ATOC 2: Ben King Survives The Break

by editors on May 17, 2016

(Click here for the ATOC Stage 2 Photo Gallery)

Wonder if Nor Cal’s Evan Huffman is done thinking about how he could have done the Amgen Tour of California stage 2 sprint differently? After staying off the front in a break for the back half of the 92 mile race, it was down to Huffman and Cannondale Pro Cycling’s Ben King. At 200 meters (with the peloton breathing down the necks) Huffman went first and hit it like a mad man. King was able to hang on and blast around Huffman five meters from the line to take the stage.

“I knew Evan was a pretty quick sprinter. He smoked me in both of the King of the Mountain sprints, so I was hesitant to let it come down to a sprint,” said King. “I couldn’t drop him on the climb, so in the end we both fully committed to make the breakaway stick to the finish, and in the end, Evan let out the sprint, and I was able to come around him in the finish.”

For the official word from the Amgen Tour of California, please follow the jump.

AMERICANS BEN KING AND EVAN HUFFMAN HOLD ON AND HOLD BACK WORLD’S TOP SPRINTERS TO CLAIM FIRST TWO PODIUM POSITIONS AT 2016 AMGEN TOUR OF CALIFORNIA

TEAM KATUSHA’S KRISTOFF TAKES THIRD PLACE PRIZE

World-class Cyclists Will Be Tested Tomorrow in Queen Stage from
Thousand Oaks to Race’s First Summit Finish on Gibraltar Road in
Santa Barbara County

SANTA CLARITA, CALIF. (May 16, 2016) – Stage 2 of the 2016 Amgen Tour of California presented by AEG seemed likely to end with a shootout featuring riders known for sprint finishes, but instead was claimed by Cannondale Pro Cycling Team’s super domestique and breakaway specialist Ben King
(Charlottesville, Virginia), a 2010 U.S. National Champion, just besting Rally Cycling’s Evan Huffman (Elk Grove, Calif.) to move into the overall lead.

The peloton of 144 world-class riders took off from South Pasadena just after noon today for a 92.3-mile twisting, turning up- and downhill ride to Santa Clarita. But bearing down on the finish line, it came down to a battle of just two U.S. riders who had spent most of the day out ahead of the field.

“I knew Evan was a pretty quick sprinter. He smoked me in both of the King of the Mountain sprints, so I was hesitant to let it come down to a sprint,” said King. “I couldn’t drop him on the climb, so in the end we both fully committed to make the breakaway stick to the finish, and in the end, Evan let out the sprint, and I was able to come around him in the finish.”

After several attempts to get a breakaway going, finally a group of four that also contained Team Giant-Alpecin’s Sindre Skjoestad Lunke (NOR) and another U.S. rider Axeon Hagens Berman’s Will Barta (Boise, Idaho), the second youngest rider in the race at 20, made it clear from the field more than an hour into the race.

The breakaway group containing King, who is coming back from a broken fibula after a January fall, had racked up a 7.5-minute lead over peloton by mid-race. The peloton started reeling them back on the decent of the second of four KOMs in the Angeles National Forest, where speeds reached upwards of 50 mph. Lunke was the first to be absorbed by the field.

With about 15 miles to go, Barta suffered a flat tire but had the wherewithal to get back to the breakaway after a tire change. He fell back with about five minutes to go but remained in the chase group, which came in seconds behind today’s stage leaders, landing him the Breakaway from Cancer® Most Courageous Rider Jersey as well as sixth place overall.

“We were rolling all day, then at the end, that incident happened [flat tire]; I just tried to stay calm and get back in a good amount of time,” said Barta. “The gap wasn’t huge then, so was just trying to do that with the least amount of work, but get back quickly.”

With 10 miles left to ride, Team KATUSHA led the chase to catch the four leaders, angling to position their star sprinter Alexander Kristoff (NOR), and bringing the gap down to less than two minutes. Race leader and World Champion
Peter Sagan (SVK) of Tinkoff rode in the main chase group wearing the yellow jersey he earned yesterday in San Diego, as did Team Giant-Alpecin’s John Degenkolb (GER) and Trek-Segafredo’s Santa Rosa-based rider
Peter Stetina, both of whom are coming back from career-threatening injuries themselves.

However, the two remaining in the breakaway were able to hold their lead, which stood at 20 seconds on the chase group and one minute on the field with one mile left to ride. With the finish in sight, the Rally rider attacked first, only to be overtaken in the final meters. King, at age 27, is the first U.S. rider to win a stage at the Amgen Tour of California since BMC Racing Team’s Taylor Phinney (Boulder, Colo.) took Stage 5 in 2014.

Still in the wings, Kristoff rode across the finish in third place for today’s stage. Huffman earned the Lexus King of the Mountain (KOM) Jersey on the hilly route, a good warm-up for the cyclists who must face the infamous Gibraltar Road at the close of tomorrow’s stage.

Stage 2 Podium
1. Ben King (USA), Cannondale Pro Cycling Team (USA)
2. Evan Huffman (USA), Rally Cycling Team (USA)
3. Alexander Kristoff (NOR), Team KATUSHA (RUS)

Stage 2 Jersey Winners
Amgen Leader Jersey – Ben King (USA), Cannondale Pro Cycling Team (USA)
Lexus King of the Mountain (KOM) Jersey – Evan Huffman (USA), Rally Cycling Team (USA)
Visit California Sprint Jersey – Peter Sagan (SVK), Tinkoff (RUS)
SRAM Best Young Rider Jersey – Daniel Eaton (USA), UnitedHealthcare Pro Cycling Team (USA)
Breakaway from Cancer® Most Courageous Rider Jersey – William Barta (USA), Axeon Hagens Berman Cycling Team (USA)

Celebrating its 11th year, the Amgen Tour of California is the most esteemed stage race in the U.S. Amgen has been the title sponsor of the race since its first year.

“At Amgen, we are passionate about serving patients, and we have reached millions of people with our medicines over the past 36 years,” said Raymond C. Jordan, senior vice president of Corporate Affairs at Amgen. “We are grateful that our sponsorship of the Amgen Tour of California has given us another platform to educate so many people, not just in California but nationwide, about important resources available through our Breakaway from Cancer program.”

Breakaway from Cancer®, created by Amgen in 2005, is a national initiative to raise awareness of important resources available to people affected by cancer – from prevention to survivorship. The Breakaway from Cancer® four nonprofit partner organizations – Prevent Cancer Foundation, Cancer Support Community, Patient Advocate Foundation and National Coalition for Survivorship – offer a broad range of services complementing those provided by a patient’s team of healthcare professionals.

As part of today’s race activities, cancer survivor Jim Hodge, Pasadena, Calif. joined the official start activities and cancer survivor Nancy Eckels of Santa Clarita, Calif. had the honor of awarding Will Barta the Amgen Breakaway from Cancer Most Courageous Rider Jersey.

For more information about Breakaway from Cancer, visit breakawayfromcancer.com.

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