Hours after their GC leader Simon Yates had to abandon the Vuelta a España due to a positive for COVID-19, BikeExchange-Jayco regained their maximum race momentum possible in difficult circumstances as their sprinter Kaden Groves claimed his first-ever WorldTour stage win.
Earlier in the day, lead sports director at the Vuelta, Gene Bates, bluntly described Yates’ exit as “devastating” and recognised that it represented “a blow” in the team’s ongoing UCI points battle, given Yates’ prospects of a good GC finish in Madrid remained intact 10 days into the race.
But if those hopes of a top overall position were wrecked by a positive test for COVID-19, Groves’ bunch sprint success at least gave the team a major consolation prize, as well as proving that when the team talked on Wednesday morning about increasing their focus on stage wins they clearly meant business.
“It’s devastating for us and the team,” Bates said at Wednesday morning’s stage start. “We had a big focus for the Vuelta with Simon and we were going well. There’s clearly a very strong top three at the moment, but we had a steady approach, and it was going in our favour, he’d moved up another spot to fifth overall on Tuesday.
“It’s a hard pill to swallow. But the key thing is we can’t control that, so we look to what we can control and that’s all about regrouping and getting the most out of the rest of the Vuelta.”
Bates said that overnight Yates had come down with a high fever as well as other symptoms and did not sleep well. A positive test confirmed their worst fears, and for a second time in his career, after his positive in the Giro 2020, Yates’ GC hopes in a Grand Tour were dashed by the coronavirus.
Bates recognised that quite apart from the Vuelta itself, in terms of the UCI points battle, the loss of a chance of a top result on GC was “a blow in that regard”.
“We can’t hide that, so we’ll just have to get a bit imaginative on where we look for those points, won’t we?”
In terms of the Vuelta, “As we know the points system and the way it’s set up doesn’t favour stage wins, more one-day races and overalls. But we’ve got the focus on stages here, and that’s what we’ll do while we’re here and we’re looking for other plan Bs.”
Bates pointed to Groves as the leading light in that field, and said that although the Vuelta finish in Cabo de Gata was anything but straightforward because of the wind, “that suits his style.”
As…
Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at CyclingNews RSS Feed…