Haedo wins stage, Arrieta keeps lead

Eurosport - Fri, 07 Mar 02:47:00 2008

Argentina's Juan Jose Haedo, of the CSC team, won the third stage of the Tour of Murcia, a 146km run from Puerto Lumbreras to San Pedro del Pinatar.

CYCLING 2008 Clasica Almeria CSC Juan Jose Haedo - 0

Spain's Aitor Perez Arrieta, of the Extremadura team, keeps the overall leader's yellow jersey.

The 27-year-old Haedo (pictured), a professional rider since 2003, came out on top in a sprint finish which involved Spain's Koldo Fernandez de Larrea and Australian rider Graeme Brown, the winner of Tuesday's first stage.

Alejandro Valverde, the Tour of Murcia winner in 2004 and 2007, slipped to ninth overall from fifth place but six seconds behind Perez.

STAGE TWO

Spanish rider Aitor Perez Arrieta took the overall lead in the Tour of Murcia following the 152.5km second stage which was won by compatriot Jose Rubiera.

Arrieta takes over from Australian Graeme Brown, who won the first stage, but he will be anxiously looking over his shoulder as Tour de France champion Alberto Contador is in fourth overall while last year's winner of this race Alejandro Valverde is fifth, both of them just six seconds in arrears.

Contador is looking for a morale-boosting win after his Astana team were controversially barred from competing in this year's Tour de France, even, though, the team management and riders are radically different to the one that was ordered out of the race last year after Alexandre Vinokourov was found guilty of blood doping.

STAGE ONE

Australian Graeme Brown won the first stage of the Tour of Murcia, a 197.3km ride from Pinatar to Lorca.

The Australian prevailed in a sprint finish ahead of Spanish duo Koldo Fernandez and Aitor Perez.

The stage had been enlivened by a 190km escape from Spaniard Jose Antonio Lopez Gil and Alexander Serov of Russia, who were swept up just 6km from the finish.

Brown leads Fernandez and Perez in the overall standings while two-time winner Alejandro Valverde is in 21st place on the same time as the winner.

AFP