San Diego Union-Tribune

STAGE 3 ENDS GOING TO PHOTO-FINISH CAMERA

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SONDERBORG, Denmark

Dutchman Dylan Groenewege­n overtook Wout van Aert and Peter Sagan at the line to win the third stage of the Tour de France in a photo finish while van Aert extended his overall lead on Sunday.

Groenewege­n got behind record seven-time Tour sprint champion Sagan’s wheel when he was battling with van Aert, and found a gap to squeeze through and nudge his wheel over the line to win for the BikeExchan­ge-Jayco team.

“I took a lot of wind and my legs were tired but I still had enough to sprint to the line,” Groenewege­n said. “Wout van Aert always jokes, saying that if you are not sure of having won, you still claim the victory and you celebrate. That’s what I did (and) I understood I won from the sport directors screaming in the car.”

Groenewege­n’s fifth Tour stage win came a day after Fabio Jakobsen’s first. Two years ago, Groenewege­n was blamed for a heavy crash at the Tour of Poland that sent Jakobsen flying through roadside crash barriers. Jakobsen was put in an induced coma and needed five hours of surgery on his skull and face.

Although Groenewege­n was remorseful over the incident, he was banned from cycling for nine months by cycling’s governing body UCI.

“My family supported me greatly after what happened,” he said. “My new team has put a lot of faith in me and a great train to lead me out. Every victory at the Tour de France is special.”

Three years after his last

Tour stage win, the 29-yearold Groenewege­n was openmouthe­d and emotional as he put his hands over his head. The win was even more special since he crashed nine kilometers out and had to catch the peloton up.

Sagan was cross with van Aert, meanwhile, muttering angrily and wagging his finger at him after they crossed the line because he found himself boxed to the right and close to the barriers. But there was no contact and Sagan even appeared to lean on van Aert.

Van Aert picked up a sixsecond bonus and is now seven seconds ahead of Yves Lampaert and 14 ahead of two-time defending champion Tadej Pogacar in the standings. Pogacar’s rival Primoz Roglic, the 2020 Tour runner-up, is seventh overall and stayed nine seconds behind Pogacar.

The stage started in Vejle on the Jutland Peninsula and ended in Sonderborg in southern Denmark after 182 kilometers (113 miles) of flat racing. Groenewege­n’s winning time was 4 hours, 11 minutes, 33 seconds. Pogacar and Roglic were nestled in the main pack with finishing positions irrelevant since they all got the same time.

Today is a rest day for riders.

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