Written by: Andrew Hood
Posted: Wednesday, 14 May 2008

Tinkoff’s Pavel Brutt feinted and feigned his way to victory in the
final kilometers of a five-man breakaway that held off the chasing
peloton by 30 seconds in Wednesday’s fifth stage at the 91st Giro
d’Italia.
Photo:
Graham Watson
The blond Russian said he was too tired to take pulls. He said he
had nothing left. And then, a few meters before the 1km flag, Brutt hit
the accelerator on the short climbing finish into Contursi Terme to win
ahead of his dismayed fellow escapees. It was the first Russian victory
since 2004, when Pavel Tonkov offered the crowd an intemperature hand
gesture as he crossed the finish line.
Brutt’s chances were greatly improved when David Millar’s chain
broke just as the Slipstream-Chipotle captain was stomping the pedals
to counter the move.
Millar had already negated a stab by Spanish climber Fran Pérez (Caisse
d’Epargne) and looked to be the strongest in the group. When he
realized he had lost his chance to add a Giro stage to his wins at the
Tour de France and Vuelta a España, he flung his useless bicycle over
the fencing in a fit of rage.
“I was totally motivated to win the stage. All my rage just came out at
the moment,” Millar told Italian TV at the line. “I will try again, not
tomorrow, but in a few more days. I hope to win a stage in this Giro.”
Ahead, Brutt struggled up the rising finish but had enough in the
tank to hold off Johannes Fröhlinger (Gerolsteiner) by four seconds and
Luis Laverde (CSF-Panaria) by 10. Pérez limped across at 25 seconds
back while Paolo Bettini (Quick Step) cursed an opportunity missed by
having left the chase too late, leading the pack across the line at 31
seconds in arrears.
“I didn’t believe we’d make it to the finish, but then I was with
some very strong guys and it made the difference to pull clear,” said
Brutt, whose press conference was translated by legendary Russian star
Dimitry Konyshev. “I like go into breakaways. That’s my best chance and
I’ve done a lot of them. I do that as often as possible.”
Franco Pellizotti (Liquigas) enjoyed his fourth day in a row in pink
and safely negotiated the rising finish to retain his one-second grip
on the maglia rosa ahead of second-place Christian Vande Velde (Slipstream-Chipotle).
Russian on the fly
The 203km stage from Belvedere Marittimo to Contursi Terme saw a
five-man break go clear about 20km into the rolling stage, with Brutt,
Laverde (CSF-Panaria), Frohlinger (Gerolsteiner), Millar (Slipstream)
and Francisco Perez (Caisse d'Epargne).
Once again the skies opened up on the race and riders rode through rain on and off all day.
The break built a gap of more than nine minutes before the peloton got
serious about chasing. Liquigas took the front, with Charley Wegelius
once again cranking out the revs for his race leader, while Quick Step
lent a hand for world champ Paolo Bettini. LPR came to the fore, too,
hoping to set up Danilo Di Luca in the finale.
But the bunch waited too long to launch its pursuit, and as the
break took a lead of two minutes into the final 4km, it was clear that
the winner was going to be one of the five leaders.
“The group didn’t react and when our gap grew to more than nine
minutes, we understood that we had good chances to make it to the
line,” said Pérez, who rode much of the day in the “virtual” pink
jersey after starting the day 1:57 back.
“I dreamed of taking the maglia rosa, but the stage victory
was still there. I felt good and tried to attack on the hill, but Brutt
took advantage of us. In the final, the Russian didn’t take any pulls
and said he was dead, but he was still able to beat us! I’m a little
disappointed to lose this good opportunity, but satisfied that I have
good legs.”
Fröhlinger jumped first to no effect, then Pérez went, but he, too,
was caught. Millar appeared to be the strongest and Brutt the weakest,
but when the Scot suddenly snapped his chain, the Russian went,
grabbing an insurmountable lead with 450 meters to race.
The breakaway specialist’s rope-a-dope worked and he rode away with the biggest win for both him and his upstart team.
Brutt is part of the gaggle of young Russian riders being nurtured
on the Tinkoff team under the watchful eye of team owner Oleg Tinkov.
The millionaire Russian businessman started the team last year and
earned invites to the Giro.
The team animated last year’s Giro with a seemingly endless stream
of breakaways, but nothing ever stuck. That all changed Wednesday when
things went just right for Brutt.
“Oleg said if I got into a breakaway, I could give his wife a kiss.
I don’t know if that’s true, but it was a good group to be in today,”
Brutt said. “I prefer to race on a Russian team than on a French or
Italian team. The ambiance is different.”
The 25-year-old Brutt is an old-school Russian who hails from St.
Petersburg. A winner of a dozen races since turning pro in 2004, Brutt
raced for Itera and Lokomotiv before joining Tinkoff in 2006.
Pellizotti steady in pink
What a difference a second makes.
Pellizotti enjoyed his fourth day in the maglia rosa after riding up the short climb to Contursi Terme in eighth place.
“I only have a one-second lead in the GC, but what a difference it
makes!” Pellizotti said. “I’ve had four days in pink thanks to that one
second.”
Vande Velde remains poised in case anything happens to the
curly-haired Italian, but so far Pellizotti shows no signs of cracking.
Slipstream took a dazzling win in Saturday’s opening team time
trial, but had the unfortunate luck to run into a challenging stage the
very next day. Vande Velde put up a great defense, but Pellizotti was
strong enough to take back 10 seconds to Vande Velde’s nine-second head
start and it’s been deadlocked ever since.
There were no major shakeups in Wednesday’s fast run up the finish
line. Alberto Contador (Astana) was 10th in the stage and fifth out of
the main pack behind Bettini.
Contador will decide next week if he’s in winning form or if he’ll pull the plug on the Giro and set his sights on other goals.
“I am better than I had hoped,” Contador said. “In the seventh stage
that ends on the summit, I believe I will know if I am in condition to
challenge for this Giro or go home. We’ll see then, but I might stay
around until the time trial (stage 10) before making the definitive
decision.”
Riccardo Riccò (Saunier Duval-Prodir) also looked fresh on the final
charge, finishing three spots behind Bettini. A winner of the second
stage at Agrigento, Riccò said he’s feeling better after crashing hard
in Monday’s stage.
“When the breakaway left, I thought the peloton would control it and
we’d have a shot for victory, but they left it too late,” Riccò said.
“My finger is slowly getting better, it only hurts when I am out of the
saddle, but it’s better day by day. I don’t expect it to be a problem
in the mountains. The Giro is getting harder? Better. The harder the
Giro is, the better for me.”
Attackers will get another chances in Thursday’s longest stage from
Potenza to Peschici. Race organizers agreed to eliminate a final 33km
loop and reduce the stage from 265km, but it still ranks as the longest
of this year’s Giro.
Another short rising finish will provide the Bettinis and Riccòs
with another shot at the win — if a breakaway doesn’t stay clear.
For complete coverage of the 2008 Giro d'Italia and all of your competitive cycling news go to http://www.velonews.com.