Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Groenewege­n wins second Tour stage; cobbles ahead

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AMIENS, France — Dylan Groenewege­n has turned the sprinting battle at the Tour de France into a three-man race.

The 25-year-old Dutch rider won his second consecutiv­e stage Saturday, joining world champion Peter Sagan and Tour newcomer Fernando Gaviria as two-stage winners at this edition of the world’s leading cycling race.

Groenewege­n entered the final meters of Stage 8 behind Andre Greipel, Gaviria and Sagan, but the Team LottoNL-Jumbo rider timed his last surge perfectly, swinging around his hard-charging opponents to cross first.

“It was a hectic [finish], but that’s every day in the

Tour,” Groenewege­n said. “I am very happy with my team. The last two days have been very good with two wins.”

Greipel and Gaviria crossed next, but their results were disqualifi­ed after they dangerousl­y jockeyed for position in the final meters, though they both keep their times.

Greipel boxed Gaviria in next to the barrier on the left-hand side of the street, appearing to nudge him with his side. Gaviria responded by pushing back, even knocking Greipel with his helmet.

That meant that Sagan officially finished second, with John Degenkolb in third.

“The legs have been better every day,” Groenewege­n said, adding that “the team did an amazing job and put me in a great position. I saw Gaviria and Greipel were fighting for position but I saw the finish line and thought, ‘This is the moment.’ ”

Olympic road race champion Greg Van Avermaet, who is riding in support of BMC leader Richie Porte, kept the overall lead for a fifth consecutiv­e day.

Van Avermaet picked up a one-second bonus overall during an intermedia­te bonus sprint at just over 12 miles from the finish. That increased his lead over Froome’s teammate Geraint Thomas in second to 7 seconds and his own BMC teammate Tejay Van Garderen to 9 seconds.

Four-time winner Chris Froome is in 12th place at 1 minute, 6 seconds behind Van Avermaet.

The mostly flat 112-mile ride from Dreux to Amiens was won by Groenewege­n in 4 hours, 23 minutes. It comes before the three-week race faces one of its most difficult legs when it hits the tricky and occasional­ly treacherou­s cobbleston­es.

Today’s Stage 9 will take riders over 15 cobbled paths scattered along 131/2 miles of the 97-mile course from Arras to Roubaix, near the Belgian border.

Van Avermaet won the single-day cobbleston­e Paris-Roubaix race in 2017. He said he will try to keep the yellow jersey while his teammates work for Porte.

“We will try to do both,” the Belgian said.

“We will try to keep Richie with me, but if I have to follow another rider or attack, the other six guys will take care of Richie.”

That cobbleston­e challenge will be followed by a rest day Monday before the race shifts to its first mountain stages in the Alps.

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