Tour of Britain: Olav Kooij wins third consecutive stage and retains overall lead

Cycling

Products You May Like

Olav Kooij celebrates his stage win

Olav Kooij continued his brilliant start to the Tour of Britain by sprinting to a third straight win on stage three from Goole to Beverley.

The general classification leader held off fellow Dutchman Danny van Poppel and Britain’s Ethan Vernon.

The Jumbo Visma rider matches Edvald Boasson Hagen’s record of three straight stage wins in the 2009 event.

Britons Tom Pidcock and Robert Donaldson finished sixth and seventh respectively in a tight finish.

Kooij’s triumph followed a similar pattern to his wins in Wrexham on Monday and Manchester on Sunday, with the peloton reeling in a small breakaway group before a bunch sprint.

The 22-year-old, racing in his first Tour of Britain, once again relied on a devastating lead out from team-mate Wout Van Aert in the final kilometre.

After three bunch sprints Kooij is now tied with 55 other riders at the top of the general classification battle on time and leads because of his superior total in the points classification.

Wednesday’s 166.6km relatively flat stage from Sherwood Forest to Newark is expected to be another day for the sprinters.

“We actually miscalculated in those final kilometres, we thought the finish would be a bit earlier, but in the end we still managed to make it a hat-trick,” Kooij said.

Stage three results

1. Olav Kooij (Ned/Jumbo-Visma) 2hrs 22mins 51secs

2. Danny van Poppel (Ned/Bora-hansgrohe) Same time

3. Ethan Vernon (GB/Great Britain)

4. Max Kanter (Ger/Movistar)

5. Rasmus Tiller (Nor/Uno-X Pro)

6. Tom Pidcock (GB/Ineos Grenadiers)

7. Robert Donaldson (GB/Trinity Racing)

8. Casper van Uden (Ned/dsm-firmenich)

8. Rory Townsend (Ire/Bolton Equities Black Spoke)

10. Davide Bomboi (Bel/TdT-Unibet)

General classification after stage three

1. Olav Kooij (Ned/Jumbo-Visma) 9hrs 39mins 51secs

2. Danny van Poppel (Ned/Bora-hansgrohe) Same time

3. Max Kanter (Ger/Movistar)

4. Ethan Vernon (GB/Great Britain)

5. Wout van Aert (Bel/Jumbo-Visma)

6. Davide Bomboi (Bel/TdT-Unibet)

7. Tom Pidcock (GB/Ineos Grenadiers)

8. Gonzalo Serrano (Spa/Movistar)

9. Rasmus Tiller (Nor/Uno-X Pro)

10. Rory Townsend (Ire/Bolton Equities Black Spoke)

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Mike Trout’s injuries are carving into Hall of Fame legacy: Where Angels slugger stacks up against greats
All-ACC forward Omier leaving Miami for Baylor
The top Vermont high school girls, boys tennis players? Here’s our 2024 watchlist.
North Carolina set to play non-conference game in Hawaii
Ryan Poles shares his thoughts on ‘Hard Knocks’: ‘I get the program’