CyclingQuotes.com uses cookies for statistics and targeting ads. This information is shared with third parties.
ACCEPT COOKIES » MORE INFO »

Every day we bring you more pro-cycling news

After a 6-rider break had been caught with 1km to go, Nizzolo was given a textbook lead-out and held off Dupont and Pelucchi in the bunch sprint on stage 3 of the Tour of Croatia; the Italian is back in the leader’s jersey

Photo: ANSA-PERI / Dal Zennaro

GIACOMO NIZZOLO

RIDER PROFILE
|
NEWS

MATTEO PELUCCHI

RIDER PROFILE
|
NEWS

TIMOTHY DUPONT

NEWS

TOUR OF CROATIA

RACE PROFILE
|
NEWS
21.04.2016 @ 17:44 Posted by Emil Axelgaard

Giacomo Nizzolo (Trek) again underlined that he is fully ready for the Giro d’Italia as he took a second stage win on the hilly third stage of the Tour of Croatia. After a very hectic finale where a 6-rider break was caught under the flamme rouge, he was given a textbook lead-out by Edward Theuns  and easily held off Timothy Dupont (Verandas Willems) and Matteo Pelucchi (IAM) in the bunch sprint to take the win and move back into the overall lead.

 

The first start of the season was a frustrating one for Giacomo Nizzolo. The Italian was clearly stronger than ever before and impressed by his aggressive riding in the cobbled classics. He was second in the Dubai Tour queen stage and only narrowly missed out on victory in the Arab race.

 

However, as it has so often been the case for the talented Italian, the elusive win was always missing and he had several places of honour in the first part of the year. However, it now seems that both he and his lead-out train have reached peak condition just in time for his big goal at the Giro d’Italia.

 

Two days ago Nizzolo opened his account when he won a very technical sprint on the first stage of his final warm-up race, the Tour of Croatia, and after a frustrating near-miss yesterday where he lamented the wrong information in the roadbook, he again proved that he is currently the fastest in the Croatian race by winning the third stage of the race.

 

After two relatively flat stages, the 190.8km stage from Makarska to Sibenik was significantly harder as the first half was almost all uphill, culminating at the top of a categorized climb. The second half was mainly descending but with a categorized climb and an uncategorized ascent along the way, the stage was generally tipped to be too tough for most of the fast finishers. In the end, they did one lap of a flat 9.8km circuit.

 

It was a sunny day in Croatia when the 158 surviving riders gathered for the start and with such a lumpy course, it was no surprise that things were aggressive in the opening phase. However, the break was established relatively early as 8 riders managed to build and advantage of 30 seconds after the first intermediate where Nicola Boem (Bardiani) beat Kamik Gradek (Verva) and Josef Cerny (CCC) at the 10km mark.Two riders were distanced and it was Josef Cerny (CCC), Nicola Boem (Bardiani), Marcin Bialoblocki (ONE), Artem Ovechkin (Gazprom-Rusvelo), Mark Christian (WIGGINS) and Kamil Gradek (Verva) who started to increase the advantage. Boem beat Ovechkin and Cerny in the first KOM sprint,

 

The gap quickly went out to three minutes and had reached 4.00 at the 50km mark. It reached a maximum of five minutes fifteen kilometres later but as more team started to chase, the situation changed.

 

Sergio Paulinho (Tinkoff), Julien Bernard (Trek) and Jay Thomson (Dimension Data) did the early work to keep the situation under control as they went up the first climb where Boem beat Ovechkin and Cerny in the KOM sprint. They slowly reduced the gap to 3.30 at the 120km mark and it dropped to less than a minute as they entered the final 55km.

 

As they hit the second climb, Gradek had to dig deep to stay with his companions while Boem again beat Ovechkin and Cerny in the KOM sprint. In the peloton, Paulinho, Thomson and Bernard were still working hard and had reduced the gap to 2 minutes when they entered the final 30km. Ovechkin beat Bialoblocki and Cerny in the final intermediate sprint.

 

The gap was no longer coming down as the six escapees went full gas after the climb and even though Nathan Haas (Dimension Data) was now also taking turns on the front, it was still 2 minutes with 20km to go. Elchin Asadov (Synergy Baku) tried to bridge across but it wasa futile attempt.The uncategorized climb made a difference as Julian Arredondo took over for Trek, joining forces with Thomson but the leaders were still 1.30 ahead as they entered the final 15km.

 

Dimension Data took complete control and had most of their team lined out on the front as they crossed the finish line for the first time but the gap was only coming down slowly. It was still 35 seconds when Daniel Ratto (Androni) made a small attack with 7km to go and the escapees still had 20 seconds when a CCC rider made a move two kilometres later

 

Trek went all in with Gregory Rast and Eugenio Alafaci but they had failed to take back any time with 3km to go where a crash split the field. However, the escapees slowly started to lose ground and as the peloton led by Trek and IAM was breathing down their neck, Bialoblocki tried to attack, distancing Ovechkin in the process.

 

Tinkoff hit the front with Juraj Sagan and his massive turn was enough to bring the break back under the flamme rouge after Bialoblocki and Cerny had tried to insist. The Slovakian led his teammate Jay McCarthy but ran out of power when Boy van Poppel  sprinted past him.

 

Verandas Willems hit the front with one rider leading Timothy Dupont into the perfect position. Nizzolo had latched onto the Belgian’s wheel and was quick to jump onto his teammate Edward Theuns who sprinted out of the penultimate turn.

 

Theuns gave Nizzolo the perfect lead-out as Dupont slotted into third ahead of Nicola Ruffoni (Bardiani), and Matteo Pelucchi (IAM) while Mark Cavendish (Dimension Data) found himself further back. Nizoolo could start his sprint in the final turn and no one could come around as he easily held off Dupont and Pelucchi, with Cavendish making a good comeback to take fourth.

 

With the 10 bonus seconds, Nizzolo is back in the overall lead with a 10-second advantage over Cavendish. However, there will be no third win tomorrow as stage 4 is the queen stage. After a lumpy start, there is ac category 1 climb at the midpoint and then it all comes to an exciting conclusion on the 22km HC climb of Ucka where the climbers will try to gain time before Saturday’s team time trial.

MORE NEWS:

VIEW SELECTED

Bycykling 101: Navigering i byens gader og cykelvenlige... 27.11.2023 @ 12:11The Best Danish Cyclist To Bet On At 2022 Tour De France 13.01.2022 @ 15:262022 Upcoming Tournament Overview 03.01.2022 @ 09:45Best Place to Find Stand-Up Paddleboards 16.06.2021 @ 08:16What are Primoz Roglic’s Chances to Win 2021 Tour de Fr... 17.03.2021 @ 08:37Amazing victory by young champion Sarah Gigante 04.02.2021 @ 14:21Three reasons why cycling is one of the best ways to ex... 28.09.2020 @ 12:03Why do businesses use meeting room managers? 14.09.2020 @ 13:42Five things that you can do, if you want to gain more f... 20.08.2020 @ 15:38One for the road 09.06.2020 @ 15:25List of CyclingQuotes previews 07.05.2020 @ 13:20Blue Energy: room for all interests 26.08.2019 @ 12:56Get your daily dose of exercise at home 08.07.2019 @ 10:443 good advice to be able to afford your favorite bike 25.02.2019 @ 12:32Cycle through gorgeous landscapes 22.10.2018 @ 21:41Balance Your Economy and Diet and Start Saving Money 08.10.2018 @ 11:18Stay Safe: 3 Helmets That Can Keep Your Head Protected... 20.07.2018 @ 07:59Planning to bet on Tour De France - Bet types and strat... 24.05.2018 @ 14:18Basics of cycling betting 25.10.2017 @ 13:10Bauer moves to ORICA-SCOTT 28.08.2017 @ 10:45End of the road for CyclingQuotes 08.01.2017 @ 16:00Rui Costa confirms Giro participation 07.01.2017 @ 12:55Van Avermaet: I am not afraid of Sagan 07.01.2017 @ 09:45Unchanged course for E3 Harelbeke 07.01.2017 @ 09:32Jenner takes surprise win at Australian U23 Championships 07.01.2017 @ 08:53No replacement for Meersman at Fortuneo-Vital Concept 06.01.2017 @ 19:14Barguil with two goals in 2017 06.01.2017 @ 19:06More details about French Vuelta start emerges 06.01.2017 @ 14:16Kristoff to start season at Etoile de Besseges 06.01.2017 @ 14:10Ion Izagirre announces schedule for first year at Bahrain 06.01.2017 @ 12:40JLT Condor optimistic for Herald Sun Tour 06.01.2017 @ 09:19Haas leads Dimension Data trio in fight for Australian... 06.01.2017 @ 09:15Sagan spearheads Bora-hansgrohe at Tour Down Under 06.01.2017 @ 09:12Henao and Thomas lead Sky Down Under 06.01.2017 @ 09:09Bauer crowned New Zealand TT champion 06.01.2017 @ 08:33Van der Poel ready to defend Dutch title 05.01.2017 @ 21:00Pantano ambitious for first Tour with Trek 05.01.2017 @ 20:41Landa with new approach to the Giro 05.01.2017 @ 20:36Sunweb Development Team sign Goos and Zepuntke 05.01.2017 @ 20:27Dumoulin confirms Giro participation 05.01.2017 @ 20:19Bauer targets victories in Quick-Step debut 05.01.2017 @ 20:16Gaviria and Boonen lead Quick-Step in San Juan 05.01.2017 @ 20:13Team Sunweb presented in Germany 05.01.2017 @ 20:09ASO take over major German WorldTour race 05.01.2017 @ 11:01Team Sunweb unveil new jersey 05.01.2017 @ 10:54Reactions from the Australian TT Championships 05.01.2017 @ 08:27Dennis defends Australian TT title 05.01.2017 @ 08:21Scotson takes back to back U23 TT titles in Australia 05.01.2017 @ 08:15Utrecht on track to host 2020 Vuelta 04.01.2017 @ 18:28Pre-season setback for Talansky 04.01.2017 @ 17:56Kristoff: It's not impossible for me to win in Rou... 04.01.2017 @ 17:49Boom close to first cyclo-cross win in LottoNL debut 04.01.2017 @ 17:40UAE Abu Dhabi make late signing of Arab rider 04.01.2017 @ 17:36UAE Abu Dhabi unveil new jersey 04.01.2017 @ 17:30BMC unveil race schedule 04.01.2017 @ 17:21

Currently no news in this list

Rodney SANTIAGO
36 years | today
Edward WALSH
28 years | today
Ryoma WATANABE
23 years | today
Kairat BAIGUDINOV
46 years | today
Anthony SAUX
33 years | today

© CyclingQuotes.com