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Tour de France: Chris Froome keeps yellow jersey as Lilian Calmejane wins stage eight

France's Lilian Calmejane celebrates as he crosses the finish line at the end of the 187,5 km eighth stage of the 104th edition of the Tour de France cycli
Image: France's Lilian Calmejane celebrates stage eight victory at Station des Rousses

Chris Froome overcame a brief off-road venture to retain his yellow jersey as Lilian Calmejane won stage eight of the Tour de France.

Froome had a scare on one of Saturday's descents but had no trouble getting back to the front of the peloton on a day when countless breaks were attempted and the peloton split in two.

The Team Sky rider, going for his fourth Tour de France victory, remains 12 seconds ahead of team-mate Geraint Thomas heading into Sunday's huge mountain stage in the Jura, a day that includes three "hors categorie" climbs.

Pace was high from the outset, mainly because of an early intermediate sprint which was won by Andre Greipel - German compatriot Marcel Kittel was third and keeps the green jersey.

Soon after, the peloton split in two and it was from that front group that a breakaway formed including Direct Energie rider Calmejane and eventual stage runner-up Robert Gesink.

Froome and the rest of Team Sky remained calm in the second group, in the knowledge that all of his main rivals were behind him, with only Emmanuel Buchmann (Bora-Hansgrohe) at one point moving into the "virtual" yellow jersey.

France's Lilian Calmejane celebrates his polka dot jersey of best climber on the podium at the end of the 187,5 km eighth stage of the 104th edition of the
Image: Calmejane will wear the polka-dot jersey as leader of the mountains classification on Sunday

The Briton's scare came on one of the downhill sections, when he ran wide on to a grass verge along with Thomas, but TV replays appeared to show him staying on his bike and quickly he was able to regain a spot at the front of the peloton.

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Froome said: "Me and Geraint took the wrong trajectory in a corner and we went off the road, it happens sometimes."

The closing Cote de la Combe de Laisia-Les Molunes was where Calmejane made his break for glory, quickly seeing off Warren Barguil, Serge Pauwels and Nicolas Roche.

Gesink (Lotto-NL Jumbo) tried to chase and briefly looked like catching Calmejane when the Frenchman suffered a cramp and had to slow down and stretch his groin out.

France's Lilian Calmejane, suffering from cramps, receives assistance after he crossed the finish line at the end of the 187,5 km eighth stage of the 104th
Image: Lilian Calmejane tries to get rid of cramp after a gutsy win on stage eight of the Tour de France

But he was soon back up to speed and eventually crossed the line for his second Grand Tour stage victory, adding to one he claimed in last year's Vuelta a Espana.

"It's huge. It was everything I was dreaming of," said Calmejane. "When I had cramp in the finale, I decided to drop a gear so I could pedal softer."

Gesink finished 37 seconds adrift and the peloton crossed a further 13 seconds down, with Froome and Thomas safely ensconced in it ahead of Sunday's massive test.

"Tomorrow will be a very very hard day, it will be very selective," Froome added.

DOLE, FRANCE - JULY 08:  The peloton pass through during stage eight of the 2017 Le Tour de France, a 187.5km road stage from Dole to Station Des Rousses o
Image: Chris Froome had a brief off-road excursion but keeps hold of his yellow jersey for another day

Stage eight result:

1 Lilian Calmejane (Fra) Direct Energie 4hr 30min 29sec
2 Robert Gesink (Ned) LottoNL-Jumbo +37s
3 Guillaume Martin (Fra) Wanty-Groupe Gobert +50s
4 Nicolas Roche (Ire) BMC Racing all same time
5 Roman Kreuziger (Cze) Orica-Scott
6 Fabio Aru (Ita) Astana
7 Michael Valgren (Den) Astana
8 Rafal Majka (Pol) Bora-Hansgrohe
9 Nathan Brown (USA) Cannondale-Drapac
10 Romain Hardy (Fra) Fortuneo-Oscaro

Overall standings:

1 Chris Froome (Gbr) Team Sky 33hrs 19mins 10secs
2 Geraint Thomas (Gbr) Team Sky +12s
3 Fabio Aru (Ita) Astana +14s
4 Dan Martin (Ire) Quick-Step Floors +25s
5 Richie Porte (Aus) BMC Racing +39s
6 Simon Yates (Gbr) Orica-Scott +43s
7 Romain Bardet (Fra) AG2R La Mondiale +47s
8 Alberto Contador (Spa) Trek-Segafredo +52s
9 Nairo Quintana (Col) Movistar +54s
10 Rafal Majka (Pol) Bora-Hansgrohe +1:01