Majka wins 14th Tour stage

Nibali extends lead, holds on to yellow jersey with a second-place finish

July 20, 2014 06:13 pm | Updated 06:13 pm IST - RISOUL, France

Stage winner Rafal Majka of Poland climbs towards Risoul, French Alps, during the fourteenth stage of the Tour de France. The 177 kilometers race started in Grenoble and finished in Risoul, France.

Stage winner Rafal Majka of Poland climbs towards Risoul, French Alps, during the fourteenth stage of the Tour de France. The 177 kilometers race started in Grenoble and finished in Risoul, France.

Rafal Majka of Poland won the 14th stage of the Tour de France a second day of punishing Alpine climbs and over the highest point on the race as Vincenzo Nibali again extended his overall lead by finishing second on Saturday.

Majka led a breakaway on the final climb in the 177-kilometer (110-mile) roller-coaster course over two infamous climbs, including the 2,360-meter (7,742-foot) Izoard pass, and a finish up to Risoul ski station.

The one-two result was the flip of Friday’s entree into the Alps- Nibali won, and Majka was second.

Majka’s victory was the first on this Tour by his Tinkoff-Saxo Bank team, which lost main leader Alberto Contador when he crashed out injured on Stage 10.

“I am really very happy,” Majka, who was sixth in the Giro d’Italia this year, said of his first Tour stage win. “I am a little tired, but ... I had a calm first week to help Alberto. It broke my heart to see him leave.”

The stage didn’t shake up the top five standings. Nibali strengthened his hold on the yellow jersey, making the Tour from here to the finish in eight days in Paris looking more and more like a race for podium spots behind him.

Nibali crossed 24 seconds behind Majka, followed by Jean-Christophe Peraud in third, two seconds slower. Two French riders, Thibaut Pinot and Romain Bardet, conducted a two-man sprint and crossed another 24 seconds back. American Tejay van Garderen was fifth, 54 seconds back of the Polish rider. Alejandro Valverde lost a minute to Nibali.

Overall, the Italian leads second-place Valverde by 4-37, and third-place Bardet by 4-50.

Sunday’s stage offers some relief after the Alps- Stage 15 is a flat 222-kilometer (138-mile) course from Tallard to Nimes.

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