with the added motivation of a stage win in front of his parents, who had flown over from Australia as a surprise, race leader Caleb Ewan threw everything he had at the line today, beating second-placed Patrick Bevin (Avanti Racing Team) by a bike length. Ewan, a sprinter whose team came to Korea with ambitions to only win stages, now goes into Sunday's final 65km stage in Seoul with an eight-second buffer over Bevin in the General Classification. Though reluctant all week to voice any ambitions of an overall win, both Ewan and his team will now invest energy into protecting the yellow jersey.
"It’s pretty obvious now that we will ride to protect the general classification” said Sports Director, David McPartland. “It hasn’t been a goal of ours all week, we have been prioritising things to go for stages. In the final it’ll be the same deal, we will set up Caleb again for the win. The only difference tomorrow is that there are intermediate bonus seconds on offer throughout the stage so we will be on the alert for those."
Under the watchful gaze of ORICA-GreenEDGE, four riders - Luke Grivell-Mellor (JLT Condor), Jang Kyunggu (Korail Cycling Team), Damien Monier and Kazuo Inoue (both Bridgestone Anchor Cycling) - broke off the front of an otherwise contained peloton after the first hour of racing.
Gaining a lead of five minutes as they approached the category three climb just prior to the stage's 145.8km mid-point, Polka Dot jersey-wearer Jang - despite starting the day with an unassailable lead in the climber's classification - moved ahead of this breakaway companions to secure maximum KOM points.
With his group's lead drastically cut to less than a minute with 30km remaining, Grivell-Mellor led through the intermediate sprint (at 118.1km) before dropping off to be swept up by the rapidly-approaching main field. Against oppressive headwinds, the peloton absorbed the remaining trio inside the last 10km.
Passing through the 3km marker, Ewan's teammate Leigh Howard dug deep, hauling the strung-out bunch over a small climb and onto the descent towards the finishing area at Daejong's World Cup stadium, where a final right-hander 300m from the finish line awaited. Already in excess of 70kph, Howard swung off and OGE's Mitchell Docker and Adam Blythe pulled a perfectly-positioned Ewan towards his fourth Tour de Korea stage win and, perhaps, his first overall yellow jersey.
After hugging his Mum and Dad, Ewan spoke with cautious excitement at the prospect of winning his first stage. "Mum messaged me last night and told me she was here. It made it a bit more special winning today knowing that my family are here. Obviously, it would be nice to win the whole tour now that they’re here - it would make it a bit more special. It’s not like I have that much of a buffer where I can just sit up and relax. The team is still riding so strong, they’re not showing any weakness, so that’s a good sign. I’m still feeling good and I’m confident going in, but you can’t celebrate and relax and say 'I’ve got it'"
Evgeniy KRIVOSHEEV 36 years | today |
Rodney SANTIAGO 36 years | today |
Edward WALSH 28 years | today |
Chun Te CHIANG 40 years | today |
Sivianny ROJAS 36 years | today |
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