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Pete Trifunovic

Tour de Wallonie: Markus Hoelgaard outsprints Jimmy Janssens for stage 3 victory

Markus Hoelgaard wins stage 3 at Tour de Wallonie (Image credit: Luc Claessen/Getty Images)
Corbin Strong wears the overall leader's jersey on stage 3 at the Tour de Wallonie (Image credit: Getty Images)
Markus Hoelgaard and Jimmy Janssens in the breakaway on stage 3 at the Tour de Wallonie (Image credit: Getty Images)
Matteo Trentin wins the sprint for third place on stage 3 at the Tour de Wallonie (Image credit: Getty Images)

Markus Hoelgaard (Uno-X Mobility) secured the queen stage of the Tour de Wallonie after catching out his breakaway partner Jimmy Janssens (Alpecin-Deceuninck) inside the final 500m of the race’s third day.

The Norwegian national road champion benefitted from a downhill run-in into La Roche-en-Ardenne to launch his stage-winning attack, not offering the Belgian any chance to sit in the wheel and outsprint Hoelgaard.

The duo were part of the day’s original breakaway that managed to hold off the bunch throughout the 192km stage from Arlon.

Matteo Trentin (Tudor Pro Cycling Team) led home the chasing group, including race leader Corbin Strong (Israel-Premier Tech), to secure third on the day, 23 seconds in arrears.

The result means the Kiwi remains at the top of the GC standings by seven seconds to Trentin, with Lidl-Trek’s Alex Kirsch a further four seconds behind.

Reacting to his well-timed stage-winning attack, Hoelgaard said, “It’s a super feeling; when I won the nationals, I set one goal, and that was to get at least one victory in this nice jersey, so to do it on race day three is better than I could’ve dreamt.”

The day’s break managed to forge a gap of around five minutes at times during the undulating stage that featured six category-one climbs. However, Janssens and Hoelgaard still held a sturdy 1:45 lead as they tackled the Côte de Maboge for a final time with 10km to go, ensuring their hard work didn’t go to waste.

“I knew my shape was good, then yesterday I was behind the crash and my GC [chances] were gone, so I decided to go for the breakaway. We were five strong guys, and everyone committed, then when the gap kept on growing, I was confident that we’d be able to fight for the win,” Hoelgaard added.

Results

Results powered by FirstCycling

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