Events

Butler wins in photo finish at Tour of Good Hope

· By Press Office · 6 comments

The fourth stage of the Bestmed Tour of Good Hope came to a dramatic conclusion when Team Telkom’s Reynard Butler took stage honours in a photo finish ahead of New Zealand’s Sam Gaze at La Paris Estate in Paarl today.

Metres from the line it looked like Gaze – who won on top of Du Toitskloof Pass the previous day – had the victory in the bag but Butler was able to draw even as the man from Cambridge lifted his arms in early celebration.

ccs-62657-0-07645600-1457020863.jpgTeam Telkom’s Reynard Butler (second from left) beat New Zealand’s Sam Gaze (left) in a photo finish on stage four of the Bestmed Tour of Good Hope at La Paris Estate in Paarl today. Photo: Warren Elsom/Capcha

Video footage revealed that Johannesburg-based Butler had in fact crossed the line first, by two-thousands of a second, in 3:19:43.

“With 500m to go, my team was in front leading me out and the Specialized guys came from the right with a flyer,” the 26-year-old said.

“I shouted at my boys but it was a bit too late. Sam came on my outside and I just kept on sprinting as I had the belief that I could still do it.”

Butler said he was hopeful of getting the nod as the commissaires peered over the footage as he felt that he had sneaked up and passed his opponent on the line.

“It is up to the officials in the end and the footage maybe showed that too.”

Clint Hendricks of RoadCover completed the men’s podium in the same time while Stefan de Bod of Dimension Data retained the yellow jersey ahead of teammate Keagan Girdlestone and Clint Hendricks of RoadCover.

Earlier in the stage, a group of six riders consisting of Morné van Niekerk and Jayde Julius of Dimension Data, Gawie Combrinck from Songo.info, Waylon Woolcock of USN-Purefit and Kent Main and Bradley Potgieter from RoadCover got away on the descent of Du Toitskloof.

ccs-62657-0-10538100-1457020879.jpgDimension Data’s Amanuel Gebreigzabhier leads teammates Metkel Eyob (king of the mountains) and Stefan de Bod (overall leader) on the early slopes of Du Toitskloof Paas during the fourth stge of the Bestmed Tour of Good Hope that finished in Paarl today. Photo: Warren Elsom/Capcha

The group built a maximum lead of 3:50 as they headed through Slanghoek on their way to Bain’s Kloof Pass.

They started the ascent with a two-minute advantage over the peloton with Potgieter and Main popping halfway up.

The remaining quartet worked well together as they passed through Paarl and held onto a minute-and-a-half lead until the final 10km.

At this point, they started to play cat and mouse and their lead diminished until the peloton reeled them in with 2km to go.

Dimension Data’s Metkel Eyob consolidated his lead in the king of the mountains competition after winning the first prime on Du Toitskloof with Julius taking the second on Bain’s Kloof.

The women’s race went according to form with the overall leader, Annika Langvad of Denmark, snatching another close victory ahead of Britain’s Sharon Laws.

ccs-62657-0-26668000-1457020853.jpgDenmark’s Annika Langvad sprinted to a comfortable victory in the fourth stage of the Bestmed Tour of Good Hope at La Paris Estate in Paarl today. Photo: Warren Elsom/Capcha

“I’m in the yellow jersey and needed to defend it while conserving as much energy as possible,” said Langvad, who rides in the colours of Spur-Specialized.

“Sharon was really putting the hammer down on the first climb, but I managed to hold onto her wheel and outsprinted her for the king of the mountains points.

“After the top, we were only four girls together including my teammate Ariane Kleinhans and Carla Oberholzer.”

She said they worked well together until the last climb where Laws once again applied the pressure.

“I knew it was all about following her wheel and was again able to grab the KOM on top.”

Langvad said she wanted the group to come together again to let her teammate back into the race.

“But Sharon just time-trialled from there and I couldn’t do anything else but hold onto her wheel and go for the final sprint.

“She rode very, very strongly and I really admired her effort towards the finish. Then again, it is racing and I wanted to defend my jersey.”

With Kleinhans finishing a distant third, the overall podium positions remained intact.

Results and GC:

Elite men

Stage 4 results

1. Reynard Butler 3:19:43
2. Sam Gaze 3:19:43
3. Clint Hendricks 3:19:43

GC after stage 4

1. Stefan de Bod 9:47:42
2. Keagan Girdlestone 9:49:29
3. Darren Lill 9:50:43
4. Nico Bell 9:51:03
5. Metkel Eyob 9:51:20
6. Morne van Niekerk 9:51:42
7. HB Kruger 9:51:58
8. Gustav Basson 9:52:02
9. Jayde Julius 9:52:14
10. Paul van Zweel 9:52:38

Elite women

Stage 4 results

1. Annika Langvad 4:12:15
2. Sharon Laws 4:12:19
3. Ariane Kleinhans 4:16:00

GC after stage 4

1. Annika Langvad 12:13:56
2. Sharon Laws 12:14:13
3. Ariane Kleinhans 12:20:12
4. Carla Oberholzer 12:22:41
5. Alexis Barnes 12:29:45
6. Juanita Venter 12:30:39
7. Catherine Colyn 12:31:06
8. Chante van der Merwe 12:48:45
9. Kelly-Ann van der Toorn 12:54:19
10. Marilyn Fisher 13:07:53

Comments

Shebeen

Mar 4, 2016, 4:46 AM

Check out @tourofgoodhope's Tweet:

Blind
Shebeen

Mar 4, 2016, 4:47 AM

Please tell me there's a pro photo of this

lerouc

Mar 4, 2016, 5:09 AM

Check out @tourofgoodhope's Tweet:

Blind

Is it the guy in blue that won or the premature celebrating guy on the left?

lerouc

Mar 4, 2016, 5:15 AM

Is it the guy in blue that won or the premature celebrating guy on the left?

Nevermind, tread the article now. Love it!!

rock

Mar 4, 2016, 7:40 AM

Sam must have tired from winning the mountain top finish yesterday.

 

Part time roadie showing who's boss.

Cylon

Mar 4, 2016, 11:12 AM

Don't celebrate until you cross the frikkin line!!!

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