Roche loses valuable time at Vuelta a España

Irish rider slips to 26th place overall as French sprinter Bouhanni claims stage six

Nicolas Roche: finding the going tough in the Vuelta a España. Photograph:  Tim de Waele/Getty Images
Nicolas Roche: finding the going tough in the Vuelta a España. Photograph: Tim de Waele/Getty Images

Nicolas Roche missed a split on stage six of the Vuelta a España on Thursday, with the first 50 riders gaining one minute 44 seconds on Roche's group.

French sprinter Nacer Bouhanni (Cofidis) was first to the line, beating Danny van Poppel (LottoNL–Jumbo) and Elia Viviani (Quick-Step Floors) in the sprint finish.

Roche placed 80th, while Dan Martin finished three minutes five seconds back in 111th. Roche is now down two places to 26th overall, five minutes and seven seconds behind the overall leader Rudy Molard (Groupama-FDJ). He leads Michal Kwiatkowski (Team Sky) by 41 seconds.

Meanwhile Conor Dunne and Eddie Dunbar were left reeling this week when the Irish Aqua Blue Sport pro team collapsed. The team had been under financial pressure this year despite stating last year that there was enough funding for four years.

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The team management were aiming to merge with another squad but talks fell through, prompting the announcement that it was going to stop.

Dunbar won the Irish Road Race Championships in June and was given a new two-year contract. He told the Irish Times that the sudden team collapse meant that he doesn't know if he will have enough time to find a replacement team for 2019.

“Right now I am just fighting really hard to stay in the pro peloton,” he said. “Just to try and get something on the table and then weigh up things once I know more. There is just so much in the unknown right now.

“Before this all happened, my motivation was still high to stay in the sport. I am still super motivated to work hard and to improve in the sport. I still think I can.”

He said that although his disappointment at the news plus his uncertainty about securing a replacement so late in the year made him consider a completely new direction – something which would be possible after securing a 2.1 degree in philosophy and psychology – he believes he has more to show in the sport.

“I’ve got the national champion’s jersey. I have still got nine months in that. It would be such a shame to let that go to waste and not ride in it. I want to show the jersey off.”

Dunbar is one of the most promising young riders in the sport. He is a past winner of the U- 23 Tour of Flanders and was second on the final stage of the recent Tour de l’Avenir. It is expected that he won’t have issues finding a new squad.

Shane Stokes

Shane Stokes

Shane Stokes is a contributor to The Irish Times writing about cycling