Australia’s Haden Groves secures third Vuelta stage win in wet Santander sprint

Fellow Australian Ben O’Connor maintains his five-second lead in the overall standings

Australia's Kaden Groves  on his way to winning stage 17 of the Vuelta a Espana between Arnuero and Santander. Photograph: Ander Gillenea/AFP via Getty Images
Australia's Kaden Groves on his way to winning stage 17 of the Vuelta a Espana between Arnuero and Santander. Photograph: Ander Gillenea/AFP via Getty Images

Australia’s Kaden Groves secured his third stage win of the Vuelta a Espana with a perfectly timed sprint in Stage 17 on Wednesday.

Czech rider Pavel Bittner and Belgium’s Vito Braet came second and third in a mass sprint finish on very wet streets in the port city of Santander, which hosted a Vuelta finish for the first time in over 20 years and a stage departure for the first time in a decade.

The large group of sprinters who crossed the finish line included overall leader, Australian Ben O’Connor, and his main challenger, Slovenian Primoz Roglic. O’Connor maintained his five-second lead in the overall standings.

“It was quite a tough day. It started dry and then the finish was wet so it made it quite dangerous as well,” Groves told reporters.

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“There are only a few sprint stages in this race and the rest are mountain stages so the intermediate riders really have to try on days like today.”

A leading group of four riders followed each other in the mountains of northwestern Spain into the mostly flat final stretch but lost time as none of them wanted to attempt a breakaway.

The peloton cut into the lead as they passed through the city centre and caught up within the leaders in the last kilometre.

O’Connor praised his compatriot Groves, who also took over the green points jersey following Wout van Aert’s abandonment after a crash on Tuesday.

“It’s always good to see another fellow Aussie win,” O’Connor said. “It was a bit wet, not too hard, a little treacherous on the descents, but it wasn’t too complicated in the end.”

Ireland’s Eddie Dunbar moved up one place to 14th on general classification after finishing the stage in 40th position, while Darren Rafferty moved up four places to 67th after placing 67th on the stage.