The third stage of the Tour Down Under will start a new chapter of the race for overall victory, with the attacks, time gains and time losses of stage 2 ripping up the expected script for the final days of the race.
Michael Matthews (Jayco-Alula) was the big favourite for overall victory but his 2:13 time loss on stage 2, sparked by a brutal and cruel ripple in the peloton and some damage to his bike as they hit the decisive climb of the day, lead to the Australian admitting it was ‘game over’ for the GC.
Matthews had dedicated his winter to being at his best for the Tour Down Under, but slipped to 58th at 2:09. Now he will have to pick himself up, perhaps try to win a stage and help Simon Yates as the British climber becomes Jayco-AlUla’s plan A.
Yates is 12th overall at 21 seconds after being in the decisive attack on stage 2. That’s within touching distance of new race leader Rohan Dennis (Jumbo-Visma), but to win the Tour Down Under Yates will have to crack Dennis and also gain time on major rivals such as Jay Vine (UAE Team Emirates), Mauro Schmid (Soudal-QuickStep), the evermore-impressive Magnus Sheffield (Ineos Grenadiers), the on-form Corbin Strong (Israel-Premier Tech) and perhaps even Ethan Hayter (Ineos Grenadiers).
Yates will have to ride aggressively on Friday’s stage to Campbelltown and especially over the Corkscrew Road climb that ends just 5.8km from the finish. The 9% hill is his best chance to pull back time.
Saturday’s fourth stage to Willunga – not including the famous hill – is expected to be a day for the sprinters, with stage 5 to Mount Lofty his final chance as it hosts the culminating showdown on a rolling circuit.
Dennis, Vine, Schmid, Sheffield and Yates appear to be the strongest candidates for the final podium places of the Tour Down Under. Dennis is now in the ochre-coloured leader’s jersey but leads Vine by just three seconds. Sheffield is third at 12 seconds and Schmid fourth at 13. Just behind them are Strong in fifth at 14 seconds and Hayter 11th at 21 seconds.
Giro d’Italia winner Jai Hindley (Bora-Hansgrohe) was also in the big attack on stage 2 but is still 42 seconds down on Dennis after losing a lot of time in the rain-soaked time trial. He could still target a stage victory on Friday or Sunday and so add another layer of complexity to the battle for overall victory.
Into the Adelaide Hills and over Corkscrew Road
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