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Thomas' Tour hopes take hit as leader Alaphilippe defies expectations once more

Thomas' Tour hopes take hit as leader Alaphilippe defies expectations once more
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The defending champion is now two minutes and two seconds behind his French rival.

Geraint Thomas saw his Tour de France hopes fade on the brutal slopes of the Tourmalet as he lost contact with the main favourites in the final kilometre before Thibaut Pinot took victory.

Julian Alaphilippe once again defied expectations to finish second in the yellow jersey while Welshman Thomas was distanced and finished 36 seconds after Pinot.

It was a dramatic finish to another stage which rewrote the general classification as contenders were dropped one-by-one on the Tourmalet, with Adam Yates and Dan Martin seeing their overall hopes effectively ended.

The new general classification shows Deceuninck-Quick Step's Alaphilippe has extended his lead over second-placed Thomas to two minutes and two seconds, while Steven Kruijswijk moves into third place ahead of Egan Bernal.

Alaphilippe had already defied predictions to pull out time on Thomas in Friday's time trial, but that it was the defending champion that cracked before him on the Tour's first hors categorie climb was an even bigger surprise.

Most observers still expect Alaphilippe's remarkable run in yellow to end sooner or later, but Thomas' rivals will have been hugely encouraged by his struggles here.

Kruijsiwjk is now only 12 seconds in arrears to Thomas after a big performance from his Jumbo-Visma team, while Emmanuel Buchman and Pinot are 70 seconds behind the Team Ineos man in fifth and sixth respectively.

Thibaut Pinot took the stage win
Thibaut Pinot took the stage win (Christophe Ena/AP)

French fans could celebrate however, as Pinot collected the stage win and Alaphilippe finished six seconds later in yellow.

For Pinot, it was a third career Tour stage win, and a sweet moment after he lost time in the crosswinds on stage 10.

"When you're a climber all wins at the Tour de France are beautiful, but to win on a monument like this, that's what I love" the 29-year-old said.

"We were motivated...I was angry. We will continue to fight. The Tour isn't finished yet."

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Mitchelton-Scott rider Simon Yates of Britain wins the stage on July 18, 2019
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