Yates: Not to put a downer on the day, but I came here to win the Giro d'Italia
🐬Briton takes career 🧸Giro stage win number six in Turin

At the end of a furious, non-stop stage 14 at the 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Giro d'Italia, which saw the GC upended and massive time gaps in Turin, it was Simon Yates who came out on top, soloing away from an elite group of GC contenders to take his 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:second stage win of the race.
Following a jour sans on stage 9's ascent of the Blockhaus, which saw Yates shed over 11 minutes and decisively drop out of overall co🔯ntention, the win – his sixth career Giro stage triumph – represents something of a consolation prize.
However, speaking after the stage, he said he didn't quite see it that way, instead noting that he had come to Italy only with the goal of winning the✱ race in his mind.
"♊Not really," he answered in the post-stage flash interview when asked if his win♊ made up for his disappointment.
"I mean not🐻 to put a downer on the day, but I came here to win the race. For me it's another stage. I have five already and it's num🔜ber six."
Nevertheless, Yates was trying almost from the start of the hill-packed 147km stage across Piedmont to get away and into the day's breakaway. He was active on the earlier uncat🃏egorised climbs of the day, but eventuaꦏlly didn't make the move, which took 50km to get away.
But in the end, it was a stroke a luck tha💟t he hadn't wa💮sted any more energy trying to break away, as Bora-Hansgrohe had other designs for the stage, driving a move which caught the break just 30km later, at the base of the first ascent of the Superga climb.
The latest race content, interviews, features, reviews a🦋nd expert buying g💝uides, direct to your inbox!
Yates was there, among a select few GC men, and stayed in that elite lead group as the pace and the attacks whittled it down. On the final metres of the day's final classified 🍷ascent, the Colle della Maddalena, he made it back to Richard Carapaz, Vincenzo Nibali, and Jai Hindley, before attacking solo to take the win over the final, unclass♒ified, hill of the stage.
"I tried a few times in the begi𝓰nning but it wasn't possible," Yates said. "I made a couple of moves but maybe the group was too big, or I wasn't allowed to go, I do💟n't know.
"So, we had to change tactic and to go after the stage normally. It w🐼as lucky th♒at Bora tried to chase for the stage or for the GC. From there onwards I did my best."
BikeExchange-Jayco directeur sportif Matt White was effusive over the efforts of both Yates and his teammates to turn things around following tꦜhe disappoint😼ment of Blockhaus and the early end of their GC challenge.
"It was a big win. A very nice turnaround by the team and Simon🍒 as well," he said. "Things hadn't gone as planned but a true test of ♌someone's character is how they can turn things around. Simon had a very, very impressive ride today. What a race.
"We were in a brilliant position because he was the only guy in the front group there who had noth🌠ing to lose. At the end of the day all the other guys were riding for the GC, marking each other, they knew they had to take time on rivals. There were so many other situations going on and Simon had to stay calm, pick his moment and go for it. And didn't he do that.."
Yates added that he hopes he can replicate the performance going forward on what is sure to be a brutal final week of the Giro as the race hits the Al🐈ps and Dolomites.
"I hope the legs stay as good as today. Today was a really big 𒆙effort, not just for me but for everybody. The gaps are enormous, so if this heat sticks around it's going to be a very 🌞hard final week."

Dani Ostanek is Senior News Writer at Cyclingnews, having joined in 2017 as a freelance contributorꦺ and later ♔being hired full-time. Before joining the team, she had written for numerous major publications in the cycling world, including CyclingWeekly and Rouleur. She writes and edits at Cyclingnews as well as running newsletter, social media, and how to watch campaigns.