Tadej Pogacar of Slovenia on Sunday won a stormy mountainous ninth stage of the Vuelta a Espana, while Nairo Quintana took over the race lead.
“When I saw the weather yesterday, I was happy it was going to rain,” 20-year-old Pogacar said. “On the ground section I went full gas. Today was a tricky stage, a lot of technical areas ... and also a hail storm. It was an incredible ride.”
Pogacar, who rides for UAE Team Emirates, finished the short, but extremely challenging 94.4km stage in 2 hours, 58 minutes. Quintana crossed the finish line next as the Movistar rider took the leader’s red jersey from Nicolas Edet, who was dropped early in the stage.
Photo: EFE
The highly anticipated stage in the Pyrenees shattered the peloton with five summit climbs and a 4km gravel track near the end, which the riders reached amid heavy rain and hail.
The strongest of the favorites for the Grand Tour all finished within a minute of each other, leaving them in a tight bunch ahead of the first rest day.
Primoz Roglic overcame signs of weakness and finished in third, as the Slovenian moved to second overall at six seconds behind Quintana.
Miguel Angel Lopez looked like he was going to deal a blow to his rivals after he dropped them with a powerful attack, but he fell on the gravel stretch when the weather was at its worst. The Colombian finished the stage ninth and is third overall at 17 seconds behind fellow countryman Quintana.
Lopez said the stage should have been stopped because of the weather. A mountain stage was halted in the Tour de France in July when rain made the course impossible to ride.
“I have my arms scraped up,” Lopez said. “It was very dangerous. At least there wasn’t a descent.”
World champion Alejandro Valverde, a teammate of Quintana, is fourth at 20 seconds back.
The racing resumes today with an individual time trial across the border in France. Roglic is considered the best suited of the top riders to make big gains on the 36km from Jurancon to Pau.
“The important thing was to try to take some time on Roglic, who should do well on the time trial,” Quintana said.
Major League Baseball (MLB) star Shohei Ohtani wants his former interpreter to hand over hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of baseball cards he says were fraudulently bought using his money. The Los Angeles Dodgers star is also requesting Ippei Mizuhara, who previously pleaded guilty to bank and tax fraud for stealing nearly US$17 million from the unsuspecting athlete, return signed collectible baseball cards depicting Ohtani that were in Mizuhara’s “unauthorized and wrongful possession,” court documents filed on Tuesday said. The legal filing alleges Mizuhara accessed Ohtani’s bank account beginning in about November 2021, changing his security protocols so that he
US skier Mikaela Shiffrin said she sustained an abrasion on her left hip and that something “stabbed” her when she crashed during her second run of an Audi FIS Ski World Cup giant slalom race on Saturday, doing a flip and sliding into the protective fencing. Shiffrin stayed down on the edge of the course for quite some time as the ski patrol attended to her. She was taken off the hill on a sled and waved to the cheering crowd before going to a clinic for evaluation. “Not really too much cause for concern at this point, I just
CLASH OF MANAGERS: Brighton’s Fabian Hurzeler and Russell Martin of Southampton accused each other of disrespect, while both were booked Southampton on Friday were denied a priceless victory by a controversial decision as they drew with hosts Brighton & Hove Albion 1-1 in the Premier League. Kaoru Mitoma spectacularly headed Brighton into a first-half lead and Flynn Downes hammered home an equalizer an hour in. Minutes later teammate Cameron Archer converted a cross from Saints substitute Ryan Fraser. A video assistant referee check of more than four minutes eventually decided that Archer was onside, but then penalized Adam Armstrong, who was offside, but did not touch the ball, for interfering with goalkeeper Bart Verbruggen. “I find it hard to accept,” Southampton manager Russell Martin
Mary McGee, a female racing pioneer and subject profiled in an Oscar-contending documentary, Motorcycle Mary, has died, her family said. She was 87. “McGee’s unparalleled achievements in off-road racing and motorcycle racing have inspired generations of athletes that followed in her footsteps,” her family said in a statement. The family said McGee died of complications from a stroke at her home in Gardnerville, Nevada, on Wednesday, the day before the release of the short documentary Motorcycle Mary, on ESPN’s YouTube channel. Seven-time Formula 1 champion Lewis Hamilton was an executive producer on the film, which became available globally on Thursday. Its premiere