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PASADENA, Calif. (AP) – Slovakian Peter Sagan surged late and
won
the Tour of California by three seconds on Sunday with a close third-place finish.
Britain’s Mark Cavendish won his fourth stage of the eight-stage
event and 13th victory of the season in a mass sprint in the last of
nine circuits around the Rose Bowl.
Sagan (Tinkoff-Saxo), who began the final day trailing former race
leader Julian Alaphilippe (Etixx-Quick Step) of France by two seconds,
gained four bonus seconds for the third-place finish and a one-second
bonus during a mid-race sprint.
Wouter Wippert (Drapac) of the Netherlands was second in the final
stage. Sagan edged American Tyler Farrar (MTN-Qhubeka) by a few inches
for third to secure the title.
Sergio Luis Henao Montoya (Sky) of Colombia finished third overall, 37 seconds behind Sagan.
“I almost thought that I didn’t do it,” Sagan said. “(Tyler) Farrar
was third, I thought, but after my team said that I was third, and I
came here (to the podium) and I can’t believe that I did it.”
Sagan, who won two stages of the event and has four Tour de France stage
wins
,
held the race lead after winning the Stage 5 time trial. He collapsed
at the finish line after finishing sixth in the mountainous Stage 7 to
Mount Baldy and relinquished his lead.
“It was very hard to get this victory,” Sagan said. “I did surprise
myself from the effort yesterday and I believed that I could do it
today. I never thought about going for the general classification at the
Tour
of California. This year it was very hard to finish on the climb.”
Cavendish (Etixx-Quick Step), who earned his ninth Tour of
California
career stage, completed the 65.3-mile road race from Los Angeles to Pasadena in 2 hours, 14 minutes and 55 seconds.
“We tried our best, but Tinkoff (Saxo) rode very well,” especially
Peter,” Cavendish said. “He chased down breaks on by himself. It was
impressive.”
Sagan finished second to Cavendish in a mid-race sprint in a photo
finish, gaining two bonus seconds and moving to a one-second race
deficit to Alaphilippe, who placed third and gained one second.
Guillaume Boivin (Optum-Kelly Benefit) of Canada crashed out of the
final stage before it started. Approaching the start from the back of
the pack, Boivin’s handlebars malfunctioned and he fell into the
starting barriers.
The eight-day race began May 10 in Sacramento with a field of 143 riders from 18 teams. There were 121 finishers.
Copyright 2015 The Associated Press.