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Aspen’s van Garderen out of Vuelta after crash

The Associated Press

MURCIA, Spain — Jasper Stuyven of Belgium won an accident-ravaged eighth stage of the Spanish Vuelta on Saturday after a crash sent Kris Boeckmans to the hospital and forced three others, including Aspen’s Tejay van Garderen, to withdraw from the race.

The unexpected pileup in the peloton happened on a straightaway 31 miles before the finish of a stage whose biggest threat was supposed to be the sun, not the tarmac.

Boeckmans, a Belgian rider for Lotto-Soudal, ended up lying on his side and was hospitalized.



BMC announced shortly after that van Garderen was pulling out of the race because of a fracture in his right shoulder.

French sprinter Nacer Bouhanni and Ireland’s Daniel Martins, who was third in the general classification, also abandoned the event.




Stuyven went down as well and hurt his wrists, but he recovered to win the final sprint by a bike’s length.

More trouble came when riders risked too much while veering down a narrow and winding road, before Peter Sagan was knocked down by a motorbike near the finish. Nobody was seriously hurt in those incidents.

Leader Esteban Chaves was also involved in the major accident.

Like Stuyven, the Colombian rider for Orica GreenEdge made his way back to the front to protect his 10-second lead over Dutchman Tom Dumoulin.

“It was a very difficult day,” Chaves said. “Before, when you looked at the route, it was supposed to be a so-called transition stage, but it was a day of crashes and falls … There were nervy, dangerous descents. We are just happy we could keep the red leader’s jersey.”

Spanish television showed images of Boeckmans lying completely still while being attended to by medical staff. Teammate Tosh Van der Sande tweeted “He was drinking when he hit a hole, tumbled over his bike and hit the ground hard!”

Boeckmans’ Lotto-Soudal team tweeted that he had gone to the hospital, adding that “he’s conscious and the situation is stable.”

While Boeckmans was being treated, van Garderen was on the ground holding his arms across his chest. Before this stage, Van Garderen was in 16th place overall, two minutes behind.

At last month’s Tour de France, an illness forced him to abandon the race when he was in third place.

A few minutes later Alex Howes of the United States applied the brakes in time — only to slide into the guardrail while he was briefly leading the race on a breakaway down the steep curves from the Cresta del Gallo hill.

There were also a couple of scary spills on the second descent down the narrow mountain road on the same hill, which the route crossed twice before a final rush to the finish.

Sagan, winner of the third stage, was accidentally taken out by a motorbike with five miles left. The Slovak rider got back up apparently unhurt, but televised images showed him kicking a motorbike and yelling at its driver before Sagan rode on.

Sagan’s Tinkoff-Saxo team said it is considering “legal actions against the person or persons responsible for the crash.”

“A Shimano auxiliary motorbike recklessly and dangerously drove into the peloton at high speed hitting Peter Sagan in his rear wheel,” the team said on its website. “The unacceptable collision caused Peter Sagan to crash and left the rider with extensive superficial wounds on the left buttocks and leg. Sagan was fortunately able to finish the stage but a final medical examination is yet to be made.”

Despite the turmoil, there were no major changes to the top of the standings other than Martin’s exit.

Tour winner Chris Froome remained 1 minute, 22 seconds behind Chaves overall, and also trailing Alejandro Valverde and Nairo Quintana in fourth and six places respectively.

Quintana said that, while the crashes were bad, the heat was brutal.

“More than the nerves, the heat we have been dealing with for the past few days has been inhuman,” the Tour runner-up said.

Riders get little relief in Sunday’s ninth stage, a 168.3-kilometer (104.5-mile) ride from Torrevieja to the Cumbre del Sol or “Summit of the Sun” peak.