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Vuelta Stage 17: Rouleur Roux remains clear for maiden Grand Tour stage win

GC contenders Gesink and Mosquera bloodied and bruised after fall

Image © Unipublic

Vuelta Stage 17: Ciudad Real - Talavera de la Reina, 194KM

Anthony Roux of Française des Jeux just managed to hold on to keep the chasing peloton at bay and take Stage 17 of the Vuelta in Talavera de la Reina this afternoon. In a French one-two, William Bonnet of BBOX Bouygues Telecom crossed the line in second place, exactly as he had done yesterday.

Alejandro Valverde retains the race leaders golden jersey, and his closest rival, Rabobank’s Robert Gesink, will be nursing cuts and bruises for the rest of the race after coming down in a fall which also saw Xacobeo-Galicia’s Ezequiel Mosquera, sixth in the general classification, hit the tarmac. Both got back to the main bunch so lost no time.

Roux, a 22-year-old from Verdun, had been involved in a five-man break that went off 10 kilometres into the stage and at one point had a seven-minute gap, but in the closing 30 kilometres of the race, Liquigas, Milram and Columbia-HTC worked together, chasing hard to try and catch the escapees to set up a bunch sprint.

As the break passed under the three kilometre to go banner, Dutchman Martijn Maaskant of Garmin-Slipstream decided that attack was the best option and headed up the road on his own.

Roux, who had been urging his fellow escapees to keep working together to hold the chasing pack at bay, went off in pursuit and quickly bridged the gap before passing Maaskant with around a kilometre to go.

Britain’s Roger Hammond and the Kiwi Julian Dean, both involved in a crash in the closing kilometres of yesterday’s stage, seemed to have suffered no lasting damage as they came in today in 11th and 16th place respectively.

Tomorrow’s Stage 17 covers the 165 kilometres from Talavera de la Reina to Ávila, and with a Category 1 climb coming early on, Valverde’s Caisse d’Epargne team will be keeping a watchful eye on his rivals for the race lead.

Friday’s stage, which includes three Category 1 ascents, and Saturday’s individual time trial in Toledo, represent the last opportunities for grand classification contenders to wrest the golden jersey from Valverde’s grasp before the race finishes in Madrid on Sunday.

Top 20 Stage 17

1) Anthony Roux (Francaise Des Jeux)      04:28:14
2) William Bonnet (BBOX Bouygues Telecom) 00:00:00
3) André Greipel (Columbia-HTC)           00:00:00
4) Daniele Bennati (Liquigas)             00:00:00
5) Fco. José Pacheco (Contentpoli-Ampo)   00:00:00
6) Jurgen Roelandts (Silence-Lotto)       00:00:00
7) Sébastien Hinault (AG2R La Mondiale)   00:00:00
8) Javier Benitez (Contentpoli-Ampo)      00:00:00
9) Enrico Gasparotto (Lampre-NGC)         00:00:00
10) Borut Bozic (Vacansoleil)             00:00:00
11) Matti Breschel (Saxo Bank)            00:00:00
12) Roger Hammond (Cervelo TestTeam)      00:00:00
13) Leonardo Duque (Cofidis)              00:00:00
14) Gerald Ciolek (Milram)                00:00:00
15) Matteo Tosatto (Quick Step)           00:00:00
16) Julian Dean (Garmin-Slipstream)       00:00:00
17) Assan Bazayev (Astana)                00:00:00
18) Greg Henderson (Columbia-HTC)         00:00:00
19) Massimiliano Mori (Lampre-NGC)        00:00:00
20) Kevin De Weert (Quick Step)           00:00:00

Top 10 General Classification after Stage 15

1) Alejandro Valverde (Caisse d'Epargne) 74:27:48
2) Robert Gesink (Rabobank)              00:00:31
3) Samuel Sánchez (Euskaltel-Euskadi)    00:01:10
4) Ivan Basso (Liquigas)                 00:01:28
5) Cadel Evans (Silence-Lotto)           00:01:51
6) Ezequiel Mosquera (Xacobeo-Galicia)   00:01:54
7) Joaquin Rodriguez (Caisse d'Epargne)  00:05:53
8) Paolo Tiralongo (Lampre-NGC)          00:06:28
9) Thomas Danielson (Garmin-Slipstream)  00:08:28
10) Juan José Cobo (Fuji-Servetto)       00:10:45

 

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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