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Matt Goss wins Milan San Remo on day of drama in La Classicissima

Cancellara and Gilbert make up the podium in exciting race

Matt Goss of HTC-Highroad has won the 102nd edition of Milan-San Remo today, outsprinting Fabian Cancellara with Philippe Gilbert third in a finale contested by just eight riders, including other big names such as Vincenzo Nibali and Alessandro Ballan.

The young Australian, who with his first Classic win caps a phenomenal start to the season with seven victories already, had been expected to assist Mark Cavendish as the Manxman sought to win back the title he had won by inches from Garmin-Cervelo’s Heinrich Haussler two years ago.

A crash on the day’s second climb, Le Manie, which saw 20 or so riders hit the deck including world champion Thor Hushovd, put paid to Cavendish’s chances, as well as those of the Norwegian and his Garmin-Cervelo team mate Tyler Farrar as a group of around 35 riders got away and quickly built a two-minute lead.

With HTC-Highroad and Garmin-Cervelo represented in that lead group by, respectively, Goss and Haussler, those teams appeared disinclined to chase down the break. Meanwhile, at the front of the race, BMC and Katusha, which both had several riders in the break, were pushing hard.

Although the gap started to narrow, in the end the pursuers gave up the ghost and only Michele Scarponi of Lampre managed to bridge across after attacking the other members of the second group on the day’s penultimate climb, the Cipressa.

Another pre-race favourite, three-time winner and defending champion Oscar Freire of Rabobank, saw his chances dashed by a fall during the descent from that climb, some 90km from the finish of the 298km race.

It could have been much worse for the Spaniard, though; while bashed and bruised from his chute, only the safety barrier prevented him from a precipitous fall down the hillside after he slid across the road on the outside of a hairpin bend.

With 10km to race, the leaders were on the final climb, the Poggio, and BMC’s Belgian rider Greg van Avermaet made a bid for glory, hitting the summit 15 seconds ahead of the other leaders, with Vincenzo Nibali of Liquigas Cannondale attacking behind him.

As the leaders entered San Remo, just eight riders were left in contention. Yoann Offredo of FDJ may have been the least heralded, but he has decent form in this race and launched a series of attacks but could not get away.

Nibali, Gilbert and Cancellara in turn each tried to make the decisive move, with Ballan, Scarponi and Filippo Pozzato also in the mix, but the 24-year-old Tasmanian Goss, the last remaining pure sprinter in contention, had enough left in his legs for one final effort despite having nearly 300km of riding in his legs.

Prior to the race getting under way outside the Castello Sforzesco this morning, tribute was paid to the victims of the earthquake in Japan and shortly after the start that country’s national champion, Takashi Miyazawa of Farnese Vini-Neri Sottoli, got off the front to make his own commemoration.

He was joined by three other riders, Nico Sijmens of Cofidis, Alessandro de Marchi of Androni-Giocatolli and Katusha’s Mikhail Ignatiev. At one point they had a lead of more than 13 minutes, but by the time they were over the Turchino, coming up to the halfway point of the race, they were being reeled back in before the drama began in earnest.

The stage appeared to be set for the peloton to regroup ahead of a bunch sprint, but the crashes on the Manie put paid to that, as well as the hopes of many of the pre-race favourites, with the main group eventually coming home 5 minutes 23 seconds after the winner.

2011 Milan-San Remo result 
1 Matthew Goss      HTC-Highroad         6:51:10
2 Fabian Cancellara Leopard Trek
3 Philippe Gilbert  Omega Pharma-Lotto
4 Alessandro Ballan BMC Racing Team
5 Filippo Pozzato   Katusha Team
6 Michele Scarponi  Lampre-ISD
7 Yoann Offredo     FDJ
8 Vincenzo Nibali   Liquigas-Cannondale   + 0:03

 

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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