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August 1, 2023
Tour de l‘Ain 2023 🇫🇷 – Stage 2 – Saint-Vulbas – Lagnieu : 124 km
For young, up-and-coming French riders the Tour de l’Ain is one of the most important races on the pro cycling calendar and a big chance to attract the interest of WorldTour talent scouts.
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August 1, 2023
Tour de l‘Ain 2023 🇫🇷 – Stage 2 – Saint-Vulbas – Lagnieu : 124 km
For young, up-and-coming French riders the Tour de l’Ain is one of the most important races on the pro cycling calendar and a big chance to attract the interest of WorldTour talent scouts. The multi-day race was first held back in 1970 under an old and now defunct name, the Prix de l’Amitié. In 1989 a committee of new organisers came in and changed the name to the more familiar Tour de l’Ain. They also took the race to a new region, swapping southeast France and the French Alps for the Jura Mountains and the Ain department in east-central France. Since the establishment of the UCI ProTour back in 2005, the Tour de l’Ain has been ranked as a 2.1 event, making it one of the biggest French stage races. Up until 2018, the race regularly ran for five stages, with a short opening prologue followed by four punchy road stages. Now there are just three stages for the riders to compete over, two of which are often held in the heart of the Jura Mountains.
Jefferson Cepeda (EF Education-EasyPost) won stage 2 of the Tour de l’Ain after he pipped Michael Storer (Groupama-FDJ) in a two-up sprint in Lagnieu after a crash-marred finale.
Storer crashed beyond the finish after he made contact with Cepeda as he dived for the line, but he could have no complaint about the Ecuadorian’s sprint. Cepeda moves into the race lead, four seconds ahead of Storer and 20 up on Kenny Elissonde (Lidl-Trek), who placed third on the stage.
After the early break had animated proceedings on the Col des Fosses and the Côte de Saillonnaz, Groupama-FDJ took up the reins at the head of the peloton and pinned back the escapees on the category 1 Col des Portes on behalf of Storer, with overnight leader Jake Stewart distanced.
Hugh Carthy (EF Education-EasyPost) sensed his chance, and he launched a stinging attack 5km from the summit that only Storer and Elissonde could initially follow, with Cepeda joining them soon afterwards.
Elissonde was distanced when Storer accelerated near the summit with 15km to go, but Carthy and Cepeda held firm, and this trio dropped down the other side to fight it out for stage victory.
The rainy conditions, however, made for a treacherous descent. Alexis Vuillermoz (TotalEnergies) was a faller in the chasing group, while Carthy’s chances of stage victory disappeared when his wheels slipped from under him with a little over 2km to go.
All the while, Elissonde was mounting a vain solo pursuit of the leaders, but the Frenchman would have to settle for third on the stage, 14 seconds back, while his Lidl-Trek teammate Julien Bernard won the sprint for fourth at 37 seconds.
Out in front, Cepeda managed to force Storer to lead out the sprint and the Australian opened his effort with 200m to go. Cepeda unleashed a sharp effort of his own and just about managed to fend off Storer, who slid across the road on crossing the line.
The Tour de l’Ain concludes on Wednesday with a tough stage to Lelex-Mont Jura that includes no fewer than seven classified climbs.
“It was a great stage, my team was very strong, it worked well. In the end I lost my teammate Carthy on the descent, but I was able to think about the sprint,” said Cepeda. “Tomorrow, we hope we can defend the leader’s jersey, we have a great team here.”
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