Wiggins triumphs for Britain in Tour de France

AFP
Bradley Wiggins finished the 3,479km Tour de France with a 3min 21sec lead over British team-mate Chris Froome.

PARIS (AFP) –

Bradley Wiggins, in tthe yellow jersey, leads the peloton towards the finishing line of Tour de France at the Champs Elysees in Paris. Wiggins was crowned Britain’s first Tour de France champion on Sunday after safely negotiating the 20th and final stage of the race, won by Sky team-mate Mark Cavendish.

Bradley Wiggins was crowned Britain’s first Tour de France champion on Sunday after safely negotiating the 20th and final stage of the race, won by Sky team-mate Mark Cavendish.

Wiggins, who virtually sealed victory when he won his second time-trial of the three-week epic on Saturday, finished the 3,479km race with a 3min 21sec lead over British team-mate Chris Froome.

Cavendish won for the fourth consecutive year on the Champs-Elysees, taking his tally of stage wins from this year’s race to three and to 23 overall.

An emotional Wiggins hailed his triumph a dream come true after sealing victory in Saturday’s penultimate stage time-trial.

The 32-year-old triple Olympic track cycling champion started Sunday’s final stage to Paris with a 3min 21sec lead over fellow Briton and Sky teammate Chris Froome, with Italian Vincenzo Nibali of Liquigas third overall at 6:19.

The 120km final stage got underway in Rambouillet, 30km west of Paris at 2pm local time (12:00 GMT).

A tradition is for Wiggins, as race leader, to be served champagne by his team early on, with the sprinters arriving on the Champs Elysees at around 4pm.

The Tour de France will finish with eight laps of the Champs Elysee in Paris

Bradley Wiggins competes in Saturday’s Tour de France time-trial. The 32-year-old triple Olympic track cycling champion started Sunday’s final stage to Paris with a 3min 21sec lead over fellow Briton and Sky teammate Chris Froome, with Italian Vincenzo Nibali of Liquigas third overall at 6:19.

The riders did eight laps of the Champs Elysees circuit before crossing the finish line.

“It’s a dream come true, but I’ve been working to win this for the past five years. The job is done, almost,” said Wiggins.

In a campaign that was reminiscent of his childhood hero, Spanish legend Miguel Indurain, Wiggins sealed final victory thanks in large part to two time trial wins, with Team Sky providing crucial support in the mountain stages in between.

“It’s what I’ve been aspiring to do for the past few years, and even since I was a child, when I was 12 years old I said I wanted to win the Tour de France,” said Wiggins.

“No one really imagines, at that age, that it’s possible. Here I am 20 odd years on and it’s a reality now.”

A year after crashing out of the race with a broken collarbone and three years after underlining his yellow jersey credentials with a fourth place finish, Wiggins was finding it hard to come to terms with his achievement.

Chris Froome is set to take overall second place in the Tour de France

Team-mate and fellow Briton Chris Froome (foreground) leads Bradley Wiggins across the finish line at the end of Tour de France’s seventeenth stage this week. Wiggins held an overall lead of 2:05 on Froome before Sunday’s final leg.

Going into the final 53.5 km race against the clock between Bonneval and Chartres on Saturday, Wiggins held a lead of 2:05 on Froome, the man who helped pace him up the latter stages of the race’s climbs.

Froome, who finished second on the first time trial at 35secs behind Wiggins, this time finished second at 1min 16sec.

“I’m very happy. Our objective was to come here and win the Tour with Bradley, and that’s what we have done,” said Froome, who outshone Wiggins on several of the race’s tough climbs.

“For me to come second is a big bonus.”

After his injury setback on stage seven last year, Wiggins came into the June 30-July 22 epic determined to make amends.

Although he only took 10secs off defending champion Cadel Evans in the opening prologue won by Swiss Fabian Cancellara, he took 1:43 off the Australian in the stage nine time trial.

When it came to the mountain stages where rivals such as Evans and Nibali were hoping to use their attacking capabilities to make the difference, Sky simply proved too strong.

They came to the Tour with a team of climbers who had trained together at high altitude and knew, thanks to experience and a methodical approach that has seen them exploiting the “marginal gains” that attacks would not get far.

It led to a controlled and at times subdued race that probably did little to attract new fans, but Wiggins believes it showed the sport is far cleaner than it used to be.

On the race, Sky’s professionalism was evident to every other team.

Frenchman Thomas Voeckler, who finished fourth overall riding with his modest Europcar team, said: “They designed their team around the demands of the race route.

“They’ve got a really big annual budget which is more than triple ours,” said Voeckler, who this year won two stages and the King of the Mountains polka dot jersey.

“Some people might say their victory was without style and panache but you can’t argue with the fact they’ve finished first and second. Hats off to them.”

Wiggins admitted he came back doubly determined this year.

“I think you need those disappointments to make you stronger,” he said. “2010 was a disastrous Tour really in every way, in the way I handled myself and everything. It’s those things that make you or break you.

“Then crashing out last year, sitting at home watching Cadel in Grenoble win the Tour and seeing the sense of what he was going through, that was sort of my motivation. I wanted to feel what he was feeling.”

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