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Posted: 2024-02-25 21:26:42

Ben O'Connor has been pipped agonisingly for victory by just two seconds and Jay Vine's hopes disintegrated as Australia's big week at the prestigious UAE Tour ended in anti-climax.

The two Aussies started the final day in command at the week-long WorldTour event, with Vine leading by 11 seconds ahead of second-placed O'Connor, but it all went wrong for the Aussie pair on the slopes of the Jebel Hafeet mountain as Lennert Van Eetvelt proved a shock winner.

He climbed from ninth to first on the final stage, gobbling up a 37-second gap between himself and Vine, and then some.

Vine, riding for the home UAE Team Emirates, suffered a miserable day, getting distanced at the bottom of the climb in such a sub-par performance that there were suspicions he was unwell.

Cyclist Jay Vine is seen from behind as two riders ride away from him at the UAE Tour.

Jay Vine dropped off the back of a climb and fell back to 22nd, 3 minutes and 45 seconds off the eventual winner.(Getty Images: Tim de Waele)

He eventually dropped all the way back from first to 22nd overall, finishing 3 minutes and 45 seconds behind Van Eetvelt.

It looked to have gifted a golden opportunity for O'Connor to earn the biggest general classification win of his career.

But the Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale rider from Perth, suddenly finding himself having to control the race effectively as virtual leader over the final few kilometres, could not respond to an electric late charge with 1,700 metres left by Lotto-Dstny's 22-year-old Van Eetvelt.

He charged away to distance third-placed O'Connor by just 22 seconds, and the gap was enough for him to pip the Australian by just two seconds after nearly 1,000 kilometres of riding in the desert over the week.

"In the end, I'm just a bit disappointed," admitted O'Connor.

"It would have been a great moment for me to take the victory but I just didn't have enough, and in the end the strongest guy won.

"Second overall, it's still a success, but you're left wanting without the overall victory.

"The final kilometres were rough. I just exploded and had very little left.

"I wanted to get the bonus seconds at the finish line but didn't realise how strong the guy from Lotto [Van Eetveld] was, so chapeau to him."

O'Connor, 28, earned a brilliant stage win earlier in the race and would have joined the elite likes of Tadej Pogačar, Primož Roglič and Remco Evenepoel if he had managed to achieve AG2R's first stage-race win for a decade, but it was Van Eetvelt's day.

"Unbelievable! I can't believe it. This morning everyone was telling me to give everything, try and go for GC. I was like 'let's stay realistic', I'm still far behind the world's best guys in there like Jay Vine," he beamed.

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