Jeremy stays in the hunt
NST, 11/2/2008
ANOTHER bizarre finish unfolded
in Stage Two of Le Tour de Langkawi (LTdL) yesterday as Credit
Agricole’s Jeremy Hunt took victory after outsprinting a
last ditch breakaway group of 10 riders.
It was a day that looked set to serve up
the explosive bunch sprint that everyone had been waiting for,
but instead two late attacks and a decisive third one spoiled
it again as Hunt was the only big sprinter in the winning group
who went away inside two kilometres to go in the 159.7-kilometre
stage from Butterworth to Sitiawan.
The bunch hadn’t worked effectively
to catch a two-man break featuring Meitan Hompo-GDR’s Yukiya
Arashiro and Skil-Shimano’s Yoshimasa Hirose that had lasted
from 72km into the stage until they were caught less than two
kilometres from the finish.
In between there was a double chase attempt
by Credit Agricole’s Nicolas Roche and NGC Medical-OTC Industria
Porte’s Stefan Trafelet.
As soon as Arashiro and Hirose were caught,
the 10-man break that contained Hunt surprised the sprinter’s
teams and kept a good gap between themselves and the main peloton
to the finish. It was 34-year-old Hunt’s first win since
taking the GP La Marseillaise in France exactly a year ago.
“It was not an unexpected way to win
as I’ve done it this way before. The split in the main group
happened when there were crosswinds inside five kilometres to
go and I only just made it into that group,” Hunt said.
“I’d come here with some good
form as I’m coming from the Tour Down Under in Australia
and I’ve had an advantage of putting in more training miles
than most of the European sprinters stuck in the cold weather.”
Hunt outsprinted CSF-Navigare’s Matteo
Priamo and Karpin-Galicia’s Gustavo Cesar to take the win,
but the latter was the main beneficiary of the circumstances.
The yellow jersey for the overall lead remained
on the back of Bouygues Telecom’s Matthieu Sprick, but due
to Spaniard Cesar being part of the first group, the lead was
cut to just three seconds with the Karpin-Galicia rider stating
he’s already thinking of wresting it away from the Frenchman
who is determined to not let that happen.
“Today (yesterday) our team had led
the chase of the breakaway but we didn’t pull for the sprint.
We just controlled it and that was why there were many attacks
in the final kilometres,” said Sprick.
“As a spectator, I would say I’d
like to see the yellow jersey change hands often, but as a rider,
I want to keep it.”
Stage Three, the Tour’s longest stage
at 209.4km from Sitiawan to Banting today, offers yet another
enticing affair as for two days of flat stages in a row have already
surprised with a lack of bunch sprints, with attacks succeeding
both days.
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