The New Zealand Herald

Bevin into No 1 spot at Tour of Britain

- Niall Anderson

Kiwi cyclist Patrick Bevin is wearing a leader’s jersey at a major stage race for the second time this year — and this time, he might be able to keep it.

The 27-year-old has shot into the lead at the Tour of Britain after a second-place finish on stage three yesterday morning, being narrowly edged out by Julian Alaphilipp­e in a slight uphill sprint to the line.

While Bevin could agonise over the result — he was boxed in on the barriers and once he found room to sprint, his rapid finish was just too late — it came with a more than handy consolatio­n prize — the green leader’s jersey.

Fellow Kiwi Dion Smith continued his excellent form to claim ninth on the stage to sit 15th overall, 49 seconds behind Bevin, who leads Commonweal­th Games time trial champion Cameron Meyer on a countback, after clawing back an eight-second deficit with two bonus seconds at an intermedia­te sprint and six bonus seconds for his second place.

“We knew it was another stage that had a really tough finish,” analysed Bevin.

“These kinds of stages really drain the legs and for us, the idea was to try and get over the last KOM in a good position and try to fight for the win in the sprint. It was a really hard sprint and when we came up into the final kilometre, everyone was a little bit legless and everything happened in slow motion really. Unfortunat­ely, I didn’t quite have the legs to get over Julian but I am happy that I can now wear the leader’s jersey.”

Although missing out on what would have been his first stage victory in 33 months, Bevin continues a strong year, which has seen him

We knew it was another stage that had a really tough finish Patrick Bevin

twice finish second in individual time trials, win two team time trials — including one at the Tour de France — and now take back-to-back third and second-place finishes in Britain.

Bevin also held the leader’s jersey for a day at Tirreno-Adriatico earlier in March, but that was just as a placeholde­r, before losing it in the mountains. This time, things could be extremely different, with Bevin looming as one of the hot favourites to take the overall win.

It would be a remarkable accomplish­ment, because it won’t be easy. While the race isn’t a World Tour event, there are 11 World Tour teams participat­ing, and the field is littered with classy riders. Aside from Alaphilipp­e, there’s Tour de France fourth-place finisher Primoz Roglic, while, oh yeah, Tour de France champions Chris Froome and Geraint Thomas are casually riding around as well, in support of Team Sky’s big hope, Wout Poels.

However, in amongst all of those names is Bevin, and the race suits him perfectly. There are no mountains on the schedule — it is Britain, after all — and his BMC squad are masters of the team time trial, which makes an appearance on stage five.

With today’s stage looking like one for the sprinters, there is a chance that Bevin could open up a buffer if things go well in the team time trial, and then — following the style of Matej Mohoric — do everything in his will to cling on to the jersey in the final three stages.

I may be getting ahead of myself, and Bevin will surely play down his overall ambitions by pulling out the cyclist’s cliche of choice — “taking it day by day”.

So, sure, while it may be remiss to call him the number one favourite — Alaphilipp­e, Poels, Roglic and Bob Jungels will fancy their chances on stage six’s uphill finish — make no mistake: Bevin is in with a legitimate chance at earning the biggest result of his cycling career.

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? Patrick Bevin (left) was edged for the stage three win by Julian Alaphilipp­e but second place was good enough to hand the Kiwi the green jersey.
Photo / Getty Images Patrick Bevin (left) was edged for the stage three win by Julian Alaphilipp­e but second place was good enough to hand the Kiwi the green jersey.

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