If the cycling runners are above all hard to evil the suffering, some are also small rides ready to seize all the opportunities with a bit of luck. When you are not the best, you need malice to exist.
Take Kaden Groves, the solo winner of the 20th stage, this Saturday, July 26, in Pontarlier, in the Doubs, in a cold and thorough rain. On this tower, he should never have ended up before. He came with a teammate for the two superstars of his team Alpecin, Mathieu Van der Poel and Jasper Philipsen. The two having abandoned after each winning a stage, the sprinter fegged in a breakaway of 13 runners ready to face the bad weather on the hilly roads of the Jura. Well took him. 21 kilometers from happiness, he narrowly escaped a fall in a turn while two of his opponents left in ventriglisse. And at 17 kilometers, he flew alone, with the train, distant the last two men with him who preferred to type a belote than to prosecute him. At 26, the Australian becomes the 114th man in history to have won a stage on the three