Tour de France | The stars who sizzled and fizzled

A look-back at those who reached beyond the norm and those who failed to deliver what had been expected of them at this year’s edition of the Tour which was won by Colombia’s Egan Bernal on Sunday.

July 29, 2019 09:25 pm | Updated 11:04 pm IST - PARIS

Mixed performances: Though Egan Bernal, centre, made the Tour his own, the locals were treated to some fine riding by Julian Alaphilippe, right, even as the king of the mountains Romain Bardet did not deliver as expected.

Mixed performances: Though Egan Bernal, centre, made the Tour his own, the locals were treated to some fine riding by Julian Alaphilippe, right, even as the king of the mountains Romain Bardet did not deliver as expected.

The Tops

Julian Alaphilippe: Will go down in Tour history for an unrelentingly valiant ride with his bullet like supertuck downhill charge, and his uphill short-climb kick, had a human touch and sheer guts as he thrilled France with his unlikely 14 days in yellow.

Caleb Ewan: After winning his first sprint, Ewan said the photo-finish victory was ‘almost worth leaving Australia for’. The 22-year-old ended the 2019 edition with three stage wins, one more than either Simon Yates or Alaphilippe.

Simon Yates: Yates came to the Tour having flopped at the Giro d’Italia and was riding under the radar as sherpa for his twin Adam.

He emerged from the shadows to close out a pair of breakaways and take his first two stage wins.

His next target is 2020 Olympic road race in Tokyo before turning his attention to the Tour in 2021.

Thierry Gouvenou: The course designer has to be given a certain amount of credit for putting together 21 stages that encouraged breakaways which ignited such a thrilling Tour and for placing the Alpine trilogy that ultimately decided the race right at the end, maintaining the suspense, even after the weather almost undid his work.

The Flops

Jakob Fuglsang: The Dane came into the Tour on the back of a Liege-Bastogne-Liege one-day win where, he said, he had decided to win or die, and a one-week triumph that suggested he was a potential Tour champion.

But the Astana captain built a reputation as a gripe when he moaned after losing time on the stage to Albi saying no-one had warned him about a crosswind, a claim that exasperated his bosses.

His disappointing Tour ended when he crashed out, through no fault of his own.

Adam Yates: Came to the 2019 Tour looking for a place in the top five or even the podium spot but struggled every time the going got tough on a climb.

He was also unable to keep up in a breakaway of lesser riders on the Galibier after the main contenders decided to ignore him and let him go.

Romain Bardet: In the end, Bardet just about redeemed himself with the king of the mountains jersey, but the man who finished on the podium spots in 2016 and 2017 was a flop having apparently overtrained and by Sunday was almost half an hour behind Bernal.

After losing more than a minute to the big guns on the first big climb, up La Planche des Belles Filles, he stopped at the finish line, wiped out.

He cut a sorry sight as compatriots Alaphilippe and Thibaut Pinot shone.

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