Groves wins sprint after Alaphilippe becomes latest Vuelta casualty

Team Bikeexchange's Australian rider Kaden Groves celebrates as he wins the 11th stage of the 2022 La Vuelta cycling tour of Spain, a 191.2 km race from Alhama de Murcia to Cabo de Gata, on Aug. 31, 2022. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 01 September 2022
Follow

Groves wins sprint after Alaphilippe becomes latest Vuelta casualty

  • Evenepoel finished safely in the peloton to preserve his 2min 41sec lead over Primoz Roglic but the Belgian lost a key ally in Alaphilippe

MADRID: Australian Kaden Groves won a frantic sprint to take stage 11 of the Vuelta a Espana on Wednesday as Remco Evenepoel maintained his overall lead on a day dominated by further rider casualties.

After more big names failed to start following positive COVID tests, Julian Alaphilippe crashed out with less than 70 kilometers to go, dealing a blow to his hopes of a world title hat-trick and to the Vuelta chances of team-mate Evenepoel.

“It’s sad on such a quiet stage to lose Julian,” said Evenepoel. “It’s a stupid fall. I hope he’s okay and that he doesn’t suffer too much.

“He was in great shape, but I have confidence in all my teammates for the coming weeks.”

Groves gave BikeExchange their first victory of this year’s Vuelta on the day they lost British team leader Simon Yates following a positive COVID test.

“This morning with the news of Simon going positive for Covid all the boys were pretty disappointed,” said Groves after the 191.2km run along the windy Andalusian coast to Cabo de Gata.

“It was the best way to bounce back after such news.”

“I’m really happy to celebrate but also wish he was here,” said Groves after his first major tour stage victory.

Evenepoel finished safely in the peloton to preserve his 2min 41sec lead over Primoz Roglic but the Belgian lost a key ally in Alaphilippe.

The double world champion left the course in an ambulance after dislocating his right shoulder in a fall with less than 70km to go.

He will fly to Belgium on Thursday for further scans to rule out any further damage, his Quick-Step team said in a statement.

The crash puts 30-year-old Alaphilippe’s chances of winning three straight world championship road races in doubt. This year’s event is in Wollongong, Australia, on Sept. 25.

Among the Covid casualties was Irish sprinter Sam Bennett of Bora, who dropped out Tuesday. He had been a close second in the points competition after winning two stages earlier in the race.

Sprint leader Mads Pedersen suddenly had a big advantage but needed to collect as many points as possible on flat finishes with second-place Evenepoel a threat in the coming mountain stages.

Pedersen collected maximum points in an intermediate sprint with 10km to go, but was outmaneuvered in the massed charge for the finish line. The Dane ended up fifth after being boxed in.

“It was pretty fast, a lot of guys everywhere,” the Trek rider said. “I misjudged it a little bit.”

Groves outpaced Dutchman Danny van Poppel and Belgian Tim Merlier to the line.

Alaphilippe was the latest casualty in a Vuelta that has been hit unusually hard by crashes and Covid positives.

Quick-Step had lost another rider, Pieter Serry, to a positive Covid test on Sunday.

After Yates, the 2018 Vuelta champion, Pavel Sivakov of Ineos, who was also in the top 10, and three Kern Pharma riders withdrew before Wednesday’s 11th stage, the day’s racing began with ony 154 of the 184 starters.

“There is a little paranoia among the riders,” said Colombian Miguel Angel Lopez. “We see that every day several teams are starting without all their riders. We have to be pay a lot of attention and wear the mask and continue to respect the rules.”

On Thursday, riders travel 192.7km through Andalusia on a stage that is mostly flat until a demanding 19km finishing climb up Penas Blancas.


Israel seeks to demolish West Bank stadium just weeks after UEFA intervention

Updated 8 sec ago
Follow

Israel seeks to demolish West Bank stadium just weeks after UEFA intervention

  • In January, a football pitch in the Aida refugee camp was saved, but Israel is now looking to dismantle the Umm Al-Khair Stadium in Masafer Yatta

RIYADH: On Jan. 20, an intervention by UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin prevented Israeli forces from taking over the Aida refugee camp football pitch outside Bethlehem, but now Tel Aviv is targeting another arena.

Less than a month later, Israel is threatening to demolish the Umm Al-Khair Stadium in Masafer Yatta, in the West Bank.

“UEFA saved one pitch in the West Bank. Israel is demolishing another,” read the cover of Game Over Israel’s latest Instagram post.

The latest move illustrates why this situation is not simply about saving one or two stadiums, but one which critics of Israel argue is designed to encourage settler expansion and make life increasingly difficult for Palestinians.

The Umm Al-Khair stadium in Masafer Yatta serves as a recreational space for children in the village who want nothing more than a safe space to play and take part in sporting activities.

It appears, however, that the well-being of these children comes second to settlement expansion demands. The pro-settler Regavim organization has reportedly claimed that the facility obstructs settlement expansion in the area.

“We received this stop-work order from the Israeli Civil Administration against the playground of Umm Al-Khair,” a resident said in a video distributed by journalist Leyla Hamed.

“If we don’t reply to our lawyers, this playground will be dismantled and demolished by the Israeli army.”

On one level, it may feel like a victory for Ceferin and UEFA to have helped save one pitch. But can it truly be considered progress if every time one stadium is saved another faces demolition?

Ashish Prashar, a former advisor to the Middle East peace envoy and leader of the #GameOverIsrael campaign, said: “You have to know who Israel is ... and Ceferin clearly doesn’t.

“Celebrating and receiving awards for playing a role in the saving of one pitch isn’t the work of justice.

“And it doesn’t protect the lives of Palestinian kids, nor fulfill his obligation as president of UEFA to promote peace, a legal assertion that gives the organization a very advantageous tax status in Switzerland.

“The only solution here is to be a serious person and suspend Israel.”

The so-called war may be over on paper, but until the wider system is addressed, the future of Palestinian football — and the peace surrounding it — remains under serious threat.