Subscribe for updates!

Search this blog..

Top Stories of the week

Mark Cavendish Win Tour Of Spain

Posted in : Tour, Players

(added last year!)

Mark Cavendish Win Tour Of SpainMark Cavendish Win Tour Of Spain: Britain's Mark Cavendish retained the leader's red jersey after the second stage of the Tour of Spain despite being pipped in a sprint finish by Yauheni Hutarovich of Belarus  here on Sunday. Hutarovich, of the Francaise des Jeux team, pulled off a surprise victory over the British sprint king at the end of the 173.7-kilometre course from Alcala de Guadaira to Marbella in southern Spain. Third was American Tyler Farrar, ahead of Italy's Alessandro Petacchi.
 
It was the first stage win in any of the three Grands Tours for the 26-year-old Hutarovich. "It might seem like a surprise but it wasn't, it's my fifth victory this season," said the Belarusian, who turned professional in 2007. "I came with the intention of winning a stage, I've therefore achieved that."But he admitted that "when I saw that I had won, I couldn't believe it. But I saw Cavendish, the leader, had some problems and I knew I had a chance.

Spain's three-time World Road Race champion Oscar Freire admitted he was "surprised" by Hutarovich's win.

"I don't know him, I have never heard his name," he said. "But we'll have to watch him, as he has just beaten one of the best current sprinters, Cavendish."

The Briton, making his Tour of Spain debut, holds a 12-second lead in the overall standings over a group of five riders -- Kanstantsin Sivtov of Belarus, Peter Velits of Slovakia, American Tejay Van Garderen, Australian Matthew Goss and New Zealand's Hayden Roulston.

The 25-year-old Isle of Man rider on Saturday powered his HTC Columbia team to victory in the opening stage, a 13km team time-trial held at night under floodlights in the southern city of Seville.

He already has a remarkable string of stage wins in major Tours that includes 15 victories in the Tour of France over the past three years.

Sunday's stage was marked by an early breakaway by four riders -- Spain's Javier Ramirez, Australia's Johnnie Walker and Frenchmen Mickael Buffaz and Mickael Delage.

Buffaz was forced to withdraw after breaking his collarbone in a crash after about 73 kilometres.

The leading trio was joined by Spain's Marcos Garcia Fernandez, but they were caught by the peloton with about 12 kilometres to go in the final downhill run to the finish.

Monday's stage takes the riders 156 kilometres from Marbella to Malaga, and includes a first category climb.

The event has been left wide open by the absence of three-time Tour de France winner Alberto Contador of Spain, who skipped his home Tour -- which he won in 2008 -- after a hard-fought victory in France in July, and last year's winner Alejandro Valverde, who is serving a suspension for doping.

Top contenders now include 35-year-old Russian Denis Menchov, a two-time Tour of Spain winner, the Schleck brothers of Luxembourg, Andy and Frank, and the 2008 Tour de France winner, Carlos Sastre of Spain.

The 21-stage 65th edition of the Tour of Spain, in which 198 riders from 22 teams are competing, ends in Madrid on September 19.

Related Posts

» Cycling: Sky make flying start to deliver Cavendish win

» Cycling: Britain's Cavendish supports return of teammate after doping ban

» Mark Cavendish SPOTY award proves that cycling is now officially mainstream in Great Britain

» Mark Cavendish surprised by cycling's place in the mainstream

» Mark Cavendish signs for Team Sky

» Cycling: Cavendish and Wiggins sure of maximum help in world challenge

» Basque Police Prepare as Tour of Spain Cycling Race Returns After 33 Years

» Cavendish captures Olympic test on 'dangerous' course

(added last year!) / 347 views