Farrar Outsprints Cavendish for Stage Five Win in Vuelta a Espana

September 1, 2010 Updated: October 1, 2015

Tyler Farrar of Garmin-Transitions celebrates as he crosses the finish line of Stage Five of the Vuelta a Espana. (Jose Jordan/AFP/Getty Images)
Tyler Farrar of Garmin-Transitions celebrates as he crosses the finish line of Stage Five of the Vuelta a Espana. (Jose Jordan/AFP/Getty Images)
Stage Five of the 2010 Vuelta a Espana saw Garmin-Transition’s Tyler Farrar take advantage of confusion in the normally impeccable HTC-Columbia leadout train to outsprint Mark Cavendish for the stage win.

“I was sick yesterday, and sick all night last night. Finally this morning it was better. I guess it was all the adrenaline in the finish,” Farrar said on Fromsport.com. When asked what drove him, Farrar replied, “My motivation is to try to win— the most important thing is to get victories for the team.”

After chasing a four-rider break (Arnaud Labbe (Cofidis), Pierre Rolland (Bbox Bouygues Telecom), Jose Vincente Toribio Alcolea (Andalucia-Cajasur) and David Gutierrez (Footon-Servetto)) through a long, rolling stage with nor big climbs, no tricky descents, and no real flats, the peloton came together 15 km out and set a high pace for the final distance.

Liquigas took the lead through the final 10 km, handing off to HTC with five km to go. Entering the final two km, it was Lampre lining up, followed by Quick Step. Mark Cavendish’s leadout rider, Matt Goss, flatted five km out, leaving Cavendish on his own in the final kilometers.

With no one to lead him out, Cavendish had to work harder than the competition. With the road slanting slightly uphill and a headwind to boot, Cavendish needed to conserve his energy for the sprint, but also needed to keep a high pace to keep up with the other teams’ trains.

Meanwhile Farrar, lacking a leadout himself after Julian Dean crashed before Stage One, decided to stick to Cavendish.

Cavendish launched too early—"My lead-out man, Matt Goss punctured with 5km to go. So I had no choice but start sprinting from far. It was hard to hold it for so long,"Cavendish explained afterward too CyclinNews.com. Cavendish made a strong effort, but the faster he rode, the more he helped Tyler Farrar.

Finally, in the last 200 meters, Farrar cut to the left and blasted past Cavendish.The pair were ahead of the rest, but in the final few meters Cavendish ran dry and sat up, losing second to Euskatel’s Koldo De Larrea.

Farrar stayed strong and took the win, his seventh of the year and his fourth stage win in a Grand Tour.

"Of course it's always nice to win against the best sprinter in the world,” Farrar told CyclingNews.com, “but it's even better to win a stage at the Vuelta.”

Vuelta a Espana Stage Four

 

Rider

Team

Time

1

Tyler Farrar

Garmin-Transitions

5:03:36

2

Koldo Fernandez De Larrea

Euskatel-Euskadi

+0:00

3

Mark Cavendish

HTC-Columbia

+0:00

4

Wouter Weylandt

Quick Step

+0:00

5

Alessandro Petacchi

Lampre

+0:00

6

Sébastien Chavanel

FDJ

+0:00

7

Robert Förster

Milram

+0:00

8

Denis Galimzyanov

Katusha

+0:00

9

Theo Bos

Cervelo

+0:00

10

Greg Van Avermaet

Omega Pharma-Lotto

+0:00

2010 Vuelta a Espana General Classification

 

Rider

Team

Time

1

Phillipe Gilbert

Omega Pharma-Lotto

19:00:06

2

Igor Anton

Euskatel-Euskadi

+10

3

Joaquin Rodriguez

Katusha

+10

4

Vincenzo Nibali

Liquigas

+12

5

Peter Velits

HTC-Columbia

+16

6

Tejay Van Garderen

HTC-Columbia

+29

7

Tondo Volpini

Cervelo

+49

8

Fränk Schleck

Saxo Bank

+50

9

Ruben Plaza Molina

Caisse d’Epargne

+54

10

Eziquiel Mosquera

Xacobeo-Galicia

+55