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Chris Froome wants to dominate Tour de France for "six or seven years"

Team Sky leader in 100th edition of cycling's biggest race also speaks of his relief at Bradley Wiggins' absence...

Chris Froome says he has set himself the goal of dominating the Tour de France for the remainder of the decade, and that he is relieved that team mate and defending champion Sir Bradley Wiggins is missing this year’s race through injury, since the absence of media speculation regarding Sky’s leadership and tactics will result in less pressure.

Despite a stellar 2013 to date, in an interview with The Times [£], the 28-year-old Froome said he is still getting used to being in the limelight and that what counts for him is results, not stardom.

“I am who I am, I am not some of the things I’ve been told that I am,” he said. “There are already a lot of people making opinions of me. It’s one of the things I am still adjusting to. I see comments on social media which are hard not to take offence to.”

“I don’t feel like I am looking for fame or looking to be recognised for something. I’ve got my goals, and personally where I want my career to go is to target the Tour, not just this year but for the next six or seven years. I am driven by that goal, not from a fame point of view.”

Born to British parents in Kenya, schooled in South Africa and now racing for Great Britain after initially representing the country of his birth, Froome has had a singular and often difficult journey to reach the top ranks of professional cycling.

The fact he has got there, with stage wins and podium positions in two of the three Grand Tours and an Olympic bronze medal in the time trial, is a sign if nothing else of his determination.

“When I focus on something, there is not much that can throw me off course,” he said. “That is my personality. Once I’ve set my mind on something, I’ll do everything I can towards it. I can become very self-immersed.”

Froome heads to Corsica for the start of the 100th edition of the Tour in a fortnight’s time as a strong favourite, following victories in the Tour of Oman, the Critérium International, the Tour de Romandie and, last week, the Critérium du Dauphiné.

The only rider to have got the better of him this year – Vincenzo Nibali in Tirreno-Adriatico, where Froome was second overall – misses the Tour, having targeted and won the Giro d’Italia, while the man many expect to be his biggest rival in France, Alberto Contador, looks nowhere near his best.

Indeed, until it was confirmed earlier this month that a knee injury meant that Wiggins, who abandoned the Giro midway through due to illness, wouldn’t be riding the Tour, it looked as though Froome’s greatest potential rival at the Tour would come from Sky’s own ranks – even though the team had recently publicly reiterated that he would be undisputed leader.

Reflecting on Wiggins’ absence, Froome said: “It’s a shame because with Bradley, there comes a certain feel of, ‘We’ve got the defending champion, we have more respect in the peloton.’ But it is also nice not to have that continuing pressure from the media.

“The last six months, every time I have been on the record, it’s probably been the first question: who is going to be the leader for the Tour? In that respect, it will be more relaxed from a media point of view in that we will not be constantly questioned on leadership and team tactics.”

In last year’s Tour, Froome was runner-up to Wiggins, and while the latter may be absent, the man who will lead Sky’s challenge in this year’s race believes that Richie Porte’s form – he finished second to Froome at the Dauphiné and the Critérium International, and won Paris-Nice – may have a psychological impact on rivals.

“An interesting element now, with Richie Porte sitting second twice, is in some people’s minds. They are going to have to work pretty hard to get a spot on the podium, let alone trying for the victory. It is probably moving the goalposts a bit.”

The relationship Froome has with Porte certainly seems a world away from the often strained partnership with Wiggins that became evident at times during last year’s Tour and again in recent months as the latter made noises about defending his title.

Neighbours in Monaco and close friends as well as training partners, Froome acknowledged that he and Porte have contrasting personalities.

“He’s very vocal,” he explained. There’s not a thought that goes through his mind that he won’t say, which makes it interesting in the peloton especially. He will always call a spade a spade. He’s very different to me.”

Porte’s success this year has been rewarded with an extension to his contract, and the Tasmanian is targeting the world championships later this year, and has also said he wants to lead Sky in next year’s Giro d’Italia.

Like Froome, Porte is 28, and with those opportunities ahead and his career entering its peak years, he doesn’t face the time pressures that may have been in part behind Wiggins’ desire to defend his title.

That said, three weeks’ racing is a long time and anything can happen, and in Porte, Team Sky have a very useful Plan B should anything go wrong with Froome’s challenge.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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39 comments

Avatar
Sheen wheels replied to Simon E | 10 years ago
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Er...only bronze in the Olympic time trial.

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davidtcycle | 10 years ago
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I do hope Froomy can win the TdF. But has anyone thought about what happens if he doesn't?

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Leviathan replied to davidtcycle | 10 years ago
0 likes
davidtcycle wrote:

I do hope Froomy can win the TdF. But has anyone thought about what happens if he doesn't?

Someone else will win. What happens after that? A belting Vuelta.

It would be nice to see Chris win 6 or 7 Tours as this has never been done before.

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Wookie replied to Leviathan | 10 years ago
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bikeboy76 wrote:
davidtcycle wrote:

I do hope Froomy can win the TdF. But has anyone thought about what happens if he doesn't?

Someone else will win. What happens after that? A belting Vuelta.

It would be nice to see Chris win 6 or 7 Tours as this has never been done before.

 19

Avatar
manu_anfield1892 replied to davidtcycle | 10 years ago
0 likes

who else can win TdF?

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Skylark replied to manu_anfield1892 | 10 years ago
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manu_anfield1892 wrote:

who else can win TdF?

If Twigo can, anyone can.

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swelbo replied to davidtcycle | 10 years ago
0 likes

 31

Avatar
farrell replied to swelbo | 10 years ago
0 likes
swelbo wrote:

 31

I fully understand where you are coming from and it is a very well articulated point you are making but I can't help but think it may be slightly flawed.

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Metjas replied to farrell | 10 years ago
0 likes
farrell wrote:
swelbo wrote:

 31

I fully understand where you are coming from and it is a very well articulated point you are making but I can't help but think it may be slightly flawed.

 39

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