Liege-Bastogne-Liege: Martin win seals tactical tour de force for Garmin

By Felix Lowe / Expert

What a way to secure your first victory in one of cycling’s Monuments: making Joaquim Rodriguez look average in a pulsating final kilometre in Liege-Bastogne-Liege.

Yet that’s what Ireland’s Dan Martin did in ‘La Doyenne’ – the oldest of cycling’s Classics – on Sunday. Drawing level with his Spanish rival in the last kilometre, Martin then left Rodriguez for dead with a final dig ahead of the final bend to solo home in style.

While Martin’s win was a piece of individual brilliance it was also the culmination of a carefully thought-out plan by Garmin-Sharp – perfectly executed by both Martin and team-mate Ryder Hesjedal.

Before the race, Canadian reigning Giro d’Italia winner Hesjedal said the team would be riding for Martin during the undulating 262km race through the Belgian countryside.

The race was a rather routine affair until a series of attacks came on the infamous La Redoute climb as the day’s initial break were reeled in some 40km from the finish.

When Hesjedal attacked from a select leading group 16 kilometres from the finish on the penultimate climb of the day, the Cote de Colonster, it looked as if either Garmin were trying out Plan B or Hesjedal had been telling fibs to shield his own ambitions.

Exploiting a moment of indecision from his fellow escapees and a lack of coherence a bit further back down the road amongst the big race favourites, Hesjedal went into full time trial mode as he opened up a 20 second gap ahead of the final climb of the day, the Cote de Saint-Nicolas.

When the counter attacks came thick and fast on the 8.6% slope of the 1.2km climb, Martin was on hand to join the party. The 26-year-old – who finished fifth in last year’s Doyenne – helped chase down the active Carlos Betancur (Ag2R-La Mondiale) before forming a leading group alongside the Colombian, his Canadian team-mate, Rodriguez of Katusha, Italian Michele Scarponi (Lampre) and two-time former winner Alejandro Valverde (Movistar).

His chances for the solo win over, Hesjedal still had a huge role to play inside the final five kilometres. The 32-year-old drove the tempo of the six-man break on the flat drag into the finish town of Ans, allowing Martin to save his energy by sitting at the back.

Once Rodriguez made his own attack as the road head back uphill just over one kilometre from the finish, Martin was able to latch on to Scarponi’s wheel in the chase before shedding the Italian and drawing level with Rodriguez, who finished second in the race back in 2009.

Martin had the momentum entering the final 300 metres – and once the road levelled out, the Birmingham-born climbing specialist surprised by launching his sprint early ahead of the final bend. It was a devastating final blow to Rodriguez, whose Ardennes Classics week was wrecked by that crash in last Sunday’s Amstel Gold.

Martin had the luxury of being able to coast across the line – his arms aloft in celebration and that goofy grin of his bigger than ever – as he wrapped up what was the perfect race for both him and his Garmin team.

Hesjedal finished 18 seconds down in eighth place and rode straight to his team-mate for a hug and some words of encouragement. Job well and truly done. Watching at home, team manager Jonathan Vaughters couldn’t hide his feelings of euphoria.

“Hahshahavhhaaaaaaaaaaaaaaapprhthfgdghhc!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,” he tweeted.

But it’s worth pressing that Martin’s win – or Garmin’s perfect dovetailing of tactics – was no isolated fluke.

Martin placed fifth in this race last year – so we already knew he had the class to be there or thereabouts. A former Vuelta a Espana stage winner, Martin also won this year’s Volta a Catalunya after a victory in stage four which followed a familiar script: Hesjedal buried himself in the break alongside Martin, putting a minute on his team-mate’s main rivals for the GC and giving the Irishman a springboard both for the stage victory that also put him in the leader’s jersey, which he wore till the finish.

The rider he kept off the top rung of the podium? Joaquim Rodriguez.

Then last Wednesday we had the Fleche Wallonne, after which Martin admitted he was “gutted” to have missed out on a podium position by a matter of inches. Having dropped the likes of Philippe Gilbert, Alberto Contador, Peter Sagan and Valverde on the Mur de Huy, Martin was clearly riding into a rich vein of form.

Such was Martin’s promise going into the 99th edition of Liege-Bastogne-Liege, Ireland’s only other former winner of ‘La Doyenne’ – Sean Kelly – told me before the race that Martin was his outside tip for the win.

“Valverde is the favourite in the best form but I would watch out for Dan Martin today,” Kelly told me ahead of his commentary shift for Eurosport.

And Kelly – having won the race in both 1984 and 1989 – knows what it takes to triumph in a demanding 262km race that features more than 4,700 vertical metres of climbing.

Most tellingly of all, perhaps, Martin’s team manager – despite his seemingly incredulous reaction to the result – predicted the victory.

Asked before the race who would win by a follower on Twitter, Vaughters replied: “Tactics and hesitation will be the deciding factors after La Redoute. So, intelligence will win. Dan Martin.”

Wise words.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2013-04-30T19:01:21+00:00

Felix Lowe

Expert


Sean is a man of a few words, Lee - I can ask but will be tricky now we're hitting Grand Tour season (he's usually out in situ).

2013-04-24T01:51:56+00:00

Lee Rodgers

Expert


I disagree about 'harsh' - I think all ex-dopers should be banned from management and coaching. I can't see how having them still around sends anything but the wrong message to the young riders. So many guys who weren't as successful as these ex-dopers, like JV and Riis - just faded away but may well have been brilliant coaches, because they actually hung in there in the pro peloton for years and did it clean, too. Guys like JV and Riis are still reaping the benefits from having cheated, because in all likelihood they would not have had the same opportunities in cycling post-racing as they had if they had not been as successful as they were whilst racing - a success which, of course, was aided greatly by vials of EPO and the rest of it. The current silence emanating from the pro peloton is deafening. It's just normal service resumed, and a very great opportunity is slipping away, daily.

2013-04-23T12:14:33+00:00

Justin Curran

Roar Rookie


The classics were great this year! I feel a bit sorry for Gilbert. It really was him versus the world, and he came off second best. Now hopefully the Giro is as entertaining as it was last year.

2013-04-23T07:32:08+00:00

Bobo

Guest


I think some holier than thou pros talk out of both sides of their face. Actions speak louder than words.

2013-04-23T07:24:07+00:00

Brendan Bradford

Roar Pro


I think Vaughters - and others still in pro-cycling - are doing their best to make up for their past indiscretions and are legitimately trying to clean up the sport. David Millar is an example. To ban them all completely seems harsh. Great race though. Wonder how Hesjedal would have gone if the rest of the course was flat, seemed pretty strong.

2013-04-22T18:40:44+00:00

delbeato

Roar Guru


Harsh Lee. Vaughters appears to be making a genuine effort to clean up cycling. I'm sure there are other DSs in the pro ranks without doping histories, but who are more tolerant of the practice. On a related note, I was happy to see two riders who have taken significant anti-doping stances (I'm assuming they're clean, although we can't be sure, but let's not speculate) take positions 1-2. This is more heart-warming than some previous years' results.

2013-04-22T13:18:29+00:00

Lee Rodgers

Expert


Yes, the doping history. I feel dopers should be banned from management. That would mean a lot of guys, but I think their presence alone sends out the wrong message.

2013-04-22T10:56:23+00:00

Tim Renowden

Expert


Great race, great report. The last 20km was just frenetic, attacks everywhere, the peloton smeared all over the course, real white-knuckle stuff. I thought Valverde had the easy sit, but clearly Rodriguez was having none of that, and Martin looked really strong. Loved it.

2013-04-22T05:23:17+00:00

tommy

Guest


Why don't you like Vaughters Lee? Is it because of the doping history or you just don't like him?

2013-04-22T03:38:57+00:00

Lee Rodgers

Expert


I am never really happy when Vaughters' team win, have to say, I think we'd be better off without him in top-level cycling (or any other cycling for that matter), but as for the individual riders, well what a great result. Amazed by the strength of Hesjedal, to power solo for so long then to have enough to keep the break away, that is some effort. Then I thought Martin hadn;t the confidence to take on Purito as he rode to him easily enough but then rode alongside him - i thought 'He's respecting him too much' - shows how wrong I can be! What a finish, what a finale to the spring classics - awesome, brilliant season, apart from la Fleche bu we can let her off, the rest has been breathtaking. Hurry up 2014! Any chance of an interview with Kelly, Felix?

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