Cannondale-Garmin’s Lasse-Norman Hansen won stage five of the Tour of Alberta in bizarre circumstances this week when the chasing peloton missed a turning. After the bunch had done a U-turn, officials neutralised the two finishing circuits and awarded Hansen the win, even though he still had 2km to go.
The Edmonton Journal reports how Sven Erik Bystrom of Team Katusha, who was chasing Hansen, missed a crucial turn despite race marshals frantically waving their arms and flags to indicate he should turn right. The peloton followed and a short while later, both Bystrom and the peloton were forced to turn around and head back the way they’d come, as you can see below.
Trek Factory Racing's Laurent Didier secured a somewhat sneaky second place. Trailing the peloton, he stayed on course and effectively overtook the entire field while they were taking their unscheduled detour.
However, even Didier had his problems, seemingly unsure whether he had actually finished upon crossing the line or whether he still needed to do another lap. The answer was that he would have needed to do another lap if race organisers hadn’t already made the decision to cancel the final two circuits. Not that the crowd knew. They told him to carry on.
Jeff Corbett, vice-president of technical operations for the race, explained that the stage had to be cut short because Hansen would have ended up cycling headlong into ‘the wrong way group’.
The Edson to Spruce Grove stage – at 206km, the longest of the six-day tour – also featured 21km of dirt road. Hansen explained his motivations for attacking during one of these sections.
“I went on the break on the second-last piece of gravel. That was simply because I was freezing and I wanted to go faster. I was freezing the whole way and at that point, I just thought, these guys are going too slow, I’ll never get any heat in my hands again.”
Didier’s team-mate Bauke Mollema finished in the main bunch and ultimately went on to win the overall.
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Alex has written for more cricket publications than the rest of the road.cc team combined. Despite the apparent evidence of this picture, he doesn't especially like cake.
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They must have my Garmin Edge Touring. It's always getting me lost.