Chris Froome to skip Giro d’Italia, targets fifth Tour de France crown

Chris Froome, the British cyclist, will forego defending his Giro d’Italia title, Team Sky has announced.

Published : Jan 01, 2019 18:05 IST , London

Chris Froome says age had been a factor in what had been a "difficult decision." Photo: AFP
Chris Froome says age had been a factor in what had been a "difficult decision." Photo: AFP
lightbox-info

Chris Froome says age had been a factor in what had been a "difficult decision." Photo: AFP

British cyclist Chris Froome will focus on becoming only the fifth rider to win five Tour de France crowns this year and forego defending his Giro d’Italia title, Team Sky announced on Tuesday.

The 33-year-old Kenyan-born cyclist will aim to dethrone his Team Sky team-mate Geraint Thomas, who will also target the sport’s showpiece event. If successful, Froome would join Spaniard Miguel Indurain, French duo Jacques Anquetil and Bernard Hinault — whose overall victory in 1985 is the last time a Frenchman won — and Belgium's Eddie Merckx as five-time winners.

American Lance Armstrong finished first seven times, but was stripped of his victories for doping.

Read | Simon Yates to return to Giro D'Italia by 2019

The highly-regarded 21-year-old Colombian Egan Bernal will lead Team Sky’s challenge for the Giro and along with Froome and Thomas hope to deliver a fairytale end to British media company Sky’s nine-year backing.

Froome, who in 2017 achieved the Tour and Vuelta double, said age had been a factor in what had been a “difficult decision.”

‘Amazing memories’

“I’ve got some amazing memories from last year, but I think, with the Tour de France as my main objective, it’s probably better that I skip the Giro d’Italia in 2019,” the 33-year-old said in a team statement. “I'm getting to the point in my career now where I’m starting to think about what kind of legacy I want to leave behind and if I am able to win the Tour de France for a fifth time and join that very elite group of bike riders — only four other people have ever done that — it would just be incredible.”

giro-ditaliajpg
The Giro D'Italia runs from May 11 to June 12, 2019. Representative Image (of trophy): AP
 

Thomas, 32, said he might have focussed on the Giro/Vuelta double had he not been defending his Tour crown. “Having won the Tour, I’ll have the No. 1 on my back and it would be sad not to go back and not to go back at 100 per cent as well,” said Thomas, who will also compete in the Road World Championships in Yorkshire, England, in September.

Bernal, who showed his promise last year in winning the Tour of California and his home tour, said Italy was like a second home to him. “I lived in Italy for three years, so I have a lot of friends there and I really like the Italian fans. I know the roads, I really like the Giro, and I want to do a good race there,” he said.

Bernal will begin his campaign defending his Tour Colombia title which gets underway in Medellin on February 12 and ends in nearby Alto de las Palmas on February 17. Froome will be riding alongside Bernal. “It will be the first race with Froomey there so we want to do it well!” the Colombian said.

The Giro — the first of the year’s three Grand Tours — runs from 11 May to 2 June, and the Tour from 6-28 July.

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment