Lodi News-Sentinel

Huffman wins from breakaway in Stage 4

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SANTA CLARITA — Evan Huffman had spent nearly the entire day in a breakaway with four other riders at the Tour of California, his energy drained and his legs pushed to the limit in an effort to stay away.

Yet his mind couldn’t help but wander.

Huffman thought back to last year’s stage into Santa Clarita, when he was part of a breakaway that also stayed clear to the finish. And he couldn’t help but think about Ben King beating him to the line that day, dashing the American rider’s chances of a career-defining victory.

“I was just thinking about how much it would stink not to win again,” Huffman said.

No need to think about that anymore.

With the hard-charging peloton chasing them down, Huffman sprinted clear of the fiveman break and threw his arms up at the finish line, winning the fourth stage in dramatic fashion Wednesday.

He was followed across the line by Rally Cycling teammate Rob Britton in a banner day for the small U.S.-based squad, which was granted a wild card to compete against some of the world’s top teams.

“I can’t believe we did it. It’s still so surreal,” Huffman said

after collapsing onto a patch of grass at the finish line. “This is obviously, being a continenta­l team, the first WorldTour race we’ve ever done and to win a stage is just incredible.”

Lennard Hofstede, Mathias Le Turnier and Gavin Mannion followed them across after spending about 98 of the 99 miles from Santa Barbara in the breakaway. Their advantage reached nine minutes before the peloton finally began giving serious chase, and by that point it was too late.

Peter Sagan led the field across the line 13 seconds behind the leaders.

“A lot of teams were surprised with the breakaway,” said Sagan, who won the previous stage along the Pacific Coast on Tuesday. “They took a lot of minutes from the start and after it was really hard to catch them. Almost impossible. It was impossible.”

Rafal Majka retained his overall lead, two seconds ahead of George Bennett, heading into the potentiall­y decisive climb up Mount Baldy in the fifth stage Thursday.

The big question is how the top contenders will respond from a tough day in the saddle.

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