Tour de France: Richeze's speedy lead-out earns him Zwift Rider of the Day
Quick-Step Floor🌳s rider delivers Gaviria to a second stage win
While Colombian sprint prodigy 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Fernando Gaviria (168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Quick-Step Floors) may have won his second stage of the 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Tour de France during stage 4, today's Zwift Rider of the Day goes to his teammate Maximilano Richeze. One of the top lead-out men in the sport, he's often on screen in the dying moments of a stage, but never the first t𝐆o get the plaudits afterwards.
Now 35, the Argen🎉tinean has enjoyed a late career resurgence at the Belgian team, largely in his rol🐻e guiding Gaviria through the rough-and-tumble of sprint finishes before leaving him to finish off the job.
Since Richeze joined the team in 2016, 24 of Gaviria's 29 wins have come with him at his side. The close connection between the pair, and the interdependence of lead-out man and sprinter, is demonstrated by the fact that Richeze has raced w🅠ith Gaviria in 85 of his 112 race days this year and last.
Before all this success, though, Richeze had spent the ꦇearly years of his career at smaller Italian teams. First there was Ceramica Panaria, where he served a doping ban for stanzolol, and then the early form of what we know today as Nippo-Vini Fantini.
The 2007 Giro d'Italia, where his two wins are the only victories ever recorded at the race by an Argentinean, remains a career highlight. But after a three-season dr𝓡ought at Lampre, he has enjoyed a late-career resurgence at the Belgian team.
Since joining Quick-Step h💃e's had his personal successes⛎, including a stage win and the points jersey at the Tour de Suisse and four victories at the Tour San Juan, but his new lead-out role is where he has shone.
Today was a prime example. The penultimate man in the Quick-Step Floors train after ꦉNiki Terpstra, Bob Jungels, Yves Lampert and Julian Alaphilippe, he had Gaviria on his wheel for much of the run-in. Come the final kilometre and the late catch of the breakaway, he took Alexander Kristoff's wheel as the Russian weaved trying to find a gap to the front.
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After shifting over to take John Degenkolb's wheel with 750 metres to go, a small gap opened up, right against the barriers. Richeze was immediately there, acceler♌ating into it with Gaviria close behind and the ever-attentive Peter Sagan following. Inches away from the barrier, Richeze kept going, dragging his teammate to the ⛎front.
By my ca♚lculation, Richeze was out front in the wind for 350 metres, with no other lead-out man or sprint train able to get anywhere near. At 250m from the line, he pulled off with his job for the day done. Gaviria still had a lot to do to hold off the fast-finishing An🍰dré Greipel and wheel-surfing Sagan, but a huge part of win number two was down to his lead-out.
Daniel Ostanek: Sprint stages are far from my favourite aspect of pro cycling to watch and write about, but the actual sprints themselves can be fascinating to re-watch. A full 10 minutes after the stage had finished I was still looking through the final kilometre for rider movements and how the lead-outs worked.
Richeze's combination of experience, ability to find space and then sheer power to out-drag the competition is quite something to behold - as a lead-out man, I think he's unmatched. Before this Tour, the Richeze-Gaviria tandem had racked up wins all over the place, and now they're showing that they're the best final kilometre one-two punch in cycling.
Readers' pick
On stage 3 you voted for EF Education First-Drapac's Lawson Craddock as the Zwift Rider of the Day. The 26-year-old Texan fell on stage one, fracturing his left shoulder blade and cutting his eyebrow, but continued on to the end of the da🍒y. On Monday's team time trial, he not only finished, but broke through the pain barrier to actively take turns throughout and help his team to sixth on the day.
You can vote for the stage 4 Zwift Rider of the Day below. We will announce the readers' poll🥂 winner after Tuesday🐟's stage 5.
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Dani Ostanek is Senior ༒News Writer at Cyclingnews, having joined in 2🎉017 as a freelance contributor and later being hired full-time. Before joining the team, she had written for numerous major publications in the cycling world, including Cycling Weekly and Rouleur.