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Peter Sagan Sprints to Victory in Stage 5 of 2010 Tour of California By Thomas A. Valentinsen May 21, 2010 - 2:24:16 AM
Team HTC-Columbia's Michael Rogers takes overall Amgen Tour of California lead ahead of Dave Zabriskie (Team Garmin-Transitions) and Levi Leipheimer (Team RadioShack).
Proving to be a devastating crash to the group, Stuart O'Grady (AUS) of Team Saxo Bank and Armstrong abandoned the race to secure medical attention (both are being treated for their injuries and will not be returning to the race). Heinrich Haussler (GER) of Cervélo TestTeam abandoned the race shortly after as well because of knee problems, but had not been involved in the crash. "I fell twice so far during the Tour of California and now my knee hurts but not at the same place as my previous injury," Heinrich Haussler explained. "My form is good and I have to listen to my body, get a few days rest, do some physio and look at the big picture in order to be fully prepared for the 2010 Tour de France."
The second and final sprint of the day in Porterville was nabbed by Karl Menzies (AUS) of UnitedHealthcare Presented by Maxxis, followed by Jeremy Powers (USA) of Jelly Belly Presented by Kenda and Martin. In a chase led by HTC-Columbia, the break of 15 was brought back in, which was promptly followed by several counter attacks until one finally took, which included Paul Mach (USA) of Team BISSELL, Ben Day (AUS) of Fly V Australia, Grischa Nierman (GER) of Rabobank, Mark Renshaw (AUS) of HTC-Columbia, Kurt Hovelynch (BEL) of QuickStep and Will Dicksen (AUS) of Jelly Belly Presented by Kenda. As the riders continued on the way to the final climb of the day, Round Mountain Rd. (Cat. 4 - 1,421 ft.), which was just 21 miles from the finish line in Bakersfield, different teams took turns leading the chase group. From the apex of the final climb, the cyclists will be able to look down onto the finish at Bakersfield College. On the ascent, Day took the opportunity to launch an attack and pulled out ahead of the breakaway, followed closely by Renshaw, but they were caught by the remainder of the breakaway on the descent. The final obstacle of the day was a 10 percent climb up China Grade, which was part of two finishing circuits in Bakersfield. With one lap to go Day pulled away from the group and the rest were caught by the chase, but at the base of the grade on the final circuit, he too was absorbed by the group. In an all out sprint to the finish, Liquigas-Doimo pushed Sagan to the front for the win, followed by Rogers in second and David Zabriskie (USA) of Garmin-Transitions, who started the day as the race's overall leader, in third.
"It was a pretty tough day today with the hard climb, the strong wind and the breakaway that got away. With two laps to go, it was Liquigas-Doimo and Garmin-Transitions who did the work to bring it back," Sagan stated after the stage win and added "Dave Zabriskie took off early in the sprint and with a couple meters to go. It was the right moment and I found a gap." There were several changes in the jerseys today, with Amgen's Breakaway from Cancer Most Courageous Rider Jersey going to Day, the Herbalife Sprint Jersey going to Sagan, and the Amgen Race Leader Jersey changing hands from Zabriskie to Rogers. The other jersey winners remain unchanged with Sagan in the Rabobank Best Young Rider Jersey and Ryan Anderson (CAN) of Kelly Benefit Strategies in the California Travel & Tourism King of the Mountains (KOM) Jersey. "It came down to bonus seconds," Tour of California leader Michael Rogers told Roadcycling.com after the stage. "We still have a lot of racing to go with the mountain stage tomorrow and the Time trial on Sunday but every second counts. I'm expecting teams to throw everything at us tomorrow and we'll do our best to try and defend." "Today was a very aggressive day of racing and when RadioShack picked up the tempo on the climb it thinned the bunch out pretty quickly. It worked out perfectly for us. I felt pretty good. I'm climbing well and I could even have a bit of a sprint today. "I'm really happy with the way the team rode," Rogers added and concluded "We were active all day with Mark Cavendish and Mark Renshaw setting up sprints early on and Renshaw in the break for the rest of the day. Then the boys delivered me perfectly to the finish line. Peter Sagan is a really quick sprinter - something I'm not really renowned for. So the best man won today." The 2010 Tour of California concludes on Sunday. Sign up for your own free training diary at www.roadcycling.com/diary today. Or subscribe to the pro version of our training diary service which is used by pro cyclists in the Tour of California. You too deserve the best, don't you? So act while there's still time! Please support our sponsors:
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