DUTCH RIDER FABIO Jakobsen won stage eight of the Vuelta a Espana on Saturday for his second mass sprint triumph on the race, just a year after a near fatal crash on the Tour of Poland.
Primoz Roglic retained the overall lead after the largely flat 173km run from resort town Santa Pola as Jakobsen of Deceuninck Quick-Step outpaced Alberto Dainese and Jasper Philipsen at the line.
If Jakobsen had any lingering fears remaining from his crash in Poland a year ago they were nowhere to be seen Saturday as he clinched the win with a risky manoeuvre.
Sixth coming into the final corner, the 24-year-old accelerated fearlessly to emerge not only first but fastest moving.
After that even a finish line bike-throw from Philipsen didn’t beat him.
Astana forced a sudden acceleration at the head of the peloton with 30km to go, briefly splitting the bunch in three, before the entire pack regathered and raced shoulder to shoulder all the way to a nervy high speed finish.
Breathless until the last! 🤩🔥
— Eurosport UK (@Eurosport_UK) August 21, 2021
🇳🇱 @FabioJakobsen wins Stage 8! The Dutchman draws level on stage wins with Jasper Philipsen after a thrilling sprint finish at #LaVuelta21@lavuelta | @deceuninck_qst pic.twitter.com/NiMED3Dfw2
On a broad dual-carriageway Jakobsen was expertly delivered to the front of a frantic throng of sprinters and then got the better of his great rival Philipsen of Alpecin.
Both men have two stage wins but Jakobsen, on 180 points, has retaken the green sprint points jersey from Philipsen, on 164.
“The team did a perfect job,” Jakobsen said. “They kept the speed high and even though I lost them a little bit, I was still in a good position. I launched my sprint just on the corner at 200 to go and I was the fastest, I think.”
It was about being strong, fast, and it’s about timing, I think. In a finish like this you need to be on time. I’ve been twice too late and this time I was perfectly right, and I could do a full sprint to the line.”
Last August, Jakobsen had a brush with death in a terrifying crash in a mass sprint on the Tour of Poland. He needed five-hours of surgery after breaking his jaw and losing all his teeth.
Deceuninck have a recent track record in bringing people back from the brink as they shepherded Mark Cavendish to the Tour de France green jersey and four stage wins in July.
On Saturday, Spanish cycling icon Alejandro Valverde underwent surgery on a fractured shoulder after his crash on Stage 7 on Friday. The 41-year-old Movistar leader was riding his 15th Vuelta.
Sunday’s Stage 8 is a high mountain affair which will reveal which of Roglic’s rivals might be up to the job of bettering him over the 21 days.
The stage ends in a 13km climb that should provide the scene for a skirmish to shake up the overall standings with Colombian climber Egan Bernal and his two Ineos lieutenants, Adam Yates and Olympic champion Richard Carapaz, poised should the Slovenian double-defending champion show a sign of weakness.
The42 is on Instagram! Tap the button below on your phone to follow us!
- came across Dave Farrar’s account of the 92 tale in The Blizzard #1 few hours after above piece, recommending that magazine highly (http://www.theblizzard.co.uk/product/issue-one-digital-download/)
Every fan and witness to the 84 and 86 campaigns are left wondering and regretting what might have been. Despite the so-called “folksy, light-hearted Danish attitude” they did beat England at Wembley, Eire at Landsdown, Italy, USSR, Germany but alas never Spain. Plenty of talent, national and UEFA cup champions in the squad and the 1977 EU footballer of the year Allan Simonsen. Hard to imagine Denmark will ever produce a better forward duo than Elkjær and Laudrup.
1992 was a freak summer in a competition with only 8 teams and before no-playback-to-keeper rule was added. Brian Laudrup was in the squad btw (Michael wasn’t, apparently he watched the final on TV at Jan Mølby’s wedding…).