The fifth Amgen tour of California saw Mark Cavendish win the first stage. The race began at Nevada City and ended in downtown Sacramento. The race had loads of action and drama with a five-man pile up during the race and an exhausted Cavendish crossing the finish line before the rest.
Just half a mile into the race and a spectacle was witnessed where bikes were crashing and bouncing off the lanes and down came Tom Boonen, George Hincapie, Stuart O'Grady, Andrew Pinfold and Dominique Rollin. England's Mark Cavendish won the 101.4 mile long Stage one in 4 hours, 4 minutes, 36 seconds.
Runner up JJ Haedo of Saxo Bank said, “To beat Mark Cavendish is not as easy as it looks on TV. The pressure is off now for me.” The second stage of the race will be from Davis to Santa Rosa today, and then will move on to Santa Cruz and San Jose. The five involved in the pile up are relatively unscathed, escaping with mere bruises and minor injuries. They are expected to race the following day.
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“The circuit itself isn't dangerous,” Cavendish said of the final four laps around the gleaming white Capitol. "It is the mayhem that is going on that is dangerous." He crossed the finish line without much pomp and show, simply raising his arms. “I don't think about my celebrations too much,” Cavendish said.
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Cavendish lauded his teammates, explaining that without their teamwork the victory would not have been possible. He said, “I trust those guys in front of me. I know if I am delivered to the right place, I will cross the line first.” Jonathan Vaughters, manager of Team Garmin-Transitions said, “They're structured to help Cavendish. Their guys are built to help on the flat stages.”
Just half a mile into the race and a spectacle was witnessed where bikes were crashing and bouncing off the lanes and down came Tom Boonen, George Hincapie, Stuart O'Grady, Andrew Pinfold and Dominique Rollin. England's Mark Cavendish won the 101.4 mile long Stage one in 4 hours, 4 minutes, 36 seconds.
Runner up JJ Haedo of Saxo Bank said, “To beat Mark Cavendish is not as easy as it looks on TV. The pressure is off now for me.” The second stage of the race will be from Davis to Santa Rosa today, and then will move on to Santa Cruz and San Jose. The five involved in the pile up are relatively unscathed, escaping with mere bruises and minor injuries. They are expected to race the following day.
Jet charter is fast becoming an essential tool for many of today’s busy executives who need to maximize the efficiency of their working day. FlyMeNow is one of the leading jet charter providers in UK.
“The circuit itself isn't dangerous,” Cavendish said of the final four laps around the gleaming white Capitol. "It is the mayhem that is going on that is dangerous." He crossed the finish line without much pomp and show, simply raising his arms. “I don't think about my celebrations too much,” Cavendish said.
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Cavendish lauded his teammates, explaining that without their teamwork the victory would not have been possible. He said, “I trust those guys in front of me. I know if I am delivered to the right place, I will cross the line first.” Jonathan Vaughters, manager of Team Garmin-Transitions said, “They're structured to help Cavendish. Their guys are built to help on the flat stages.”