Tour de France stage 16: Paret-Peintre becomes this year's first French winner

Valentin Paret-Peintre has won the 16th stage of the Tour de France, providing this year's first home winner, and done so on the feared slopes of Mont Ventoux.

Cyclist holds fist in the air as crowds cheer on sidelines.

France's Valentin Paret-Peintre beat Ireland's Ben Healy to win the stage. Source: Getty / Jean Catuffe

Valentin Paret-Peintre became the first French winner on this year's Tour de France as he edged an enthralling stage 16 on Tuesday, pipping Ireland's Ben Healy atop the mythical 1910m altitude Mont Ventoux summit finish.

Behind them, Jonas Vingegaard attacked overall leader Tadej Pogačar relentlessly, but the defending champion tracked the Dane all the way up the 15km ascent to extend his lead by two seconds.

Trailing by four minutes and 13 seconds at the start of this stage, Vingegaard attacked with 9km to climb on Mont Ventoux, whose upper reaches resemble a lunar landscape.

"I didn’t want to push too hard and then let him have me on a counter-attack. I kept my rhythm as much as I could," said Pogačar, who has been fighting off a cold this week.

"He attacked many times, but I just tried to hold his wheel."

Vingegaard was knocked off his bike by a motorbike after the finish line but remained unhurt, remounting to congratulate Pogačar on another fine battle.

"He seemed okay," Pogačar later said.

Pogačar's Team UAE boss Mauro Gianetti described Vingegaard as a "warrior".

"He's got the guts and the legs, and we expect him to keep on attacking every day now. He's a warrior," he said.

The battle for the overall lead, however, was eclipsed by a frantic fight for the stage win between EF's Healy and Soudal Quick-Step's Paret-Peintre, who became the first French winner on Mont Ventoux since Richard Virenque in 2002.

"He looked so happy at the finish line," Pogačar said.
Mont Ventoux has long been held in awe by riders and spectators alike, and it has witnessed some of the greatest dramas and tragedies in the Tour.

In 1967, the British cyclist Tom Simpson died here after collapsing on a baking climb.

The great Eddy Merckx once needed oxygen at the summit while Chris Froome ran part of the way up during a frantic wait for mechanical assistance on his way to a third Tour de France title in 2016.

Perfect tactic

Healy, who wore the yellow jersey for two days after winning the Bastille Day stage six, appeared to be heading for his second stage win as the two riders approached the finish of an epic tussle.

Paret-Peintre looked completely drained but, cheered on by the home crowd, he found a final surge of strength to overtake the Irishman with 20m remaining and held on to the line.

"I was near giving up. Healy was so strong, but I said to myself, 'Come on, it's the Tour de France, Mont Ventoux.'" Paret-Peintre said.

"I knew that if I held on, the last section suited me better than him, as it's really steep. It turned out to be the perfect tactic."

Healy's consolation was to be awarded the day's combativity prize while moving up one place to ninth in the overall standings.

Almost unnoticed further down the mountain, German breakout star Florian Lipowitz consolidated his third place, extending his lead on fourth-placed Scottish rider Oscar Onley by around 30 seconds.

With two more Alpine stages to come and five stages left, Vingegaard and his Visma team did everything they could to hurt the Team UAE leader, Pogačar, and can only hope they have tired the pugnacious champion.
But the 26-year-old resisted all they threw at him, despite being isolated from his teammates early in the climb.

Stage 17 should be one for the sprinters as Tim Merlier hopes to add to his two stage wins and current green jersey. Jonathan Milan also targets a second win at the 700m straight run to the finish line at Valence.

The weather, however, could rewrite the script with 50km/h winds forecast along the 170km run.


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Source: AFP


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