M
SM
Saturday, July 27
/esi/1339/6_A_17_365841_0/index.html?art_id=365841&ESI

Ewan wins stage 16 of Tour de France as Thomas survives crash scare

:Headline: Ewan wins stage 16 of Tour de France as Thomas survives crash scare:ID:365841: from db_amp
Geraint Thomas sustained minor cuts and grazes after a fall on the 16th stage.
PA | 3d

Caleb Ewan won stage 16 of the Tour de France as Geraint Thomas overcame a minor crash to retain second place overall.

Lotto-Soudal’s Ewan took his second stage victory in a sprint finish as he held off Deceuninck-Quick Step’s Elia Viviani and Jumbo-Visma’s Dylan Groenewegen at the end of the 177km stage which started and finished in Nimes.

Defending champion Thomas hit the deck with around 130km of the stage to go on the inside of a right-hand bend but was quickly back in the peloton after dropping back to the Ineos team car for a once over.

“I just took off an old scar so it was new skin bleeding,” Thomas said.

“I just had one hand on the bars and the gears jumped and jammed and I got thrown off my bike on a corner.

“I knew the race wasn’t on so I just got back into the group, it’s just frustrating. It was such a freak thing.”

Astana’s Jakob Fuglsang was not so lucky as his Tour was ended by a crash inside the last 30km, the Dane ultimately climbing into an ambulance and out of a race in which he had sat ninth overall.

They were rare moments of drama until the end of a stage which had been raced in soaring temperatures of around 40 degrees in the south of France.

After the stage, three-time former world champion Peter Sagan complained that it was too hot to race and suggested the Professional Cyclists Association, the CPA, should do more to protect riders.

“If it’s as hot as this in the mountains…” he said, imitating slitting his throat with his hand. “The CPA should do something.

“They should do something to protect us. That’s what we pay them for.”

A five-man breakaway was given little leeway though not reeled in until the final three kilometres as the sprint trains moved up.

Thomas crossed the line with a few bumps and grazes but is still second in the general classification, 95 seconds behind Deceuninck-Quick Step’s Julian Alaphilippe.

Though the Welshman is in pole position should Alaphilippe fall away as expected in the Alps, four riders are bunched within 39 seconds of him, with the Tour as wide open as it has been for many a year going into the final stages.

amp_article_365841 : Database Data restored...  : 
last updated article - 2019-07-23 16:40:05:
html db last update - 2019-07-27 10:06:42 :

ex - 7200 : read : read cache amp html
Share this article now:

Loading ...

Failed to load data.

Loading ...

Failed to load data.

Select and display your favourite team's news and scores in this panel

Subscribe to our Newsletter


Transfer Talk Daily
Match previews - twice weekly
Morning Briefing (7am UTC)
UC
Get the latest transfer news, match previews and news direct to your inbox!

Loading ...

Failed to load data.

Loading ...

Failed to load data.

Loading ...

Failed to load data.

Select and display your favourite team's news and scores in this panel
X

We value your privacy

A part of our GDPR compliance we need to ask for your consent. We and our partners use technology such as cookies on Sports Mole to personalise content and ads, provide social media features, and analyse our traffic. Click below to consent to the use of this technology on Sports Mole.