Italian Francesco Chicchi notched up his first Tour of Qatar success, winning Stage Four of the event between Pearl Qatar and Al Khor Corniche.
Chicchi, of team Liquigas-Doimo, broke away from a pack of around 50 riders to steal the title, with German Heinrich Haussler (Cervelo Test Team) again finishing second, ahead of Argentinian Jose Juan Haedo of Saxo Bank. Dutchman Wouter Mol, of Vacansoleil Pro Cycling, retains the yellow jersey with a 15 seconds' edge of Belgium's Geert Steurs.
Stage 3 winner Tom Boonen finished 11th, and will have to make substantial ground in Stage 5 if he is to retain the Tour title.
Chicchi dedicated his success to the Italian coach Franco Ballerini, who died last weekend following a rally car crash in Italy.
“This is a special win for the team as we wanted to win for Franco,” he said. “We have decided to ride all through the race with a black band on our arms as a sign of mourning. It’s a small sign in memory of a great man who had a huge place in Italian cycling. This win is for him.
“The best sprinters in the world are here and they’re in great shape. We tried to pull to the front in the last few kilometres but there was too much chaos. At the final roundabout (Daniele) Bennati gave me a hand and I set off with 300 metres to go and it went well from me,” he added.
Meanwhile, TeamSky's senior sports director Scott Sunderland is hoping his riders will pull something dramatic out of the bag before the Tour finishes.
"We've brought a relatively young team here and although we've got the horsepower and the ability to punch out the big watts, we just need a little bit more cohesion,” he said. "But that's coming together now, I think the boys are just getting a step further every day here.
"At the finish today the guys were feeling really good about how everything was working so I think there could be more to come this week. We're improving all the time and by the last day I think we'll be right up there."
Road infrastructure benefits society as well; remove roads, trucks and cars and you'd soon get an idea of what life was like before the Industrial...
It's a lot of money for a simple-looking little tool, but I've been very happy with previous Dynaplugs - they are super effective.
A couple of call-outs from the Guardian piece:...
Well that'll be the famous BBC balance.
A Victorian attitude to dress?
This round-up sponsored by Sram.
Pissy Sods Pointlessly Objecting
Instead of the cycle industry crashing, a lot of places have just about kept the head above water, yes the Wiggles have gone etc, but the bike...
The cease and desist WAS issued to Factor. That's the way they work.
I have the standard Crane E-Ne (like this without the long stalk) on both of my drop bar bikes, set so I can just reach the trigger with my middle...