Chris Froome refused to set limits on his Tour de France ambitions on Monday as he reflected on a surreal victory and the moment he ran up Mont Ventoux and left his team-mates laughing all the way to Paris. The 31-year-old Team Sky rider won his third Tour title in three years - 2014 the only blot on the record when he crashed out - on Sunday.
READ MORE: Froome signs up to exclusive club
Only four riders in 103 editions have more yellow jerseys, but Froome is taking nothing for granted when the 2017 race route in announced in October.
"We need to chill our boots a little bit. Three is incredible," the Briton told Sky Sports News. "It gets a bit dangerous when you start putting a number: five, or six, or seven.
"I'll definitely take it one at a time and if I can win the Tour again that would be unreal. I am looking forward to finding out what next year's edition will hold for us, what challenges we're going to have to train for and be ready for. I'd love to come back next year and fight for it again."
READ MORE: Froome signs up to exclusive club
Froome moved to within two overall wins of Jacques Anquetil, Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault and Miguel Indurain, who each won five Tours, while the disgraced Lance Armstrong was stripped of his seven for doping.
The defining image of the 2016 race will be of Froome striding out on Mont Ventoux on July 14. Team Sky principal Sir Dave Brailsford, known for his attention to detail, said: "We do a lot of scenario planning and we try to think of everything. Chris running up the Ventoux in the yellow jersey, without a bike, wasn't something we had in mind.
"Most athletes would've stayed by the side of the road, thrown their bike away and got angry.
READ MORE: Froome signs up to exclusive club
"It defines Chris - the only thing he was thinking about was crossing the finish line. It was instinctive. That's what's inside him, is that winning instinct."
Speaking alongside Brailsford and team-mate Geraint Thomas, Froome said: "I've had to put up with these two laughing at me for the last two weeks.
"It's nice we can laugh about it now, but at the time it was pretty chaotic and pretty stressful.
"That was a day I'll certainly never forget."
Froome rides in the Olympic Games road race and time-trial, on August 6 and August 10, respectively, and has realistic chances of gold in both events in Rio.
Brailsford added that he believes Froome can continue competing at the highest level for "three or four more years. He's as hungry as ever," Brailsford added. "Much of how far he can go will be about how much he can retain his desire."
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