
He has lost it once and taken it back. That shows how good he is on this Tour de France.
It is a dream come true to wear the white jersey on my first Tour de France. Making it to the top 10 in Paris is my goal. For now we are in a very good position and I’m very happy about our race.
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10 comments
If 'he' wins today, hope he remembers to fall over at the finish and pretend he was tired.
Bardet is SO poor at TT that he'll never be contender.
It would be a joy to see panache beat planning.
I too would dearly love to be able to finish my crap time trials with a bit 'Panache' instead of crumpling over the bars in agonising pain, and that's only over ten miles. No chance of me doing a 'Dettori' but then again I'm 81!
Mmmm, JA puts in a totally unexpected and blistering performance in a TT...and then hops off his bike like Frankie Detori and celebrates with a leap, other bonafide GC contenders trailing in the timings and finishing looking like men who had given their all. Reminds me of some equally great days in the past, which officially didn't happen now. Ho hum.
Yeah, it's much more believable when it's a couple of track pursuiters winning the tour. Or an asthmatic bloke who "couldn't scratch his arse" until he was 26 and then becomes the GT rider of a generation.
Pinot moved up three places from tenth to seventh.
I suspect Alaphilippe put in a balls-out effort because he thinks he'll need every second at the top of the Tourmalet to stay in yellow for one more day. Thomas looked more someone sticking to a plan calculated in one of David Brailsford's spreadsheets, to ensure victory nine days from now.
Wout van Aert's crash looked very bad when they were holding the advertising banners over him, as if to stop the helicopter cameras capturing a man's dying moments, but I guess it was just protection from the sun.
His shorts were virtually ripped off, so the banners were used to hide his modesty.
I would love to believe in that TT performance but when they skid to a stop, jump off and aren’t even out of breath it does make me suspicious especially if it was a balls out effort.
Good showing by TdG, isn't Alaphilippe making it all a bit exciting?