Cam Bayly Daily Diary: 2014 Le Tour de Langkawi Stage 8
By Cam Bayly ??@cameronbayly Another day of head or head cross wind meant that no one was overly keen on getting in the early break, it would be a very unlikely scenario if it stayed away. ?Today was probably the most casual day so far this tour, the first attack was at the 0km sign and no one but a few went with it, the TSG rider who was the first to attack obviously regretted his decision so much that he pulled back to the peloton only a few minutes later. ?Choon Huat was thinking about some extra cash from the preme sprints, so he decided to head up the road with the few others anyway to contest them. For Eric, Rico and I it was a fairly cruisy day. ?Eric was a little tired from his last 2 days in the break, so he was quite content to just sit in and recover a little today. ?Me on the other hand am the only non sprinter in the team to not yet be in a decisive break, so instead I wanted to help out Rico as much as possible to give him the best run in to the finish I could, so I made sure he followed me everywhere and never had to touch the wind. ?This was not the easiest task, especially when we had a stretch of highway about 20km long with a crosswind where everyone was in the gutter, as I had to sit just a little out of that line in the wind. ?It wasn’t too bad at first, but I was praying for the highway to end only a few kms later. With about 50km to go we had another crosswind section, but this time the big teams were moving up towards the front so I had to make sure we were there. ?We moved up and ?suprisingly managed to squeeze my way in to a perfect position only a couple of teams back and out of the wind, but this came with consequences, all the other teams wanted this spot too. ?I had to fight for quite a while but eventually with about 20km to go, we got pushed out by a couple of pro teams either side and had to move back a bit. ?At this point the break was just about to be caught, so I asked Eric to stay with Rico and look out for him while I got ready to follow any late moves, if there were any. Sure enough as soon as the last man standing from the break was caught, attacks started to launch. ?I followed the moves, trying to touch the wind as little as possible but making sure I was there if there was a split. ?This went on for quite a while, until a Belkin rider attacked very hard and got a gap quick. ?I decided to chase after it, to close it down before the gap got too large and in doing so had to go really deep. ?As I caught him I swung off thinking the whole peloton was on my wheel, only to realise only a few others were on my wheel, but it was too late and I couldn’t quite get on to the last wheel to follow. ?I had to sit up for the peloton and recover for a few moments, before hitting it hard one last time to try and shut the move down. ?Once I had given it my last dig I sat up and cruised in behind the bunch, leaving Eric and Rico to do what they could. ?I’m 20 minutes down on GC after the Genting climb, so there’s no point pushing it to finish on the same time as the bunch. As it turns out I was quite lucky not to still be in the peloton, as there was quite a big crash with less than 2km to go and unfortunately it contained Rico, who came down pretty hard and looks to have broken a rib. ?Rico is a pretty tough bugger so when we asked him if he would start tomorrow, he replied with “why wouldn’t I?” Only 2 more short stages to go now, 110km feels so short now after completing 3 days in a row over 200km. ?We have a late start tomorrow because Friday is prayer day in Malaysia, so instead of our normal start time of 10am, we won’t be starting until 3pm. ?Im actually looking forward to a bit of a sleep in and lazy start to the day, especially while were staying at a nice resort on the beach for the next 3 nights. Until tomorrow! Cam 2014 Le Tour de Langkawi: Stage 8 Results