And repeat: Sam Bennett doubles up with Vuelta stage 3 victory
Sam Bennett (Bora-Hansgrohe) took back-to-back stage wins in the Netherlands, holding off Mads Pedersen (Trek-Segafredo) and Dan McLay (Arkéa-Samsic) on a stage that was almost a carbon copy of Saturday’s first road outing of the 2022 Vuelta a España.
Before the stage got underway, the four jersey wearers lit a candle in Breda’s Grote Kerk for the victims of COVID-19, then led the peloton out of the church to begin the long neutral section.
Los 4 líderes @MikeTeunissen, @Sammmy_Be, @JuliusJelmer y @ethan_hayter han rendido homenaje a las víctimas del COVID19 en la Grote Kerk in Breda.
— La Vuelta (@lavuelta) August 21, 2022
The four jersey wearers lead a moment of remembrance for the victims of COVID19 at the Grote Kerk in Breda.#LaVuelta22 pic.twitter.com/H27efVbU6E
From there on, the stage took on a very familiar shape. Even the profiles of the first two road stages were hard to separate – both almost pan flat with a fourth-category “climb” in the latter third – and the storyline of Sunday’s stage carried no surprises.
One of the few differences between the first two road stages was that Tim Merlier’s Alpecin-Deceuninck found allies in Trek-Segafredo and Bora-Hansgrohe throughout stage 3, and though the 193.2 km route looked to be about as predictable as they come, the strong seven-man breakaway cultivated a seed of doubt in the minds of the sprint teams, who made sure to keep Thomas De Gendt (Lotto Soudal), Jan Bakelants (Intermarché-Wanty-Gobert Matériaux), Julius van den Berg (EF Education-EasyPost) et al. on a tight leash. The threat of wind also led to some nervous riding, but it was neither strong enough nor in the right direction for it to have a serious impact on the stage.
The peloton left the escape to sweep up the intermediate sprint points before gathering them up a little over 11 kilometres from the line, and it was a textbook finale. With the GC teams out of the way in the last few kilometres, Alpecin-Deceuninck and UAE Team Emirates sent fresh bodies to the front to dictate the run-in, but the Bora-Hansgrohe pairing of Danny van Poppel and Bennett were ready to roll out another perfectly executed leadout.
Just like stage 2, it was an agonisingly long drag race to the line, Bennett flanked by Pedersen and McLay, their positions relative to one another staying fixed for the last hundred metres. The Irishman held firm to take a second consecutive stage win as Pedersen kept Arkéa-Samsic’s British sprinter at bay to double up on second-place finishes.
With Bennett extending his lead in green, the red jersey changed hands again as Jumbo-Visma continues to share the spoils of their stage 1 success. As the Vuelta ended its trip to the Netherlands, the race lead was passed from Mike Teunissen to their Italian TT specialist Edoardo Affini.
More to come…
La Vuelta ciclista a España (2.UWT) Breda → Breda
AFFINI Edoardo
BENNETT Sam
VAN DEN BERG Julius
HAYTER Ethan
Jumbo-Visma
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