Evans snatches Giro lead after mountain stage

Evans snatches Giro lead after mountain stage
Updated 18 May 2014 20:38
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Evans snatches Giro lead after mountain stage

Evans snatches Giro lead after mountain stage

MONTECOPIOLO: Cadel Evans snatched the overall lead in the Giro d’Italia after finishing among a group of race favorites in Saturday’s eighth stage, the first mountain test of the event that was won by Italian Diego Ulissi.
BMC rider Evans, the 2011 Tour de France champion, wrested the pink jersey away from fellow Australian Michael Matthews who was quickly dropped when the competitors started to climb in the 179-km trek from Foligno.
Evans, who gained ground on his main rivals after dodging Thursday’s crashes, now leads Colombian Rigoberto Uran by 57 seconds. Poland’s Rafal Majka is third, 1:10 off the pace.
Italian Michele Scarponi lost lots of time after struggling all day with a leg injury.
Frenchman Pierre Rolland, who surged clear of the peloton with 30-km left, was caught 250 meters from the line after an attack by Spaniard Dani Moreno.
Lampre rider Ulissi won the stage after outsprinting Croatian Robert Kiserlovski.
“I hung in there all day to stay in the leading group. Then I did a super sprint,” Ulissi told Italian media.
Sunday’s 172-km ninth stage is from Lugo to Testola.

Wiggins keeps lead

Former Tour de France winner Bradley Wiggins retained the Tour of California overall lead on Friday as Colombia’s Esteban Chaves won the sixth stage from Santa Clarita to Mountain High.
Wiggins, who took the lead with a triumph in the second stage individual time trial on Monday, finished fifth in the toughest stage of the race and extended his overall lead to 30 seconds going into the final two stages this weekend.
Orica rider Chavez powered solo to win the 152-kilometer stage that ended in the San Gabriel Mountains northeast of Los Angeles in a time of 4 hours 9 minutes 13 seconds.
On a day when temperatures again soared into the upper 30s Celsius (near 100 Fahrenheit), the Colombian climber attacked from a small group in the last five kilometers of the final ascent, putting some room between himself and David de la Cruz of Spain and American Tom Danielson.
De la Cruz finished second, 13 seconds back, and Danielson was third, 41 seconds adrift.
Briton Adam Yates was fourth, 53 seconds back, with Wiggins fifth in the same time.
“Surprisingly, I was pretty comfortable with four kilometers to go,” Wiggins said. “Then the altitude kicked in.” He had enough left, however, to hold off his nearest rival in the overall classification, Australian Rohan Dennis.
Garmin’s Dennis finished seventh, 55 seconds off the lead to surrender two seconds to Wiggins overall.
“We had Tommy D off the front, so we were watching what Sky was doing,” Dennis said.
“Hopefully, they were riding hard and they would just blow up like they did on Diablo. But it wasn’t quite as steady an uphill, there was some downhill to recover. When we got to the last kilometer I don’t think I’ve pedaled like that for awhile.” The race continues Saturday with a 143-kilometer stage from Santa Clarita to Pasadena that features two significant climbs, with the final stretch all downhill.
The tour concludes on Sunday in Thousand Oaks, in rolling countryside west of Los Angeles.