Sagan lands GP Citta di Camaiore
The prolific Peter Sagan won the GP Citta di Camaiore in Italy.
The Cannondale rider from Slovakia beat the Italians Diego Ulissi and Rinaldo Nocentini in a small group sprint at the end of the 183 kilometre course.
It was a third victory this season for the 23-year-old, following two wins in Oman earlier in the year.
An early five-man break featuring Taylor Phinney (BMC), Stefano Agostini (Cannondale), Maxim Belkov (Katusha), Alessandro Proni (Vini Fantini Selle Italia) and Pedro Paulinho (Ceramica Flaminia) built up a 12:15 lead after 64km.
But that advantage was whittled down as the peloton tackled a circuit that features six climbs up Monte Pitoro, a 1.9km ascent.
With 15km to go the riders were all back together and an elite 12-man group that included Vicenzo Nibali, Michele Scarponi and Denis Menchov formed on the final ascent of the 7% climb.
But the climbers were unable to shed Sagan, who claimed victory in the sprint with Matthew Busche and Mauro Santambrogio completing the top five.
“It was a win that had a great contribution from my team-mates,” said Sagan, who had Moreno Moser for company at the finish.
“I could feel my condition improve lap after lap, and I took some morale from that. When it all came back together on the last climb, Moser was exceptional in closing down the attacks and bringing it to a group finish.
“At that point, it came down to me to bring out my best and win.”
The prolific Peter Sagan won the GP Citta di Camaiore in Italy.
The Cannondale rider from Slovakia beat the Italians Diego Ulissi and Rinaldo Nocentini in a small group sprint at the end of the 183 kilometre course.
It was a third victory this season for the 23-year-old, following two wins in Oman earlier in the year.
An early five-man break featuring Taylor Phinney (BMC), Stefano Agostini (Cannondale), Maxim Belkov (Katusha), Alessandro Proni (Vini Fantini Selle Italia) and Pedro Paulinho (Ceramica Flaminia) built up a 12:15 lead after 64km.
But that advantage was whittled down as the peloton tackled a circuit that features six climbs up Monte Pitoro, a 1.9km ascent.
With 15km to go the riders were all back together and an elite 12-man group that included Vicenzo Nibali, Michele Scarponi and Denis Menchov formed on the final ascent of the 7% climb.
But the climbers were unable to shed Sagan, who claimed victory in the sprint with Matthew Busche and Mauro Santambrogio completing the top five.
“It was a win that had a great contribution from my team-mates,” said Sagan, who had Moreno Moser for company at the finish.
“I could feel my condition improve lap after lap, and I took some morale from that. When it all came back together on the last climb, Moser was exceptional in closing down the attacks and bringing it to a group finish.
“At that point, it came down to me to bring out my best and win.”