He nearly fluffed his speech, dropping his notes on the podium beneath the Arc de Triomphe and requiring runner-up Rigoberto Uran to rescue them before they blew away, but Chris Froome was otherwise sure-footed, firing out a warning to his rivals yesterday after pulling on his fourth yellow jersey in the space of five years by saying he believed he could keep on competing at this level into his late 30s.
A few spots of rain had greeted the peloton as it arrived into Paris, exhausted from three weeks and 3540km of hard racing. Nothing was going to rain on Froome's parade, though. Not the "noise", as Froome described it, around Team Sky and its principal Sir Dave Brailsford, nor the occasional boos that accompanied him and his teammates as they made their way into the French capital, across the Seine, through the middle of Grand Palais and finally, after galloping up and down the Champs-Elysees seven times, into the arms of his wife Michelle and son Kellan.
Froome is now just one shy of the record of five yellow jerseys set by Jacques Anquetil, Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault and Miguel Indurain. None of those riders won a grand tour beyond 31 but Froome said he felt he could carry on and on.
"I'd still like to keep racing into my late 30s and keep competing for the yellow jersey," he said after Dutchman Dylan Groenewegen (LottoNL-Jumbo) claimed the final sprint from Andre Greipel (Lotto-Soudal).
"I'd like to be here for the next five years, trying to win it. But it certainly doesn't get any easier. This year was the closest it's ever been for me and it's only going to be harder next year."