Cycling: In wake of Paris-Nice win, Geraint Thomas looks Team Sky’s next great grand tour rider

Geraint Thomas is looking to complete the transformation from track cyclist to one-day rider to grand tour competitor, the possible next in a glittering recen line of Team Sky products.

Geraint Thomas waits for the start of the seventh stage of the 74th edition of the Paris-Nice cycling race on Sunday. Kenzo Tribouillard / AFP / March 13, 2016
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Geraint Thomas secured his biggest road victory in the Paris-Nice race on Sunday but there could be much more to come for the Briton who is developing into another Team Sky-shaped grand tour champion.

The Welshman, who like Bradley Wiggins made his name on the track, showed his improving climbing ability at last year’s Tour when he finished 15th overall after riding mainly to help team leader Chris Froome.

In the week-long Paris-Nice race, he beat seven-time grand tour champion Alberto Contador by four seconds after surviving the Spaniard’s onslaught in the final hilly stage, showing great composure and resilience.

He still has a lot to learn to become the third Briton to win the world’s greatest race, however, after Wiggins in 2012 and Froome in 2013 and 2015.

“One step at a time,” said Thomas, who also won the week-long Tour of Algarve last month.

“This year is all about one-week races. I think riding with Froomey, living near him (on the French Riviera), I learnt a hell of a lot. His record speaks for itself.”

Thomas has been following a path similar to Wiggins’, starting his career on the track, with both men clinching the team pursuit Olympic title in Beijing in 2008.

He finished his first Tour de France in 2007 in 140th position – out of 141 finishers.

But Team Sky, which he joined in 2010, started his transformation into a one-day classic rider although several coaches and sports directors lauded his ‘huge engine’, hinting he had the qualities to become a grand tour rider.

The development started last season when Thomas lost considerable weight – at least eight kilos – and the all-rounder now believes he could mount a Tour challenge in two years, just before Froome’s contract with Team Sky comes to an end.

“I’m happy where I am at the moment,” the 29-year-old said.

“This year, next year I’m really going to learn what it is about, leading a team. I’m like a sponge, soaking up as much as I can.”

“Even if he’s attached to the classics, he’s been yearning for something else since last year,” Team Sky sports director Nicolas Portal said.

So instead of trying to win Paris-Roubaix, the ‘Queen of the Classics’ in May, Thomas will be in Tenerife attending a Sky training camp.

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