The young guns ready to challenge Chris Froome

By Brendon Vella / Roar Guru

Three riders are potential challengers for Chris Froome’s Tour title in the years to come.

Adam Yates will be looking to follow in the pedal-strokes of his fellow Brit if his performance at this year’s Tour is anything to go by.

After narrowly missing out on a yellow jersey after Chris Froome attacked away on the descent of the Col de Peyresourde on Stage 8 to take victory, Yates ended up in fourth place on general classification, a mere 21 seconds off eventual third-place finisher Nairo Quintana.

An impressive performance on its own, which becomes even better when you take into account this was the first time he had ever ridden GC at a Grand Tour.

This result could have been much better had it not been for a difficult final week in the alps, where he punctured just before the penultimate climb of Stage 19. His chase back to the peloton was extremely difficult due to the high tempo on the climb, while also being affected by the crash and eventual abandon of Tom Dumoulin at the back of the field.

He ended up losing 30 seconds to Quintana on this stage – the difference between him finishing on the podium. Yates did have the consolation prize of winning the young rider’s jersey.

Having finished twice inside the top ten at previous Tours, Frenchman Romain Bardet shone like a beaming star in the alps to surge home and take an impressive second place on general classification.

Bardet finished sixth in 2014 and ninth in 2015 and, alongside Thibaut Pinot, was one of the major hopes for both a stage win and a high finish on GC.

The first week of the race went well, however he dropped 20 seconds on the final mountain stage in the Pyrenees, losing time to key rivals including Adam Yates. A solid second week was again however reduced somewhat by a poor time trial on Stage 13, where he finished seventh out of the final top-ten GC finishers.

However, he came to life in the alps, only losing one second in the final week to Chris Froome, and taking a fabulous win on a treacherous Stage 19. In contrast, Yates lost one minute and 57 seconds to Froome, with Quintana fairing little bit better in losing one minute and 22 seconds.

To be coming good in the third week shows that Bardet prepared extremely well for this Tour. If he continues to improve both his climbing and time trialling, which he has done over the past three years, more podiums at the minimum will be in striking distance for this talented 25-year-old.

Lampre haven’t had a genuine GC rider for a while now. Rui Costa moved to the team in 2014 and was earmarked to fill that role, however has never been able to sustain good performances over the three weeks, and has now reverted back to the rider he was at Movistar; a stage poacher.

Louis Meintjes looks to be the man that Lampre will support over three weeks going forward, after finishing a pleasing eighth place on GC. This follows up from a top-ten performance at last year’s Vuelta a Espana while riding for the MTN Qhubeka squad.

In the fight for the white jersey, Meintjes was Yates’ closest rival, finishing two minutes and 16 seconds behind the Brit. Most of this time was lost on the flat crosswind finale of Stage 11, where he got caught behind the split along with Joaquim Rodriguez, losing over a minute to his rivals.

He also lost a lot of time on the Stage 13 time trial, where he was one minute and 20 seconds behind Yates.

However, his final week was impressive, as he made up over 45 seconds on Yates, mostly in the high mountain stages of Stages 17 and 19.

The talented South African looks the goods, and could be Africa’s next Grand Tour contender.

The future of the Tour does not just include domination from Froome, with these three riders set to challenge him in the years to come.

So to sum up these previous pieces – read Part 1 and Part 2 here – was the Tour boring?

From a yellow jersey perspective, you can say so, from the Stage 13 time trial onwards. However, the closeness of the contenders at the first rest day did give us all hope that Froome would be challenged.

This year was not a typical Froome performance, where he blazed away on the opening mountain-top finish, as he did in 2013 and 2015. He had to graft for it.

The closeness of the gaps early on in the race meant Froome felt he needed to take on unexpected stages and parcours, such as the descent finish of Stage 8, and along the flatlands of Stage 11.

Such a differing of tactics from Froome made the race interesting, leading to questions as to whether these attacks were a sign of Froome feeling challenged by the form of his other competitors. While such a challenge was never really posed, such desperate attacks showed that Froome was worried for the first time in any of his Tour de France wins.

Finally, as I mentioned above, the youth that have come through to perform at this year’s Tour give hope that in the future, the Tour will not just be a one-team domination.

Boring? No. Exciting? Partially. Intriguing? Very much so.

The Crowd Says:

2016-08-05T14:01:09+00:00

Diggs

Roar Rookie


Quintana still has plenty of time, every time I see him I need to remind myself he is only mid-20's despite looking like he is 38 years old haha. But his biggest problem is he rides to conservatively. Pantano I haven't seen much of him before, but you're right seems promising, and it looks matter of time before one of them takes it... course depending. Need some serious altitude climbs. With Richie being the sole leader, that all depends on his form I suppose. TVG was consistently a good rider, 2 top 5 tdf finishes, almost beating Froome in the Dauphine, and good enough to displace Cadel from being the protected rider. In the space of 2 years he is now being written of. So I suppose a lot can happen in a short time. Porte has gone from being an exceptional TT rider, to being a good TT rider.

2016-08-04T21:30:43+00:00

tyrone

Guest


I dont think the TDF is planned for a Columbia cyclist to win. The mountains are not steep enough, a TT rider can still power up them. We need more 15-23% sections like the Veulta or 2m wide goat tracks over mountains like the Giro

2016-08-04T11:55:27+00:00

Sam Brown

Roar Guru


Yeah those guys were standouts in the GC at this Tour but I'd add Estaben Chavez and Jarlinson Pantano to the list. Quintana of course had a bad tour and may still have his time in the future, he has plenty of Tour's ahead of him. Sooner or later one of those Columbian's is going to take the Tour for Latin America. Outside the Columbians I think Fabio Aru will be better for the experience at this year's Tour, lets not forget last year he pushed Contador all the way in the Giro and won the Vuelta and he is still only 26. I also don't think the boat has sailed on Thibault Pinot. Richie Porte could also mount a serious challenge as soon as next year, he's probably guaranteed to be BMC's number 1 gun next year and has now shown he can put it together over 3 weeks. The key for any of these guys will be teamwork. One-on-one any of these guys could take Froome on their day but none of them have the support Froome does and an individual alone cannot break Sky, the way they ride makes it impossible to win that way.

2016-08-04T09:25:39+00:00

tyrone

Guest


they need to progress in time trialling. Interesting to see what role Yates will have in the future. With Kreuziger signing it means that Orica can actually field a team that can have an uphill train. I think a team with Kreuziger, Yatesx 2, Chaves and Abasini, Durbridge, Txurruka and Gerrans would allow for a serious challenge for the Giro or Vuelta

AUTHOR

2016-08-04T08:01:20+00:00

Brendon Vella

Roar Guru


Think if they continue the progression in which each one of them is making they can challenge Froome and Quintana. Beat them is a completely different story though...

2016-08-03T20:45:44+00:00

tyrone

Guest


When you say they will challenge him do you mean in Froomes current form or in 3-5 years when Froome is on the decline? I dont see him being challenged in the next few years. I do not see any of the cyclists you have selected challenging due to a lack of team mates that will match SKY.

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