Vuelta diary stage 4, Finally another Grand Tour stage win for Orica GreenEdge

By zacbrygel / Roar Guru

After what has been a long drought for Orica GreenEdge since sprinter Matt Goss won the third stage of the 2012 Giro d’Italia, the Australian team have finally won another Grand Tour stage thanks to Simon Clarke’s incredible efforts in today’s stage.

Clarke, a 26 year old former track rider, was among the group of five riders that established the breakaway group at the beginning of the stage. The group was soon trimmed to two, with the Australian and German world time trial champion Tony Martin the only survivors.

The duo held strong, and after the all important 13.4km category 1 climb that took the riders to 1km from the finish, the pair held a 50 second advantage of the main group.

From then onwards it was a sprint to the line, with Clarke proving way too strong for Martin who, it must be said, is not suited to sprint finishes. However, in spite of this, Clarke’s stage win should not be disregarded, as his four and a half hour effort was simply outstanding.

On another note, last night’s stage certainly shook up the general classification. After going into stage four with an 18 second lead in the general classification, Alejandro Valverde had a horror stage finishing 36 seconds down overall on new race leader, Spaniard Joaquim Rodriguez.

The cause of Valverde’s time loss was a big crash early in the stage, which caused 10 riders to tumble. Once Valverde recovered, he and his team mates worked to their limits to bridge the gap of the main peloton, however they were unsuccessful in this very difficult mission.

For now though, let’s focus on an Aussie stage win in a Grand Tour. Simon Clarke, a relatively unknown rider who has a strong background in track cycling, hasn’t achieved much on the road prior to this stage win. His previous best effort, a second placing in the Glava Tour of Norway, is incomparable to a stage win in a Grand Tour.

It truly was a great day for Australian cycling, and finally we Australians can celebrate a second Aussie Orica GreenEdge rider’s stage win in a Grand Tour.

Stage five tonight is a 168km ride around the streets of Logrono, where the riders will complete a 40km course on numerous occasions. It is a relatively flat stage, so expect the sprinters to shine.

Stage four ‘unsung hero’: Tony Martin. While the German didn’t grab the stage win, it was a superb performance by the time trial specialist to hold off the peloton for 168km without much help in a high mountain stage where the terrain does not suit him. Great effort, Tony Martin.

Stage results:

1.

CLARKE, S.
OGE
4:30:26
2.

MARTIN, T.
OPQ
a 2
3.

BAZAYEV, A.
AST
a 22
4.

GARCIA, M.
CJR
a 55
5.

ROCHE, N.
ALM
a 55
6.

GERDEMANN, L.
RNT
a 57
7.

TEN DAM, L.
RAB
a 57
8.

ZEITS, A.
AST
a 1:01
9.

MOLLEMA, B.
RAB
a 1:04
10.

BAKELANTS, J.
RNT
a 1:04

General classification:

1.

RODRIGUEZ, J.
KAT
13:18:45
2.

FROOME, C.
SKY
a 1
3.

CONTADOR, A.
STB
a 5
4.

MOLLEMA, B.
RAB
a 9
5.

GESINK, R.
RAB
a 9
6.

URAN, R.
SKY
a 11
7.

MORENO, D.
KAT
a 14
8.

ROCHE, N.
ALM
a 24
9.

VALVERDE, A.
MOV
a 36
10.

TEN DAM, L.
RAB
a 46

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2012-08-22T12:41:29+00:00

zacbrygel

Roar Guru


I would really like to thank you Moses for providing comments on my Vuelta diary day after day, I greatly appreciate it.

AUTHOR

2012-08-22T12:40:40+00:00

zacbrygel

Roar Guru


Good points raised there Moses. I agree with you on most of your points, except consider this. Without race radios how would riders know what was going on in front and behind them in the stage? Riders would become confused and in my view it would make for some less exciting racing. However, you made some strong points as well that certainly have great justification.

2012-08-22T08:29:41+00:00

Moses

Roar Rookie


I think a lot of fans, riders and race organisers want to get rid of radios. It's probably just the DS's who want to keep them. They don't use them for ProCont races, so that disparity is one of many reasons to give them the flick. One does wonder if Caja Rural would fork out for radios for their 2 or 3 (max) World Tour races each year. Voeckler raised another good argument at the TDF: that they're causing crashes because DS's are using them to direct their teams to all go to the front of the peloton at the same time. There's footage of Neil Stephens talking into his radio in a OGE backstage pass a few days ago during the final sprint. He was just yelling 'go, c'mon, yes, go, c'mon', etc. Must be a massive irritant for the poor riders.

AUTHOR

2012-08-22T08:20:43+00:00

zacbrygel

Roar Guru


Interesting thought Moses, you could well be right as if they did have race radios surely Rural would've known that he had't won the stage. This brings into debate the so called 'arms race' that is occuring between teams on the UCI world tour? Is it unfair that some teams can't afford the same racing technology that others can? I would be very intrigued to hear your view on that matter.

2012-08-22T07:47:50+00:00

Moses

Roar Rookie


My hero of the day was no-name Marcos Garcia, who outsprinted a bemused Nicolas Roche for 4th place and started celebrating the stage win that he didn't realise had already been taken by Simon Clarke. I wonder: is it that Caja Rural, a Pro Continental team, can't afford race radios?

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