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Sports / Cycling

Belgium’s Gilbert wins Tour of Beijing in style

Published: 15 Oct 2014 - 07:18 am | Last Updated: 20 Jan 2022 - 03:09 pm

The winner of the Tour of Beijing 2014, Philippe Gilbert (centre) of BMC team celebrates with runner-up Daniel Martin of Garmin-Sharp (left) and Johan Esteban Chaves Rubio of Orica Greenedge ending third, on the podium after the fifth stage of the 2014 Tour of Beijing yesterday.

BEIJING: Belgium’s Philippe Gilbert won the final edition of the Tour of Beijing in style yesterday, in the shadow of the Bird’s Nest Stadium that hosted the 2008 Olympics.
Ireland’s Daniel Martin, who was last year’s runner-up, again took second place overall, while 24-year-old Esteban Chaves of Colombia took third.
Garmin-Sharp’s American rider Tyler Farrar took the green jersey for the points ranking by a single point from Slovenia’s Luka Mezgec (Giant-Shimano), thanks to his fourth place yesterday.
Italian Sacha Modolo of Lampre-Merida won a bunch sprint to take the race’s fifth and final stage, a 117-kilometre (72-mile) course that started at Tiananmen Square before making 12 loops of a circuit around the stadium. 
“It was really nice but still stressful for the last lap, with a small gap like this,” said BMC rider Gilbert, who enteredthe final stage with only a three-second advantage over Martin and several sprint and place bonuses available.
“So, I took the before-last corner in a really good position, and then I saw that it was okay, because of the headwind in the last kilometre. I didn’t take any risk,” added Gilbert.
While Monday and yesterday’s stages took place under clear blue skies, heavy pollution earlier in the last World Tour event of the season forced Saturday’s hilly second stage to be cut short by about a quarter – a development that gave a boost to Gilbert, who is not known as a climber.
In his last professional race before retirement, French FDJ.FR rider Laurent Mangel sought to go out on a high in Beijing, breaking away from the pack with Belgium’s Tosh van der Sande (Lotto-Belisol) early on and the pair maintaining a gap almost to the end, only to be swept up by the peloton inside the final kilometre.
“It was close, but we tried to make the other teams work because we worked a lot this week,” stage winner Modolo said. “In the end, it worked out.”
“It’s a good race and it’s good to take cycling to new territories,” he added.
But the Beijing event was being run for last time, with the organisers admitting the event “has not been without difficulties”, and was overshadowed by some top-level withdrawals including Tour of Spain winner Alberto Contador and WorldTour number one Alejandro Valverde.AFP