Daniele Bennati of RadioShack-Nissan used all his experience today to outfox Team Sky's Ben Swift to win Stage 18 of the Vuelta in Valladolid this afternoon. Team Sky had led the peloton in the closing few kilometres as they looked to set up the Yorkshireman, and when Ian Stannard peeled off with around 250 metres left to ride, Swift got onto the wheel of AG2R-La Mondiale's Lloyd Mondory and looked poised to take the win. Alberto Contador of Saxo Bank-Tinkoff Bank continues to lead the race overall by nearly two minutes.
Bennati, aged 31, seven years older than Swift, knew exactly which wheel he wated to grab, however, nipping into the Team Sky riders' slipstream and then timimg his move round the 24-year-old to perfection to win the stage by a matter of inches.
John Degenkolb of Argos-Shimano, until now the sprinter to beat in this year's Vuelta, desperately needed a fifth stage victory to try and catch up the three Spaniards ahead of him in the points classification - Contador, Alejandro Valverde of Movistar, and Katusha's Joaquin Rodriguez, the current leader of the points competition.
Degenkolb found himself out of position at the crucial point in the finale, however, and finished fifth, well behind the pair fighting it out for the win.He remains fourth in the points classification, 46 points behind Rodriguez.
Earlier in the 204.5km, mainly flat, stage from Aguilar de Campoo, a crash some 32km out brought down four riders including Bennati's team mate Linus Gerdemann who came down heavily and was subsequently reported to have abandoned the race.
A five man breakaway, comprising uis Angel Mate of Cofidis, Martijn Keizer from Vacansoleil-DCM, the Katusha rider Gatis Smukulis, Andalucia's Gustavo Cesar and Brent Bookwalter of BMC Racing, had been swept up with 18km left to ride with the peloton going flat out, strung way back down the road as it crossed the plain and headed towards Valladolid.
The stage winner the last time the Vuelta visited the city was the Belgian sprinter Wouter Weylandt, Bennati's Leopard Trek teammate, killed in a crash during the 2011 Giro d'Italia. Today the Italian dedicated his stage win to his late colleague.
Vuelta Stage 18 Result
1 BENNATI, Daniele RNT 4h 17' 17''
2 SWIFT, Ben SKY Same time
3 DAVIS, Allan OGE "
4 MONDORY, Lloyd ALM "
5 DEGENKOLB, John ARG "
6 VIGANO, Davide LAM "
7 BRESCHEL, Matti RAB "
8 DE KORT, Koen ARG "
9 DOCKER, Mitchell OGE "
10 RAST, Grégory RNT + 6''
11 BAZAYEV, Assan AST + 6''
12 VIVIANI, Elia LIQ + 6''
13 CLARKE, Simon OGE + 6''
14 DUQUE, Leonardo COF + 6''
15 PÉREZ, Rubén EUS + 6''
16 STANNARD, Ian SKY + 6''
17 KREDER, Michel GRS + 8''
18 TERPSTRA, Niki OPQ + 8''
19 MAASKANT, Martijn GRS + 10''
20 MORENO, Daniel KAT + 10''
Last man home on Stage 18
178 ROSENDO, Jesús ACG + 25' 25''
General Classification after Stage 18
1 CONTADOR, Alberto STB 72h 25' 21''
2 VALVERDE, Alejandro MOV + 1' 52''
3 RODRIGUEZ, Joaquin KAT + 2' 28''
4 FROOME, Christopher SKY + 9' 40''
5 MORENO, Daniel KAT + 11' 36''
6 GESINK, Robert RAB + 12' 02''
7 TEN DAM, Laurens RAB + 12' 55''
8 TALANSKY, Andrew GRS + 13' 06''
9 ANTON, Igor EUS + 13' 49''
10 INTXAUSTI, Beñat MOV + 14' 10''
Points Classification after Stage 18
1 RODRIGUEZ, Joaquin KAT 170
2 VALVERDE, Alejandro MOV 159
3 CONTADOR, Alberto STB 152
4 DEGENKOLB, John ARG 124
5 FROOME, Christopher SKY 93
Mountains Classification after Stage 18
1 CLARKE, Simon OGE 38
2 RODRIGUEZ, Joaquin KAT 36
3 DE GENDT, Thomas VCD 33
4 VALVERDE, Alejandro MOV 31
5 CONTADOR, Alberto STB 28
While a warning letter is better than nothing this should have been a NIP for inconsiderate driving. Classic overtake and then brake,...
It's standard to have a suspended sentence due to full prisons....
Only buy on Aliexpress if you can justify financially supporting intellectual property theft. In my personal opinion.
That might take out a few cows too, thus reducing the impact of the real scourge on public safety.
Perhaps you're running them at lower pressures / with extra weight? I've found they feel sketchy at least when cornering and I've had a few offs...
True ... but left to itself that notion tends to go the same way as instructing pedestrians, cyclists and SUV drivers to "share the road"!...
To be fair to them, it looks like a choice between that or a lot of sunken surfaces and ironworks further out.
...mostly among sports administrators, media, and cycling fans.
>THIS< is the primary reason for 99%+ for a camera!!!!!
At what point will politicians realise that no amount of effort can really protect vulnerable users on roads and that to keep people safe automatic...