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Roglic wins stage 17; Froome extends lead

Arnel Medina - The Freeman
Roglic wins stage 17; Froome extends lead

Slovenia's Primoz Roglic celebrates as he crosses the finish line during the 183 km seventeenth stage of the 104th edition of the Tour de France cycling race between Le La Mure and Serre-Chevalier, French Alps. Agence France Presse

SERRE-CHEVALIER, France — Former champion ski-jumper Primoz Roglic took a sensational solo victory on the mountainous 183km 17th stage of the Tour de France.

Chris Froome came home third to stretch his overall lead to 27 seconds as Rigoberto Uran moved up to second and Fabio Aru dropped to fourth, with Romain Bardet remaining third.

Slovenia's Roglic, 27, was junior world ski-jumping champion in 2007 but switched to cycling in 2012.

"To win a stage, I've dreamt about it many times," said Roglic, whose girlfriend and family were at the finish of the Tour's 'Queen stage', which started in La Mure.

"It's crazy, incredible. There are no words. Right now I cannot really form all these feelings. Later probably I will know how big it is," he added before mimicking a ski-jump landing as he climbed onto the victory podium.

He was part of an initial 33-man breakaway that was whittled down to just six riders when Roglic attacked solo 6.4km from the summit of the hors category Col du Galibier, which at more than 2,600 metres above sea level was the highest point of this year's Tour.

He crested the climb, 28km from the finish in Serre-Chevalier, with a lead of just over a minute and half.

On the descent, Roglic easily managed his lead while a five-man chase group developed, including Froome.

But Italian Aru, who started the day second at 18sec, had been dropped by an acceleration from Bardet just before the Galibier summit and would go on to lose 31sec by the finish.

"I've lost (time) and I can't be happy," said the 27-year-old Astana rider, now 53sec back.

  "But the Tour finishes on Sunday. It wasn't a positive day, but this is cycling."

  Uran took second, 1min 13sec behind Roglic, to snatch six bonus seconds that moved him up to second overall, just four hundredths of a second ahead of Bardet.

"It was a good stage for me," said Uran, 30, who has remained something of a dark horse even as he steadily rose up the rankings.

  Froome also took four bonus seconds for finishing third to help increase his lead, and he was congratulated by French President Emmanuel Macron at the finish.

 "It's a great honour to be congratulated by the president, it's also a very good thing for the Tour and the sport that he came here," said Froome, 32.

"My legs are better than in the Pyrenees, today I felt good. I think also for tomorrow – we have the finish on the Col d'Izoard which will be very, very difficult."

Up front, Roglic proved the strongest of the breakaway riders despite the presence of twice former Tour winner Alberto Contador, who couldn't follow the Slovene's acceleration on the Galibier.

"He's a legend in cycling," Roglic said of Contador. "I used to watch him on television.

"But we were all the same and I thought 'just go for it'."

Further down the mountainside, Bardet and Ireland's Dan Martin put in a succession of attacks that split up the yellow jersey contenders.

Briton Simon Yates cracked first and eventually lost a couple of minutes to see his lead in the young rider's competition ahead of South African Louis Meintjes cut to 2min 28sec.

Bardet went over the Galibier summit with Froome, Uran and Warren Barguil for company while Mikel Landa, the yellow jersey's Sky team-mate, caught them on the descent.

Behind, Aru kept losing time, with Yates dropping even more on the rapid drag downhill to the finish.

Earlier in the stage, Colombian climber Nairo Quintana had been distanced on the first category Col du Telegraphe, the twice runner-up continuing to struggle during this year's Tour having raced May's Giro d'Italia. (AFP)(FREEMAN)

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