Katusha cyclist Ilnur Zakarin of Russia won the Tour of Romandie in Lausanne on Sunday holding off Britain’s two-time defending champion Chris Froome in the closing individual time-trial.
The 25-year-old Zakarin had taken the race leader’s yellow jersey at the end of Saturday’s fifth stage, but Sky star Froome had been expected to be too strong on Sunday.
Froome eventually finished third overall, 35 seconds adrift of Zakarin — his Katusha teammate Simon Spilak was second about 17 seconds adrift.
Photo: EPA
The 17.3km time-trial on the streets of the Swiss town was won by German specialist Tony Martin.
Zakarin, whose previous best results never suggested he could be a contender in a race of this quality, even overcame a technical problem that obliged him to change bikes 5km from the finish to take the prestigious prize.
“I gave everything in this race,” Zakarin said. “I don’t even know the time of Froome, I prefer to reflect on my performance.”
“I was very surprised to beat Froome and to have finished so close to Tony Martin,” he said. “In all truth, my objective was to finish in the top five [overall] and I didn’t think I would do so well.”
“I also discovered I have the ability to compete in the mountain stages. I have been on a specialist training routine and I have lost weight,” Zakarin said. He weighs 65kg instead of his earlier 75kg.
Zakarin was unmoved when asked what it felt like to join a winners list that includes illustrious names such as Froome, his fellow Briton and Tour de France champion Bradley Wiggins and Australian star Cadel Evans.
“I don’t look at such things like the roll call of winners,” he said. “The Tour of Romandie was a target for Katusha at the outset of the season and that has been achieved.”
“I will now line-up at the Giro [Tour of Italy] and see how I cope with a three week race and then I will head for the European Games in Baku in June,” Zakarin said.
Froome, whose main target this season is to regain the Tour de France title he surrendered last year when he crashed out, failed to fire in the time-trial, but he was far from dejected at not retaining his crown.
“I am not disappointed,” the 29-year-old Kenya-born rider told Swiss television station RTS. “I know it is a long season and we still have two months till the start of the Tour de France.”
“I am now going to go off on a training camp at altitude before competing in the Dauphine,” he said, referring to a traditional warm-up race for the Tour.
For his part, Martin was astonished at Zakarin’s performance — the 2007 European junior time-trial champion still managed to finish only 13 seconds behind the German in the time-trial despite his changing bikes.
“I am very surprised by his performance today, notably because of his changing bike,” Martin said. “Already yesterday I was surprised [Zakarin finished second in a tough mountain stage]. I didn’t know of him before.”
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