The riders starts form Serdang |
Jakub Mareczko takes the win at Pantai Remis |
Scott Sunderland of UnitedHealthcare came 2nd while TSG's Zamri Saleh came 3rd |
Leaders after stage 3 |
PANTAI REMIS : Jakub “Kuba”
Mareczko gave Wilier Triestina their first victory of the 2017 season in stage
3 of Le Tour de Langkawi at Pantai Remis the day after his team-mate Filippo
Pozzato came close. The diminutive Italian outsprinted stage 1 winner Scott
Sunderland who moved into the lead of the points classification whereas Ryan
Gibbons of South Africa retained the yellow jersey ahead of the queen stage to
the Cameron Highlands.
“Finally I broke the ice”,
Mareczko commented. “The whole team was dedicated to bring me to victory. I’m
grateful to my team-mates for that. Pozzato, [Alberto] Cecchin and [Rafael]
Andriato dragged me to the first positions of the peloton and I could launch my
sprint with 400 metres to go.”
Tipped for being the “new Andrea
Guardini” [in reference to the 22-time stage winner at LTdL], Mareczko won by a
length of a bike over Sunderland. “It was difficult with a lot of people moving
up all the time ahead of the sprint as everyone was fresh”, the Australian
explained. “I’ve started my sprint from a long way back as I was out of
position. I came from 25th wheel at 300m to go while he [Mareczko]
was third wheel with 200m to go. His team here is built around him while mine
has four guys out of six who are strong in the climbs. They have to protect themselves
for GC so I have to ride solo and use other teams.”
Dimension Data did most of the
pace at the helm of the peloton behind escape artist Loh Sea Keong (Thailand
Continental Team) who was accompanied by Stepan Astafyev (Vino Astana Motors)
and Dominic Perez (7/11) with a maximum lead of five minutes.
“In the last two kilometers, I
nearly fell about three times”, race leader Gibbons informed. “So my head
wasn’t in it. About 200 metres to go, I tried to come out and I just went
backwards. Hopefully I can find my head again for the upcoming stages. My team
rode all day because they had a lot of faith in me and I was confident in
myself. Jacques Janse van Rensburg sat at the front of the peloton by himself
for 90 kilometres. I’m sorry to have let the team down. It just wasn’t my day.”
Gibbons
added that, being realistic, he expects stage 4 to be his final day in the
yellow jersey as his team-mates Mekseb Debesay from Eritrea and Ben O’Connor
from Australia will take the team’s leadership over from him. Colombians are
set to fill the shoes of their compatriot Miguel Angel “Superman” Lopez who was
a brilliant stage winner in the Cameron Highlands one year ago.
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