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Paris-Nice Stage 2: Belkin's Moreno Hofland wins sprint, FDJ's Nacer Bouhanni keeps overall lead

Crash 10km out takes out riders including points classification leader Gianni Meersman of OPQS

Belkin's Moreno Hofland has won Stage 2 of Paris Nice in Saint-Georges-sur-Baulche, outsprinting Giant-Shimano's John Degenkolb to win. FDJ.fr's Nacer Bouhanni finishd third to keep the race lead after a crash cost rival Gianni Meersman of Omega Pharma-Quick Step the chance to contest the sprint.

That crash, which came 10km out, saw other riders who might have fancied their chances today such as Team Sky's Edvald Boasson Hagen, Tyler Farrar of Garmin-Sharp and Belkin's Lars Boom hit the deck.

It was Meersman, however, who was left ruing a missed opportunity. In the green jersey of points classification leader following yesterday's opening stage, he drafted his team car in a desperate attempt to rejoin the peloton, an action noted by the commissaires.

The Belgian had picked up a second at each of the day's intermediate sprints to become virtual leader on the road, and would have taken over the race leadership had he placed higher than Bouhanni in the sprint.

But as he rode through the back markers in the final kilometre it was clear he would not be contesting it, and he crossed the line 18 seconds behind the winner - and then received a 1 minute 10 seconds penalty from the commissaires for that earlier illegal drafting.

Two riders got away early on in the 205 km stage from Saint-Georges-sur-Baulche, Anthony Delaplace of Bretagne Séché Environnement and Aleksejs Saramotins of IAM.

At one point they had a lead of more than 11 minutes over the peloton, but that lead was slashed in the closing part of the race.

Saramontins attacked with 12km left, but with the peloton forcing the pace the catch was inevitable and he was reeled in with 4km left.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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Metjas | 10 years ago
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OPQS should be ashamed in drafting Meersman the way the team car did - thankfully the commissaires calculated what time he would likely have lost when penalising him.

I think time penalties should be used in all infractions - do away with these childish £200 or so fines which are exactly why pros still attempt these things. Two infractions and teams should be thrown off the race.

Let's hope the racing gets a bit more exciting, the route is certainly not helping...

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chiv30 replied to Metjas | 10 years ago
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Metjas wrote:

OPQS should be ashamed in drafting Meersman the way the team car did - thankfully the commissaires calculated what time he would likely have lost when penalising him.

I think time penalties should be used in all infractions - do away with these childish £200 or so fines which are exactly why pros still attempt these things. Two infractions and teams should be thrown off the race.

Let's hope the racing gets a bit more exciting, the route is certainly not helping...

Any team and rider in that position would do the same and chance the fine , having drafted a greenedge car last year for about 10km ( at their request) through a town on rolling terrain I can safely say once ur in the slipstream you can really fly along with little effort I'm nowhere near a pro and yet I was hitting 50kph going uphill so looking at that today I'd suggest it was upwards of 70kph for about 8km if not more however it was the blatant use of his own team car that cost him the time penalty not the actual speed and distance .

With regards to the parcours this year I think it's gonna make it an interesting race tbh

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nicholassmith | 10 years ago
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Meersman has now been docked 1:10 for the infraction, it was a bit blatant after all.

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bobbinogs | 10 years ago
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Outrageous car drafting by Meersman!! The pros moan about photobikes affecting results and then appear more than happy to (slightly) cheat when it suits...

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