Froome wins Criterium du Dauphine

Team Sky’s Chris Froome establishes himself as Tour de France favourite as teammate Richie Porte finishes second.

Alessandro De Marchi
The final stage was won by Italy's Alessandro De Marchi after a 24-man breakaway [AFP]

British rider Chris Froome reinforced his status as favourite for this year’s Tour de France on Sunday when he won the testing warm-up race, the Criterium du Dauphine.

The 28-year-old, second behind Team Sky team-mate Bradley Wiggins in last year’s Tour de France, claimed victory after Italian Alessandro de Marchi won the 155.5km eighth and final stage from Sisteron to Risoul.

Froome, Kenyan-born and brought up in South Africa but who has ridden with a British licence since 2008, was followed in the overall standings by Sky team-mate Richie Porte of Australia, who finished 58sec in arrears.

Froome, who was 36th when he represented Kenya at the 2006 road race world championships, said he would have liked to help Porte win the stage.

“It would have been great to win the stage but we have already won two this week. It just proved impossible to reel in De Marchi,” he said.

Froome’s victory was the third successive British win in the race, Wiggins – who is not defending his Tour de France crown this year – having won it in the past two years.

Froome, who had already been designated as Sky’s leader for this year’s Tour de France before Wiggins announced he was not going to compete because of injury, had effectively clinched victory in the Criterium with his victory in the first mountain stage on Thursday.

Final push

Sunday’s stage saw five riders approach the final climb with a lead of more than three minutes and it was de Marchi who was to prove the strongest as he broke free of Belgian Tim Wellens in the final five kilometres.

The 27-year-old Italian came home 24sec ahead of Froome and American Andrew Talansky.

“It is the first time that I have won since I turned professional,” said de Marchi, who added he expected to help out team leader Peter Sagan in the Tour de France.

“I have been waiting a long time for it, and I am happy that the dream has come true. I have often tried my luck in escaping but I have never succeeded until today.”

Spain’s two-time Tour de France champion Alberto Contador had a miserable stage, falling on the descent from the col de Vars before sacrificing his chances for a consolation stage win by waiting for Australian team-mate Michael Rogers, who was third overall going into Sunday’s final stage, when he got into difficulty on the final climb.

Dreadful weather had prompted several retirements during the stage.

Germany’s time-trial world champion Tony Martin didn’t even start the 155.5km stage from Sisteron to Risoul as he had a sore throat.

Others, though, did start but found the going too tough to see the race through to the finish including French champion Nacer Bouhanni and compatriots Thomas Voeckler, Pierre Rolland and Sylvain Chavanel.

Rolland, eighth in last year’s Tour de France, said he had felt a twinge in his Achilles tendon on Saturday evening after the seventh stage.

“We decided with the staff that I would give it a go today but that at the slightest hint of pain I should take no risks with just three weeks to the start of the Tour,” he said.

“I am very disappointed and a little and a little crestfallen. I hope that a few days of rest will suffice for me to recover,” added the 26-year-old specialist climber.

Others to call it a day were Belgian Thomas de Gendt, Norway’s 2010 world road race champion Thor Hushovd and Spaniard David Lopez.

Froome was oblivious to their difficulties as he rode serenely on to record his ninth win of the season, including the Tour of Romandie and the Criterium International.

His only significant defeat came in March in the Tirreno-Adriatico at the hands of Italian ace Vincenzo Nibali, who went on to win the Giro d’Italia.

Source: AFP