Thomas plays down abuse claims after liquid thrown at Froome

In 2015, a fan had called Froome a “doper” as he threw a cup of urine at his face.

Published : Jul 22, 2018 00:19 IST , France

Geraint Thomas retained the yellow jersey after Stage 14.
Geraint Thomas retained the yellow jersey after Stage 14.
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Geraint Thomas retained the yellow jersey after Stage 14.

Yellow jersey holder Geraint Thomas brushed off suggestions that Chris Froome and he were targeted by fans on the 14th stage day of Tour de France.

Welshman Thomas, a former Olympic track cycling champion, suffered the indignity of being booed off the podium when he won the second of back-to-back stages in the high Alps to take his lead over four-time champion and teammate Froome to 1min 39secs.

On the second of those days, Froome was spat at and was lucky not to crash after one fan slapped him heavily on the back as he raced the 13.8km ascent to the summit.

Race officials have since called on fans to “respect the riders” in the peloton.

But Team Sky 's domination, and controversy involving the British team in the lead-up to the Tour, has led to a backlash.

Read: Fraile wins Stage 14

As Thomas and Froome raced to the finish line in Mende, 18 minutes behind Spanish stage winner Omar Fraile, insults - and liquid from a bottle or cup - were thrown in Froome's direction.

The scene could have been reminiscent of 2015, when a fan called Froome a “doper” as he threw a cup of urine in his face.

'Not surprised'

But Thomas played the incident down. “I don't actually recall it, but I'm not surprised,” he said. “We've had a bit of that (abuse) ... but it's always been water. I wouldn't know what it was.”

Sky has been the subject of potentially damaging incidents in the past, and suspicion was raised in the wake of Bradley Wiggins' 2012 victory after medical records went missing or were never kept.

Froome, who won the Tour in 2013 and 2015-2017, was only cleared to participate in this edition days before the start by the International Cycling Union (UCI).

The Kenyan-born Briton was in the anti-doping crosshairs after his “adverse, analytical finding” for the asthma drug salbutamol on his way to victory in the Tour of Spain last year.

Froome was found to have double the permitted amount of the drug in his body, but, prior to the UCI ruling, Sky have always maintained Froome is “innocent”.

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