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Tour Down Under Stage 5: Gerrans grabs back race lead, Porte wins stage (+ video)

Orica-GreenEdge man looking for 3rd TDU title is 1 second ahead of Cadel Evans with one stage remaining

Simon Gerrans of Orica-GreenEdge goes into tomorrow’s final stage of the Santos Tour Down Under with a lead of just 1 second over BMC Racing’s Cadel Evans following a hard-fought Stage 5 of the race that saw Team Sky’s Richie Porte triumph on Old Willunga Hill.

Lampre-Merida’s Diego Ulissi finished second, ten seconds down on Porte, with Gerrans third, and the two-second time bonus he secured plus the six-second time gap on the line [the results below suggest four seconds, presumably an error - ed] put the Australian champion back into the ochre jersey.

Evans had initially attacked on the climb before being overhauled by Porte. Gerrans and Ulissi seemed to have been distanced by Evans but overhauled him towards the top of the ascent.

The former world champion and 2011 Tour de France winner was unable to stop the race lead slipping away, finishing sixth.

"All the way up the climb, I always knew what I had to do," Gerrans reflected. "I needed to save energy for the very last part.

"Earlier on, we had Matt Goss at the front, then Daryl [Impey] and Simon [Clarke] looked after me. It’s a dream result to get the jersey back. I've got a fantastic team here, we've seen it today, and they've been great all week."

The summit finish at Old Willunga Hill was first used in the 2012 edition of the race, and Gerrans, winner here last year, has a unique relationship with it.

He was second to Movistar’s Alejandro Valverde on the same ascent in 2012, but moved into the race lead on countback, the riders being tied on time.

Referring to his race lead, he said: "It’s only by one second though, actually it’s one second more than two years ago but it’s still going to be tight and nervous tomorrow."

"I’m very pleased to be back in the lead," added the 33-year-old, who is seeking to become the first man to win the race three times.

Team Sky and Orica-GreenEdge combined to chase down the day’s break and a late solo attack from one member of that group, Trek Factory Racing’s Jens Voigt which earned him the Europcar Most Competitive Rider award for the second time this week.

Like Gerrans, Porte praised the role his team-mates had played today. "This result is more than I hoped for," he said. "It was a very stressful day with crosswinds but I had my team doing incredible work for me.

"Ian Stannard, Bernhard Eisel, Luke Rowe, the Classics guys... I just had to sit in their back pocket all day. I panicked a little bit and Stannard said he’d drop me at the right place."

That place turned out to be halfway up the 3km climb, with Porte riding away to victory.

"I wasn’t exactly surprised to drop Cadel Evans off, I was disappointed the other day after the Corkscrew Climb [on Thursday’s Stage 4] [because] I started badly positioned.

"Not taking anything away from Cadel, I could have played a little bit better [on Thursday].

“Winning here means everything for me. Sky is such a great team. It’s a great way to repay them for the belief they have in me."

Evans, who will line up against Porte in May’s Giro d’Italia, has only the slimmest of chances of gaining the two seconds that would enable him to overhaul Gerrans tomorrow and give him his first win in the race, as BMC Racing sport manager Allan Peiper acknowledged.

"No, it's not over, but if you got to come from behind, it's a little bit difficult in a criterium," he said. "We will discuss our options tonight to see what we come up with."

With the final stage taking place on a sprinter-friendly circuit in Adelaide, those options seem decidedly limited, and Evans himself acknowledged that he’s put at a disadvantage by the composition of his and Gerrans’ respective teams.

"The race isn't over, but we are going against a team that is specifically designed for this race,” he explained.

“We don't have a pure sprinter here. The difference between first and second and maybe even third on GC could come down to the intermediate seconds.

“So if you don't come here with a lead out team and sprinters, it becomes quite difficult to achieve."

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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6 comments

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jarredscycling | 10 years ago
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This year's Giro is going to be a great show with Porte

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Ghedebrav replied to jarredscycling | 10 years ago
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jarredscycling wrote:

This year's Giro is going to be a great show with Porte

I reckon Porte'll be fighting for the final podium spot with Uran, Evans, Aru, Majka and perhaps one or two others. Barring accidents, I'd expect the two favourites to be Purito and Quintana.

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samwstraw | 10 years ago
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No, road.cc need to make allowances for my stupidity dammit!

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kamoshika | 10 years ago
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If I was trying to avoid finding out the result of a bike race I wouldn't look at cycling news websites  3

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VeloPeo | 10 years ago
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The best way to stay away from finding out the result of a sporting event you're watching delayed is to stay away from websites that cover that sport and social media until you've watched it.

Just saying.

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samwstraw | 10 years ago
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You've been asked by forummers SO MANY TIMES to not put the result in the headline. Was just about to sit down and watch this on sky when I saw this. Brilliant. Please stop doing it.

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