Wegmann Wins Stage 1 of Dauphine Libere, Takes Overall Lead
By Gerald Churchill
Jun 5, 2006, 20:46
Fabian Wegmann (Gerolsteiner)
has won Stage 1 of the Dauphine Libere. The German rider took a three-up sprint
to win the rolling, 207-km run from Annecy to Bourgoin-Jallieu in 5:06:36.
Thomas Voeckler (Bouygues Telecom) finished second, and Egoi Martinez (Discovery
Channel) finished third. Wegmann has taken overall leadership from prologue
winner David Zabriskie (CSC).
Wegmann takes the stage win ahead of Voeckler and Martinez. Photo copyright Fotoreporter Sirotti.
The
racing began early. At two km, Nicolas Inaudi (Cofidis) sallied off of the
front. No one pursued the Frenchman, and his lead ballooned to 18:10 at 75 km.
Credit Agricole began to ride tempo, and at 127 km, CSC joined the French squad
to protect Zabriskie’s yellow jersey.
At 97.5
km, a collision occurred. Levi Leipheimer (Gerolsteiner), Francisco Mancebo
(Ag2r), Chris Horner (Davitamon), Filippo Pozzato (Quick Step), and Andrei
Grivko (Milram) went down. Leipheimer collided with a motorbike. Leipheimer’s
bike was demolished, but Leipheimer was uninjured. Certainly, the episode did
not help the pursuit.
With 30
km left, 4:30 separated Inaudi from the peloton. At the base of the Cote de
Rapoux (193 km), Kurt-Asle Arvesen (CSC) and Manuel Quiziato and Vincenzo Nibali
(both from Liquigas) attempted to catch Inaudi. The peloton reeled in the trio,
but Wegmann, Mancebo, Martinez, and Voeckler countered. The quartet reeled in
Inaudi one km before the summit.
With
eight km left, the escapees led the peloton by 0:40. Credit Agricole, which had
led the pursuit for some time, received assistance from Quick Step. The bunch
made inroads into the break’s lead, but it was too late.
Fabian Wegmann wearing yellow on the podium. Photo copyright Fotoreporter Sirotti.
With
three km left, Martinez attacked his companions but could not escape. In the
last km, Voeckler made his move, but he was reeled in. With 200 m left, Wegmann
sprang into the lead and held off Voeckler to win.
In
the overall, Wegmann leads Voeckler and Zabriskie by 0:05. Stage 2 might produce
another leadership change. The 203-km ride from Bourjoin-Jallieu to
Saint-Galmier has four Category 4 four climbs that might break up the field.
Will another small group escape? If so, who will be in it? For the answers to
these questions and more, check in at www.roadcycling.com!