Wiggins hangs on to lead with 3 stages left

Subscribe Now Choose a package that suits your preferences.
Start Free Account Get access to 7 premium stories every month for FREE!
Already a Subscriber? Current print subscriber? Activate your complimentary Digital account.

BAGNERES-DE-LUCHON, France — Britain’s Bradley Wiggins overcame the mountains and challengers to retain the yellow jersey, while Spain’s Alejandro Valverde won the 17th stage of the Tour de France on Thursday.

BAGNERES-DE-LUCHON, France — Britain’s Bradley Wiggins overcame the mountains and challengers to retain the yellow jersey, while Spain’s Alejandro Valverde won the 17th stage of the Tour de France on Thursday.

After the last hard ascent, Bradley maintained his overall lead and said he sensed “that it was pretty much over” with just three racing days left. He’s trying to become the first Briton to win cycling’s biggest race.

Wiggins faces one last test — the individual time trial, his specialty — on Saturday.

Flat stages await Wiggins on Friday and Sunday, which features the ride to the finish on the Champs-Elysees in Paris. Those stages aren’t expected to alter the standings.

He appears on pace to make some history: Wiggins would become the first Olympic track champion to become a Tour winner. He took the yellow jersey in Stage 7, and hasn’t let go of it since. No rider has done that since France’s Bernard Hinault held a lead from the same stage in 1981 all the way to the finish.

An 89-mile ride from the southwestern town of Bagneres-de-Luchon to the ski station of Peyragudes on Thursday featured three hefty ascents in the Pyrenees and an uphill finish.

Valverde, the Movistar leader who returned from a two-year doping ban this year, won his third Tour stage in a breakaway. Christopher Froome of Britain was second, and Wiggins was third, both 19 seconds back.

Overall, Wiggins leads Sky teammate Froome in second by 2 minutes, 5 seconds, and Italy’s Vincenzo Nibali trails in third, 2:41 back, after losing 18 seconds to them in the final ascent.

A 2-minute lead after nearly 80 hours of racing and 2 1/2 weeks might not seem like much of a margin. But in stage races like the Tour, the strategy of success for a leader is keying on his closest rivals.

Wiggins wasn’t much worried about any other riders. After Nibali and Froome, his next closest challenger was Jurgen Van Den Broeck, who was 5:46 back, a deficit almost impossible to erase without a collapse by Wiggins.

Defending champion Cadel Evans of Australia, after dropping out of contention in the first Pyrenean day on Wednesday, lost more time and trailed by 9:57. Still, he rose to sixth overall, after Spain’s Haimar Zubeldia lost nearly a minute to the Australian.

American Tejay Van Garderen — a BMC teammate of Evans — rose a notch to fifth, and was 8:30 back.

Valverde, with tears in his eyes in the winner’s circle, had a rough start to the Tour with at least three crashes. He also sensed Wiggins and Froome closing on him at the end of the stage.

“I went all out,” said Valverde, who also won stages in the Tour Down Under and the Paris-Nice races this year.