Romain Bardet has raced enough Tours de France to know that the climbs unveiled at the presentation in October aren’t necessarily the ones faced the following July. These mountains may be as old as time, but they change according to the circumstances.
In 2017, Bardet scaled the Mur de Péguère frustrated by the heavy marking and lack of collaboration in the yellow jersey group, but still resolutely in the hunt for final overall victory at the Tour de France. On Tuesday, the Team DSM rider was the first of the GC men to lose contact with the groupe maillot jaune on an afternoon of sweltering heat, and by the time he forlornly crested the summit, his podium challenge was already over.
Bardet was shepherded by teammates Chris Hamilton and Andreas Leknessund over the climb and down the sinuous descent into Foix, where his deficit on Jonas Vingegaard, Tadej Pogacar et al stretched beyond three-and-a-half minutes. In the overall standings, he slips from fourth to ninth. He lies 6:37 off Vingegaard’s yellow jersey and just under four minutes off a podium spot.
“I was feeble, I was struggling to accelerate, I had headaches. It was really one of the worst days I’ve known in some time,” Bardet said after he reached Foix. “It was a calvaire, an ordeal.
“I have to say a big chapeau to my teammates, who were there from the start to the end, because without them, I wouldn’t have finished the stage. I don’t know where that came from. I had chills… It was really a terrible day.”
Earlier in this Tour, Geraint Thomas suggested that Bardet was in something approaching the form of his life. The 31-year-old had certainly given that impression at May’s Giro d’Italia, where he appeared among the strongest in the race on the Blockhaus on stage 9.
“After that day, we thought I could win the Giro,” Bardet told Pédale magazine just before the Tour. Maddeningly, illness cut Bardet’s challenge short a few days later.
This Tour offered Bardet a chance to try again. He began the race ostensibly targeting stage victories, but his consistent climbing in the Alps quickly pushed him into the reckoning for a podium finish. He began the Tour’s third week just 18 seconds behind the third-placed Thomas, but his hopes of a third podium finish in Paris effectively ended on the upper reaches of Mur de Péguère, when the group of favourites began to fragment.
The groupe maillot jaune had already been stretched atop the preceding Port de Lers, when Pogacar…
Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at CyclingNews RSS Feed…