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Crackling before the Showdown

The Italian Matteo Trentin triumphs as a soloist on the 17. Stage. The favorites are gentle and have only one thing in mind: be fit for the Showdown in the Alps. Because the distances are small, the Tour exciting.

Matteo Trentin was able to throw as a first look at what awaits the riders on the Tour de France: The mountain giants of the French Alps, towers behind the Cap, the destination of the 17. Stage on. There managed the 29-year-Italians as a soloist at the top. He had dropped out of a breakaway group, and celebrated his first Tour stage victory. The second was with around a half a Minute behind Kasper Asgreen from Denmark, followed by the Belgian Olympic winner Greg Van Avermaet. The Lead in the standings to the wearer of the Yellow Jersey Julian Alaphilippe spared, and came up with twenty minutes behind the stage winner.

Attack after 15 kilometres: later, Trentin makes his Mitausreißer and celebrates the stage win

Decision-making in the Alps

This relaxed pace is not for you to blame. Because what is a multi-day ordeal for the favorites, which will ultimately decide this Tour will be looming behind the Cap on the horizon. On Thursday, the field takes the Queen stage in the attack. On the 208 kilometers from Embrun to Valloire equal to three Alpine passes in the way of the Col de Vars, the Col d’izoard (2360 m) and the Col de Galibier (2642 meters). On Friday, the Col de l’iseran (2770) and the objective arrival in Tignes (2113) follow. On Saturday, the stage culminates ends of the 33.4-kilometre-long final climb to Val Thorens (2365). “This is the Showdown,” said Emanuel Buchmann with a view on the penultimate Tour day. The voltage tapers to and for the 26-Year-old will turn out, whether he can actually keep in the podium close to. Weaknesses will not be forgiven. Buchmann: “If you have a break-in, you lose the right time.”

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With only 2:14 minutes behind in sixth place lying in self-Buchmann has a Chance at the overall victory. Before him names such as Thibaut Pinot (+1:50 minutes) or Geraint Thomas (+1:35 minutes) waiting for the Yellow Jersey of Alaphilippe. Rarely, the distances among the favorites were so late in the Tour, still so small. But that was exactly the calculus of route planners that have entered the Alpine stages as late as possible in the stage plan. From the high mountains of the drivers directly to the final in Paris.

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