Colourplus's Logan Hutchings finishes first in stage 3 of
the PowerNet Tour of Southland, in Gore,today. Photo by
Dianne Manson/NZPA.
Perth-based New Zealand cyclist Logan Hutchings had
consigned himself to the role of water boy before a "lucky
break" led to his victory in the third stage of the Tour of
Southland today.
Hutchings, of the ColourPlus team, out-sprinted a five-strong
break on the 165km stage from Invercargill to Gore via
Edendale and Riversdale with the peloton rushing home just
three seconds behind them.
There was no change on general classification with all of the
major contenders finishing in the bunch.
That leaves Waimate's Heath Blackgrove, of Zookeepers-Cycle
Surgery, still donning the yellow jersey, 14sec ahead of
leading Nelson's Jack Bauer, of the Share The Road team.
Timaru's Marc Ryan, of ColourPlus, is next at 24sec with
Hastings rider Jeremy Vennell, of Bissell Pro Cycling, at
29sec.
After the drama of yesterday when nearly half of the field
were caught in a major crash, today's stage was without
incident in stunningly still conditions.
Hutchings found himself out of contention after yesterday's
chaos, leaving him with the role of supporting his teammates,
Olympic medallists Ryan and Jesse Sergent, of Feilding, who
are both high up on general classification.
However, he took his chance with 15km to go as a break of
five riders went clear of the peloton, including Paul Odlin
(Christchurch, Calder Stewart), Wade Mangham (Rotorua, Ascot
Park Hotel), Jason Barlow (Invercargill, PlaceMakers) and
Jonathon Atkinson (Auckland, Energy Smart).
They swooped on solo leader James McCoy (Christchurch,
Benchmark Homes) before Hutchings came off the third wheel on
the final corner to kick home for the stage win.
"It's my first stage win in New Zealand and it is always
great to win at home," Hutchings said.
"It was a lucky day in the saddle really. I was carrying out
the job as bottle boy for most of the day but managed to get
into a lucky move.
"We got a few seconds on the pack and that's all that is
needed sometimes to go clear.
"We worked pretty well together to stay clear and managed to
hold off the peloton."
Hutchings, who has been riding out of Belgium this year, is
looking forward to a break after this week following eight
months of solid racing.
"All my joints are saying stop. But I've got a week to go.
This is a lot of fun though to ride in a team with your
mates.
"The stage win is great for me and the team. But tomorrow it
is back to supporting the boys who are right up there on GC."
Earlier, a break involving McCoy, Ben King (Australia, Calder
Stewart), Mark Langlands (Cambridge, Calder Stewart) and Cody
O'Reilly (United States, Bissell Pro Cycling) went clear
after 35km.
They built their lead to four minutes 40 seconds to enable
King to claim the yellow jersey on the road.
They stayed clear until King and McCoy kicked away on Otana
Hill with 26km remaining. McCoy then edged away from King
before he was swallowed up by the key break nearing Gore.
Tomorrow's fourth stage is 88.4km from Invercargill to
Tuatapere before stage five over 102km from Tuatapere to
Winton.
The six-day tour ends on Saturday.
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