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The 100th Tour De France Wraps Up With A Win For The British

The City of Light is, in fact, lighting up for an evening showdown on the final day of the Tour de France. In a break with tradition, the 21-stage cycling race is starting later than usual from Versailles and ending 83 miles later in Paris with 10 laps of a circuit up and down the Champs-Elysees.

Yet the winners of the 100th Tour de France were pretty much set on Saturday at the end of the 20th stage. For the second year in a row, a Brit is taking the coveted yellow jersey grand prize.

Last year, Chris Froome was part of the two-man Britannia triumph when he came in second after his teammate, Bradley Wiggins. This year, the Nairobi-born Froome is finishing the race with about a 5-minute lead over the second-place cyclist, Colombian Nairo Quintana who, it's fair to say, has triumphed in his first-ever Tour de France.

In addition to coming in second overall, Quintana is expected to hold two other distinctive jerseys: The polka-dot jersey for best climber (aka "King of the Mountains") and the white jersey for best overall young rider.

Even though Froome spent the better part of the Tour holding the yellow jersey, he told reporters after Saturday's stage that it wasn't until he passed the sign indicating 2 kilometers to go to the finish that he let himself believe he was actually going to win the Tour.

"It actually became quite hard to concentrate," he said. "A very emotional feeling."

In general, Tour de France organizers have been a bit worried how this year's race would play out. It's first Tour since American Lance Armstrong admitted to using performing enhancing drugs and forcing his teammates to do the same during his racing career. Sponsorship for the Tour itself was down and race organizers were worried about the Tour's ability to attract its usual global excitement.

Their concerns proved unfounded, as it turns out. According to Sports Media Watch, viewership was up nearly a third over last year, plus hundreds of thousands of fans came out to stand by the race course and watch the cyclists whiz past.

As far as accidents and mishaps — or, as NPR's Mike Pesca called it on Weekend Edition Sunday, chaos, — there were relatively few in this year's race. Perhaps it helped that the weather cooperated, but there were only a few crashes that forced riders to drop out of the race.

On the second day of the race, there was a dog who wandered onto the course but ended up doing no harm. A spectator threw urine at British national champion Mark Cavendish during one of the time trials; an incident that claimed to make him "sad," but not angry. Apparently, the ordure-flinging did prompt Lance Armstrong to pipe up his surprise that anyone made a big deal about it at all. Armstrong tweeted:

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Shula Neuman is the executive editor at St. Louis Public Radio. She came the station in late 2013 as a subject matter editor, after having worked as an editor for NPR in Washington, D.C. Shula started her journalism career as a general assignment reporter for the Watertown Daily Times and made the switch to radio when she took a job as a reporter/evening newscaster at St. Louis Public Radio. After that, Shula reported on economic development for Cleveland’s public radio station. This is Shula’s second stint with St. Louis Public Radio. She says she just can’t stay away from her hometown because she’s tired of rooting for the Cardinals in absentia. Shula has a master’s degree in journalism from Columbia University; an Executive M.B.A. from Washington University in St. Louis; and a bachelor’s from Reed College in Portland, OR. She claims she has no intention of going back to school again.