Thursday, 16 February 2017

Soren Kragh Andersen's promise fulfilled with Tour of Oman stage win

http://ift.tt/2lo5JlN

Søren Kragh Andersen soft-pedalled in looping circles near the Team Sunweb vehicles after winning stage 3 of the Tour of Oman, waiting for each of his teammates to clamber their way to the top of the final climb and across the finish line. “Seriously guys, thanks so much,” he said, and then repeated it, as though still in disbelief at landing his first victory as a professional.

The young Dane was not among the favourites to win on the hilltop finish above Quriyat, a fishing village some 80 kilometres southeast of Muscat, and even his directeur sportif Marc Reef had insisted to one reporter ahead of the stage that Sunweb had no realistic ambitions on the day. The slew of white and black jerseys marshaling Andersen into place at the foot of the day’s final, 2.8-kilometre climb suggested otherwise.

“Well, he didn’t underestimate me when I was talking with him this morning,” Andersen smiled after dismounting the podium. “Of course, we didn’t expect to win, but I had a good feeling in the past days.”

ADVERTISEMENT
advertisement

After an attack by another promising youngster, Laurens De Plus (Quick-Step Floors), was pulled back in the finale, Kragh Andersen unfurled a long-burning sprint of some 250 metres to claim the honours ahead of Rui Costa (UAE Abu Dhabi) and overall leader Ben Hermans (BMC). “I did my own thing today. I had my own plan in my head with my team and they brought me as fresh as possible into the bottom of the final climb,” Andersen said. “I felt good all the way up and once Hermans went, I followed and then I just sprinted to the finish line.”

Andersen turned professional in 2016 following an amateur career that was capped by two stage victories in the Tour de l’Avenir; first the opening prologue and then a sprint win ahead of Mathieu van der Poel. The scouting reports spoke of a strong rouleur and quick sprinter, the kind of talent who could develop into a contender in the cobbled Classics. The finale at Quriyat was rather different fare, but still within the ample range of his capabilities.

“The main goal, and what we focus on, is to be good in the classics and the smaller hilly races. They’re the main target in the Spring,” said Andersen. “I’m not going for the Ardennes, I’m going for the cobblestone races. It’s hard and it takes years to have the experience and the level to compete with the best there.”

You can read more at Cyclingnews.com



via Cyclingnews Latest News http://ift.tt/2ktXd5m

No comments:

Post a Comment

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...