Valverde makes it a Fleche Wallonne hat-trick

Valverde makes it a Fleche Wallonne hat-trick

HUY (BELGIUM) - For the second year in a row and third in total, Spaniard Alejandro Valverde triumphed atop the brutal Mur de Huy climb to win Wednesday's Fleche Wallonne race.

Alejandro Valverde has won the Fleche Wallonne one-day classic for the second year in a row and third in total

The 34-year-old Movistar team leader placed himself at the front of the peloton on the 1.3km climb up the Mur, which has an average gradient of 9.6 percent with one section at 26 percent, and gradually wound up his sprint finish.

No-one could overhaul the winner of five Ardennes Classics titles as Frenchman Julian Alaphilippe took second ahead of of Switzerland's Michael Albasini.

It was the fourth win in a row for a Spanish rider but 2012 champion Joaquim Rodriguez could manage only fourth while his Katusha team-mate Dani Moreno, winner in 2013, was fifth.

World champion Michal Kwiatkowski, who won Sunday's Amstel Gold race, came home outside the top ten.

It was a prestigious field on the start-line in Waremme as Tour de France champion Vincenzo Nibali, the man he succeeded, Chris Froome and last year's Giro d'Italia winner Nairo Quintana were all present, and perhaps with reconnaissance in mind -- the third stage of the Grand Boucle in July will finish on the Mur de Huy.

Seven riders broke clear around 10km into the race and built up a maximum lead of eight minutes, although Valverde's Movistar and Rodriguez's Katusha teams managed the gap.

Ahead of the first of three ascensions up the brutal Mur de Huy (wall of Huy) climb with 85km still to ride, last year's runner-up Dan Martin went down and was forced to chase back on with two teammates.

However, 2011 winner Philippe Gilbert was not so lucky and crashed out in an innocuous-looking incident around 50km from home.

For a race not known for its crashes, several riders later ended up in a ditch by the side of a straight road.

And 30km from home one of the favourites, Belgian Jelle Vanendert, second at the Amstel Gold race last year before finishing sixth in Huy, hit the tarmac, ending his race.

Soon after Luis Leon Sanchez and Giuseppe Visconti attacked off the front of the peloton at the top of the second ascension of the Mur, with the remnants of the breakaway only 40 seconds up the road.

The pair quickly overhauled the breakaway riders and left them behind, although their lead over the peloton, led by Katusha and Kwiatkowski's Etixx-Quick Step team, hovered around 20-25sec.

There was still time for another crash with Froome hitting the deck hard and shredding his shorts, although he got back on his bike.

Nibali launched hostilities on the penultimate climb, the Cote de Cherave, just 5km before the final ascension of the Mur, stretching out the field.

Belgian Tim Wellens then made a brave break for home with only Italian Gianpaolo Caruso able to react but the latter was hauled back within 3km of the finish, while Wellens hit the Mur with a only handful of seconds advantage.

It wasn't enough as he was quickly passed with the favourites massing at the front and jostling for the final shoot-out.

In the end there was no dramatic attack or acceleration as Valverde simply maintained his effort a bit longer than the rest.

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