Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Cycling News
Cycling News
Sport
Laura Weislo

Tour Colombia: Fernando Gaviria sprints to stage 1 victory ahead of Persico, Cavendish

Tour Colombia 2024: Colombian Fernando Gaviria of Movistar Team wins stage 1 (Image credit: Maximiliano Blanco/Getty Images)
Vinicius Rangel of Movistar Team leads the peloton in a chase of breakaway (Image credit: Maximiliano Blanco/Getty Images)
Movistar Team led the chase of breakaway riders, with the final escapee caught with 8km to go (Image credit: Maximiliano Blanco/Getty Images)
The early breakaway contained (L to R) Diego Antonio Ochoa of Team Saitel, Ivan Arturo Ojeda of Team Colombia Potencia de la Vida-Strongman and Ignacio de Jesus Prado of Canel's-Java during 168.6km stage 1 (Image credit: Maximiliano Blanco/Getty Images)
Nairo Quintana of Movistar Team competes during stage 1 of 2024 Tour Colombia (Image credit: Maximiliano Blanco/Getty Images)
Cees Bol rides in front of Astana teammate Mark Cavendish during stage 1 from Paipa to Duitama (Image credit: Maximiliano Blanco/Getty Images)
Nairo Quintana of Movistar Team waves to crowd as team announced for stage 1 at Tour Colombia (Image credit: Maximiliano Blanco/Getty Images)
Rigoberto Uran (far right) stands on stage before stage 1 with EF Education-EasyPost teammates Richard Carapaz, Jefferson Alexander Cepeda, Esteban Chaves, Andrea Piccolo (Image credit: Maximiliano Blanco/Getty Images)
Mark Cavendish of Astana Qazaqstan Team prior to the start of stage 1 from Paipa (Image credit: Maximiliano Blanco/Getty Images)
Egan Bernal of Team Colombia prior to the stage 1 start (Image credit: Maximiliano Blanco/Getty Images)
Colombian Fernando Gaviria (Movistar Team) celebrates at podium as Blue Fan Favorite Jersey winner (Image credit: Maximiliano Blanco/Getty Images)
Fernando Gaviria (Movistar Team) puts on the Pink Points Jersey after stage 1 (Image credit: Maximiliano Blanco/Getty Images)
Nelson Andres Soto of Team Petrolike celebrates at podium as Best U23 Rider (Image credit: Maximiliano Blanco/Getty Images)
Davide Persico of Bingoal-WB accepts the Red Best Foreigner Jersey (Image credit: Maximiliano Blanco/Getty Images)
Fernando Gaviria (Movistar Team) celebrates at podium as Yellow Leader Jersey winner (Image credit: Maximiliano Blanco/Getty Images)

Fernando Gaviria (Movistar) sprinted to victory on the opening stage of the Tour Colombia, much to the delight of the local commentators.

"When you win, you can always say you're doing well, and we're doing great," Gaviria said. "It was quite a hard stage because of the altitude and the speed of the final stretch.

"At the end, fortunately, we were strong. I think we did a good job as a team and we had to face strong rivals. Everyone wanted to look for options, but I think we did great."

Mark Cavendish's Astana team worked the most to control the race but the Manxman didn't have enough speed and finished third on the stage behind Davide Persico (Bingoal WB).

Astana seemed to have everything lined up, reeling in the last two riders from the breakaway, Cristian Muñoz (NU Colombia) and Lauro Moro (Swift Carbon) with 8km to go and setting a quick pace to deter attackers.

However, the run-in to the finish got messy as Astana appeared to run out of gas in the final kilometre. Gaviria came to the fore as Cavendish lost position and held on to snag the stage win and first leader's jersey.

The victory came with some objections from Persico, who appeared to feel as though Gaviria had closed him in along the barriers.

"I was looking for the direction of the fences from the moment of the sprint and it's true that both Persico and I found ourselves there," Gaviria said. "I apologized to him but that was my trajectory, both of us wanted to look for the gap and sometimes that gap doesn't exist.

"Happy to start the year like this and grateful to my teammates for the great work."

Translated with DeepL.com (free version)

How it unfolded

At the signing-on podium in Paipa, there was a warm welcome for the visiting Mark Cavendish and for Colombian favourites like Egan Bernal and Rigoberto Urán, but the longest acclaim on the opening morning of the Tour Colombia, inevitably, was reserved for local favourite Nairo Quintana, who hails from nearby Cómbita.

Across the Atlantic, it was reported on Tuesday that Quintana’s erstwhile doctor Fredy Alexander Gonzales Torres would go on trial in Marseille in September for an alleged doping offence on the 2020 Tour de France. Here, in the heart of Quintana country, the news scarcely seemed to register. Quintana was heartily cheered as he sets off on his second act in Movistar colours after a year on the sidelines following his positive test for Tramadol on the 2022 Tour.

Although the stage took place amid the cloud-flecked peaks of the Cordillera Oriental of the Andes, the opening day of the Tour Colombia lent itself very clearly to the sprinters. The route avoided climbs on the road from Paipa to Duitama, while the finishing circuit gave the fast men a close look at the finale.

There was a rapid start to proceedings once the flag dropped, with an enterprising break of seven riders pressing clear in the opening kilometres. Brayan Sánchez (Team Medellín), Ignacio Prado (Canel's-Java), Lauro Moro (Swift Carbon Pro Cycling), Diego Ochoa (Team Saitel), Cristian Muñoz (NU Colombia), David Gómez (Team Sistecrédito) and Iván Ojeda (Colombia Potencia de Vida-Strongman) quickly built up a lead of a minute or so over the bunch.

The peloton, however, was reluctant to grant the escapees much leeway. Despite the 2,500-metre altitude, the average pace an eye-watering 48.57 kph in the first hour of racing, and the break’s advantage never nudged much beyond the 1:20 they had on reaching Sogamoso early in the day.

Out in front, Gómez picked up two of the three intermediate sprints as the break began to splinter, but the day was edging inexorably towards the anticipated sprint duel between Cavendish and Fernando Gaviria, with Astana-Qazaqstan and Movistar to the fore in dragging the peloton along the finishing circuit around Duitama. 

With 30km to go, the gap was down to 38 seconds and the situation looked under control, though the persistent rain showers would inevitably complicate the run-in. Astana took charge at the front of the peloton to chase down the escapees, who ran out of gas and luck with 8km to go.

Results

Results powered by FirstCycling

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.