logo
Ally Wollaston pips British teenager Cat Ferguson to Tour of Britain title

Ally Wollaston pips British teenager Cat Ferguson to Tour of Britain title

Yahoo08-06-2025

The teenage prodigy Cat Ferguson came within a hair's breadth of executing a memorable overall win in her debut Tour of Britain, but was outsprinted by her rival Ally Wollaston at the climax of the final stage in Glasgow.
The pair came into the final sprint tied on time, after Wollaston had erased the 19-year-old Ferguson's overall lead. Bonus seconds for third place in the final sprint, behind the stage winner, Lorena Wiebes, was enough for the New Zealander to snatch the overall win.
Advertisement
Related: 'They named a sandwich after me': Luke Rowe on life in the peloton, cobbles and Welsh riders
'I was lucky that there were a lot of seconds up for grabs,' Wollaston, riding for FDJ-Suez, said.
Wiebes, SD Worx-Protime teammate to the absent defending champion, Lotte Kopecky, rescued her team's race with a peerless stage win. 'We've had some bad luck this week with crashes and lost GC hopes because of it,' Wiebes said, 'but wrapping up the week with a stage win feels great.'
Yet it was Wollaston's day and her turns of speed in the intermediate sprints chiselled relentlessly away at Ferguson's narrow lead until only a single second separated the pair in the overall standings.
Advertisement
After beating Ferguson yet again, in the third sprint, Wollaston asserted herself in the final dash to the line to take the biggest win of her career.
'The plan was to get as many seconds as I could, and unfortunately Cat was on my wheel for every single one, so it really came down to the last sprint,' she said. 'There was definitely a moment where I thought, 'I just cannot do this today.' My teammates really helped me, and pulled me to the front for the final.'
The Aucklander's success came at Ferguson's expense and the teenager from Skipton crossed the finish line in tears as she realised she had lost the overall lead. 'I would have loved to have won. I am gutted, but she was the strongest today,' Ferguson, of the Movistar team, said.
'If you had told me at the beginning of the week that I'd be second, I would have been over the moon, so I can't be too disappointed.'
Advertisement
Victory began to slip from Ferguson's grasp in the series of intermediate sprints centred on Glasgow Green, in which she and her Movistar team were consistently overpowered by Wollaston and her FDJ-Suez team.
A mid-race puncture also forced an unwelcome bike change and left Ferguson chasing the peloton on the fast circuit. 'It was eventful for sure,' Ferguson, who also won the points and best young rider classifications, said. 'There was always something going on during the intermediate sprints. I had a puncture, but I didn't want to change the bike, because I felt OK, [but] then it was slowly going down.'
Try as she might, the teenager was unable to prevent Wollaston's track racing experience from eroding the hard-fought gains made in Saturday's stage, through the rainswept hills west of Kelso.
In the final crucial sprint, Wollaston's team put her in a better position on the last bend. 'I got a bit chopped up on some corners and really that was it,' Ferguson said. 'Ally went away and I knew that was it.'
Advertisement
But Ferguson, winner of the junior world road race and time trial titles last season, can take heart from a consistently strong performance throughout the four day race. The race's most dramatic moments came in the hills around Kelso in Saturday's attritional and rainswept 143.8-kilometre third stage. As others suffered, Ferguson flourished.
The stage, marked by two major crashes, proved catastrophic for the overnight race leader, Kristen Faulkner, who suffered a series of mishaps and finished more than three minutes behind Ferguson.
The 19-year-old, who had said 'I love it when it rains' following a win earlier this season, was true to her word on Saturday, showing true grit and bike handling skills, particularly on the greasy Kelso cobbles at the finish.
Ferguson described the torrid conditions around Kelso as 'really horrible,' but said 'the rain brings out the racer in me and gives me more adrenaline'.
Advertisement
Meanwhile, as Ferguson pondered what might have been, a tearful Lizzie Deignan rolled to a halt in Glasgow, after completing her final day of racing on British roads.
Describing her feelings as 'very close to the surface', Deignan, who retires at the end of this season, said her final day racing in Britain was 'emotional.' The 36 old described the Glasgow stage as 'fast and technical and scary, but really fun as well'.
'The crowd were amazing and the team committed 100%,' she said. 'We were against all odds today, but we didn't give up.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Wolves promising 'fresh insight and strength' ahead of new season
Wolves promising 'fresh insight and strength' ahead of new season

Yahoo

time30 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Wolves promising 'fresh insight and strength' ahead of new season

Wolves have appointed Domenico Teti as the club's director of professional football. Teti joins with a wealth of experience across Europe and the Middle East, and will work to improve the strategy and planning around professional and first-team football. Advertisement 'I am truly excited to join the Wolverhampton Wanderers family and to feel the passion of its fans, who embody the soul and spirit of this historic club. It is an honour to be part of something so special,'' he said. READ MORE: Championship clubs told to pay £1m for ex-Birmingham City wonderboy READ MORE: Birmingham City have created a new role for Lukas Jutkiewicz after retirement 'I look forward to working with (executive chairman) Jeff (Shi), (head coach) Vitor (Pereira), and the rest of the staff and players, contributing to the development of a passionate, forward-thinking, and proactive football culture.' Advertisement Matt Jackson takes on the newly-defined position of director of player recruitment and development. He will work closely with Teti and other senior executives, but will also be focused on broader club matters, including the academy and Wolves Women. The football leadership team also includes Phil Hayward, who leads the club's integrated approach to sports science, psychology, player health and wellbeing, as Wolves' newly-appointed director of performance. Long-serving Matt Wild continues in his role as director of football operations and administration, overseeing football operations, financial efficiency of the football business and governance matters. Max Fitzgerald completes the team as PR and communications director. 'I'm pleased to welcome Domenico to Wolves,'' said Shi. 'His international background and experience at senior levels will bring fresh insight to the club and strengthen the structure supporting head coach Vitor Pereira and the first-team environment.'

Somerset Men return to winning ways against Hampshire in the Blast
Somerset Men return to winning ways against Hampshire in the Blast

Yahoo

time36 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Somerset Men return to winning ways against Hampshire in the Blast

Lewis Gregory clubbed a brutal half century as Somerset defeated Hampshire Hawks by 17 runs at the Cooper Associates Ground to return to winning ways and move clear of Surrey at the top of the Vitality Blast South Group table, writes Andrew Stockhausen, ECB Reporter's Network. Will Smeed smashed 68 from 37 balls with nine fours and three sixes and dominated stands of 59 and 46 with Tom Kohler-Cadmore and Tom Abell for the second and third wickets respectively after Somerset had been put in beneath the Taunton floodlights. But the home side lost their way during the middle overs and were indebted to skipper Gregory, who clubbed a much-needed 55 from 27 balls with 4 fours and 4 sixes and staged a record-breaking seventh-wicket partnership of 82 with Lewis Goldsworthy to propel the cider county to 209-6. Veteran all-rounder Benny Howell claimed 2-12 and Liam Dawson 1-29 as the Hawks struggled to contain the South Group leaders. Advertisement James Vince raised a 30-ball 54 and South African hired hand Dewald Brevis crashed 36 from 16 deliveries, but Ben Green took 3-40 as Somerset took wickets at key moments to restrict Hawks to 192-7 and secure a sixth victory in seven outings in the short format this season. Put into bat, Somerset made a subdued start by their own high standards, Tom Banton falling cheaply to a tremendous catch on the run by Joe Weatherley at deep square leg off the bowling of Eddie Jack. Kohler-Cadmore encountered no such problems, taking 14 runs off the third over, bowled by James Fuller, as the home side reasserted themselves. Read more: Smeed was equally expansive, plundering three boundaries in one Jack over, while Kohler-Cadmore emulated that feat at the expense of Fuller in the next as the second wicket pair fashioned a half century partnership from just 23 balls in advancing the score to 68-1 at the end of the powerplay. Advertisement Hampshire's seamers held their nerve and Fuller provided relief, bowling Kohler-Cadmore for a 15-ball 29 in the seventh with the score 70-2. Kohler-Cadmore accrued a quartet of fours and a six, only to depart before he could inflict real damage. In his absence, Smeed picked up the cudgels, hoisting Fuller over mid-wicket for six and then straight-hitting the next ball for four to post 50 from 27 balls. Dawson's nagging accuracy notwithstanding, Somerset initially managed to maintain momentum during the crucial middle overs, Abell adopting the role of chief support to Smeed, who continued to trade in boundaries and put bowlers and fielders alike under pressure. He eventually succumbed, hitting Jack straight down the throat of Scott Currie at long-on as Somerset slipped to 116-3 in the eleventh. When Abell played across the line to Howell's first delivery and was bowled via an inside edge, the home side were 116-4 and Hampshire fancied they were right back in the contest, an impression that was confirmed in the thirteenth, Sean Dickson playing back to Dawson and watching the ball clatter into his stumps. Ben Green came and went quickly, holing out to long-on to provide the wily Howell with a second wicket as the flow of boundaries temporarily dried up and Somerset further subsided to 127-6 in the fourteenth. Gregory then took matters into his own hands, harvesting 25 off one Wood over as the seventh wicket alliance realised 50 in just 25 balls. Unleashing a barrage of sixes, Somerset's captain tucked into the seamers on his way to a high-octane 25-ball half century. His partnership with Goldsworthy, who finished unbeaten on 29 from 16 balls, was a Somerset record for the seventh wicket in T20 cricket, eclipsing the 67 made by Omari Banks and Ben Phillips at Northampton in 2008. Advertisement Living up to their formidable reputation, Hampshire openers Lhuan-dre Pretorius and Vince afforded the reply a super-charged start, posting 50 in 5.2 overs to force Somerset's seamers onto the back foot. Pugilistic in his approach, Pretorius struck 4 fours and a brace of sixes as the partnership advanced to 74 inside nine overs. Somerset needed a wicket and the ever-dependable Green obliged, luring Pretorius into front-foot indiscretion and having the South African held in the deep for 37. With the asking rate rising above 12 for the first time, Vince and new batsman Toby Albert looked to attack Goldsworthy. But the spinner defied their best attempts as the home side worked hard to restrict the supply of boundaries during the middle overs. Goldsworthy struck a telling blow in the twelfth, inducing Albert to hit high to long-off with the score 95-2 as the rate continued to climb. While Vince remained at large, Hampshire were in with a chance, and the England batter hoisted Green high over mid-wicket for six to raise 50 from 29 balls. He was out next ball, caught on the long-on boundary as Green further reduced the visitors to 107-3. South African dangerman Brevis and Weatherley opened their shoulders in a bid to put the chase back on track, but Somerset's bowlers remained disciplined in their lengths and the latter was run out by Riley Meredith for 15 with 75 still needed from five overs. Fuller attempted to match Brevis blow-for-blow, only to be undone by a Meredith yorker and fall for 11. Having struck 4 sixes and a four, Brevis then attempted to drive Green down the ground and skied a catch to Gregory at mid-off to signal the end of Hampshire's prospects in the eighteenth..

Evangelos Marinakis hails Nuno Espirito Santo as Nottingham Forest boss handed new three-year deal
Evangelos Marinakis hails Nuno Espirito Santo as Nottingham Forest boss handed new three-year deal

Yahoo

time37 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Evangelos Marinakis hails Nuno Espirito Santo as Nottingham Forest boss handed new three-year deal

Nottingham Forest manager Nuno Espirito Santo has been rewarded for a superb season with a new three-year contract. The deal will see him remain at the City Ground until at least 2028. The 51-year-old guided Forest to a seventh-place finish in the Premier League last season, securing European qualification for the first time since the 1995-96 season. Advertisement For much of the campaign, it looked as though Forest were going to qualify for the Champions League, but they lost five of their last eight games. However, that has not prevented owner Evangelos Marinakis from rewarding Nuno following the club's highest league finish for 30 years, while they also reached the semi-finals of the FA Cup before losing to Manchester City. Nuno said: "I am delighted to be able to continue our journey at this fantastic football club. "Since we arrived at Forest, we have worked extremely hard to create a special bond between the players, the fans and everyone at the Club, which helped us achieve great things last season. Advertisement "I would like to thank our owner, Mr Marinakis, for his constant support and backing. It is important to me to share a strong relationship with our ownership and we have thoroughly enjoyed working together ever since I arrived at Forest. "Now is the time to work harder than ever as we strive for more special memories together." The former Wolves and Tottenham boss arrived at the City Ground in December 2023 following the sacking of Steve Cooper, and helped the club avoid relegation on the final day of the season. Marinakis said: "Nuno has made a great impact and performed very well during his time with us so far. Advertisement "He has demonstrated that he maximises player performance and is an expert at developing players, whilst also embedding our young talent into the first team set-up. "We enjoy a strong and solid relationship together and, above all, we share the same dream and ambition of writing a new history for Nottingham Forest, competing in the Premier League and in Europe and winning trophies for our great club." Additional reporting by PA Sport.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store