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Matteo Trentin wins third Vuelta stage as Chris Froome retains overall advantage

Matteo Trentin surges over the line ahead of the pack at La Vuelta
Image: Matteo Trentin surges over the line ahead of the pack at La Vuelta

Italian sprinter Matteo Trentin claimed his third win of the Vuelta a Espana on stage 13, as Chris Froome finished safely among the chasing pack to retain his overall lead.

Quick-Step rider Trentin continued his dominance of the fairly scarce sprint stages during the largely mountainous three-week trek around Spain.

Trentin pipped compatriot Gianni Moscon and Denmark's Soren Kragh Andersen to the line in a time of 4hr 25min 13sec.

Trentin was also victorious on stages four and 10, and Quick-Step have now won five stages in total.

"It's amazing," said Trentin. I came to this race with confidence but never expected anything like this. For the team the Vuelta is not finished and we are betting for more."

Chris Froome is getting very familiar with La Vuelta's red jersey
Image: Chris Froome remains in red ahead of a gruelling weekend of climbing

Froome lost time due to a mechanical problem and a crash in Thursday's 12th stage, but he stayed alert near the front of the peloton to finish seventh on the day, on the 198.4km ride from Coin to Tomares.

The Brit, who is aiming to become just the third rider to win the Tour de France and Vuelta in the same year, retains a 59-second lead over Italy's Vincenzo Nibali.

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But Saturday's stage promises another showdown between the race favourites, with a gruelling uncategorised climb scheduled to end the 175km ride from Ecija to Sierra de La Pandera.

Froome said: "It's very difficult to predict what is going to happen in this Vuelta. As we saw yesterday, things can change so quickly.

"Tomorrow's final is very steep. I expect guys like Alberto Contador and Vincenzo Nibali want to make up time at this stage of the race.

"I expect a very aggressive ride from them."

Another summit finish also awaits on the Sierra Nevada on Sunday and Froome is expecting this weekend to be decisive in his quest to finally win the Vuelta after three second-placed finishes.

"Sunday's stage is going to be even harder, again up in the Sierra Nevada, over 2,500 metres," he added.

"For sure, at the end of a really tough week, we are going to see some really big time gaps in these next two stages."

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