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Mark Cavendish denied by Adam Blythe in British road race championship

STOCKTON-ON-TEES, ENGLAND - JUNE 26:  Adam Blythe of Great Britain and Tinkoff celebrates winning the Elite Men's 2016 National Road Championships on June
Image: Adam Blythe raises his arms aloft to celebrate beating Mark Cavendish to the British road race title

Adam Blythe out-sprinted Mark Cavendish to win the British road race title in Stockton-on-Tees.

Blythe (Tinkoff) and Cavendish (Team Dimension Data) went head-to-head in the closing metres of the race in County Durham, with the 26-year-old from Sheffield coming out on top against the multiple Tour de France stage winner.

The leading group of a dozen riders came back together in the closing 10km after an attack including Team Sky's Alex Peters was reeled in by a group that included team-mate Andy Fenn and Cavendish among others.

Peters continued to attack after the groups merged, as did impressive youngster Tao Geoghegan Hart (Axeon-Hagens Berman), but the pace in the leading group was so high a sprint finish became inevitable.

Cavendish nosed to the front with less than 250m to ride and appeared to be on his way to victory, but Blythe found a second kick and eventually prevailed by nearly a bike length.

Fenn finished third ahead of Mark McNally (Wanty-Groupe Gobert) and Scott Thwaites (Bora-Argon 18).

Blythe said: "I wanted that one. I was all day thinking about it, always trying to be in the right move. With a couple of laps to go I thought we might hold off the chasers but it came back together. Luckily I got round Cav (in the sprint)."

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STOCKTON-ON-TEES, ENGLAND - JUNE 26:  (l to r) Christopher Lawless (2) of JLT Condor, Tao Geoghegan Hart (1st) of Axeon Hagens Berman CT and James Shaw (3r
Image: Tao Geoghagen Hart (C) won the U23 title ahead of Chris Lawless (L) and James Shaw (R)

Geoghegan Hart's reward for finishing in the leading pack was the U23 title, which he won ahead of Christopher Lawless (JLT-Condor).

There was a victory for Team Sky in the Irish road race championship, where Nicolas Roche followed up his victory in Saturday's time-trial to claim a double.

Roche, winning his national crown for the second time, broke away from a small leading group in the closing stages in Kilcullen and won by more than 30 seconds from Matt Brammeier.

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