Former Tour de France winner Chris Froome hailed Mark Cavendish’s comeback victory as “phenomenal” after the pair had raced Wednesday’s stage five 27.2km individual time-trial between Change and Laval.

A four-time champion before a serious accident in 2019, Froome said it was great to see fellow Briton Cavendish overcome his own health issues to win after a period in the wilderness.

Recognised as the Tour’s all-time-great sprinter, Cavendish claimed Tuesday’s flat stage five years after his previous win on the world’s greatest race to take his tally to a jaw-dropping 31 stage wins.

“It’s amazing to see Cav do that, everyone had written him off, so really it’s amazing for him to do that,” Froome said at Wednesday’s finish line.

Cavendish completed the cours in 23min 08sec, with Froome a little slower at 24min 04sec.

Froome is back on the Tour roster after a two-years gap himself.

“It was quiet something to see him prove people wrong,” he said.

“The Tour de France is where you measure yourself as a professional cyclist.

“So for Cav to have come back and win another stage of the Tour, and possibly go and win another one in the next few days is just phenomenal, absolutely phenomenal,” he added.

– ‘Stressful few days’ –

The Israel Start-Up nation rider Froome said he had enjoyed the time-trial, an excercise he once excelled at, but on Wednesday took a leisurely pace due to injures picked up on stage one for much of the technically challenging course.

“It was nice top open up and push it out in sections, but I only gave about 85 percent today, just to escape the time trap,” he said of the cut-off time for straggling riders who get thrown off the race if they go too slowly.

“Today was nice to be on my own after a few stressful days,” he said after he fell badly on Saturday’s stage.

“Looking around the peloton I can’t remember ever seeing so many injured riders, everyone’s covered in bandages.”

Asked if something could be changed to alleviate all the accidents, Froome said it was a difficult issue to resolve.

“Much more needs to be done in terms of approval of courses before they are allowed to go ahead,” he said.

“Some things are just obvious. You can see an accident coming before you get to it, everyone tries to get ahead before that point and that in itself can cause accidents.

Wednesday’s time-trial was considered critical to the eventual overall standings of this year’s Tour and it follows four days of explosive action.

The race has yet to arrive at the Alps or the Pyrenees before a transfer back to Paris for the final stage on the Champs-Elysees on July 18.

LAGA UN KOMENTARIO

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