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From Chris Froome to Peter Sagan: Winners and losers of the Tour de France

Barnaby Chesterman

08:45 28/07/2015

With Chris Froome sealing a second Tour de France title, here's a look at the five winners and losers from the Tour.

FIVE WINNERS: 

Chris Froome

A second Tour victory, the first Briton to win two Tours and the first rider since Eddy Merckx in 1970 to claim the yellow race winner’s and polka dot king of the mountains jerseys in the same Tour, Froome was obviously the big winner this year.

After crashing out of last year’s Tour just five stages in, he reasserted his supremacy in the world’s most prestigious bike race.

Even being spat at, insulted, accused of cheating and doused with urine couldn’t dampen his joy.

Nairo Quintana

The Colombian climber may have come up just short in his victory quest but he was a lot closer to Froome than two years ago and proved that he could threaten and worry the Briton in the mountains.

He’s only 25 and as he says himself, he has many more years to come to try to win the Tour.

Alejandro Valverde

The 35-year-old Spaniard broke into tears after Saturday’s 20th stage and that after finishing third.

It may seem curious for a rider with so many great victories to his name but it was Valverde’s first time on the Tour podium after his best ever finish.

Quintana’s evergreen team-mate is still as hungry as ever.

Andre Greipel

The burly German has spent the last few years in the shadow of sprint greats Mark Cavendish and compatriot Marcel Kittel.

At 33 years of age, Greipel might have thought his best sprint years were behind him but with Kittel absent and Cavendish’s fabled acceleration a distant memory, Greipel won four stages – his best result at the Tour.

MTN Qhubeka

If becoming the first African team to ride the Tour de France wasn’t enough, Qhubeka made the most of their debut.

Briton Steve Cummings won the 14th stage and Eritrean Daniel Teklehaimanot wore the king of the mountains polka dot jersey for four days.

Their Tour was a resounding success.

FIVE LOSERS:

Vincenzo Nibali

The reigning champion was one of the ‘fantastic four’ coming into the race but he ended up fourth, 8min 36sec behind the winner, Chris Froome.

He had a terrible first week, including losing 1min 28sec in crosswinds on the second stage.

He then started the second week by cracking in spectacular fashion on the opening mountain stage and his victory hopes were already gone.

He did salvage some pride, however, with a stage victory.

Alberto Contador

The two-time former winner from Spain had set himself the goal of winning the Giro d’Italia-Tour de France double this year.

He came into the Tour as holder of both the Vuelta a Espana and Giro titles but Contador simply ran out of energy in France, finishing fifth at 9min 48sec.

Peter Sagan

The popular Slovak may have won the green points jersey for the fourth year in a row but it was his near-misses in stages that were most striking.

He has now gone 56 Tour stages since claiming a victory.

Second five times, third twice, fourth twice and fifth once this year alone, Sagan tries to hide his frustration but his Tinkoff-Saxo team would certainly swap that consistency for a stage win.

Mark Cavendish

From 2008 to 2012 he was undoubtedly the best sprinter in the world but it is now three Tours in a row in which he has had to sit back and watch a German dominate.

Cavendish did win a stage, but Andre Greipel won four, just as Marcel Kittel had done in both 2013 and 2014. The Manx Missile is no longer supersonic.

The French

Finishing second and third last year and with a new generation of talented youngsters, hopes were high for the hosts this year.

But crashes and illness wrecked their dreams as Jean- Christophe Peraud, Thibaut Pinot and Romain Bardet all disappointed in terms of the overall standings.

The last two did both win a stage but only after their overall hopes had disintegrated. Even sprinter Nacer Bouhanni could not bring cheer as he crashed out in the first week.

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