21 year-old Cameron Meyer, one of the youngest riders in the Giro d’Italia, decided that for the longest stage of his career so far should be in the day’s dangerous breakaway.
In our team meeting today before the start of the stage we decided that a breakaway was going to win and if so, it must have one of us in it. The other option was a sprint finish were we would work for Tyler.
Danny, Dave Z, Tom and I covered all the moves for the first 60 kilometers until the decisive break went. I was in it with three other riders. I wanted and tried very hard to be in the action today and once I was in the move of the day the team’s tactics were going to plan.

Cameron Meyer drives the breakaway.
After reaching a maximum advantage of just over two minutes on the peloton, our break was pulled back in at the half way point of the bike race by the Katusha Team. The dream of riding in the break for the day was short-lived but I went down trying.
A solo attempt by a Spanish rider shortly after reached a lead of eight minutes. Tommy D and I pulled hard at the front to reduce the gap with our new goal of making it a bunch sprint for Tyler.
The whole team did an awesome job looking after Tyler and positioning him well for the finish. With a great sprint the result was second. A fantastic effort by all and one that we will take confidence in — it may help us on the next flat stage to grasp that elusive victory!
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Team Garmin-Slipstream, stage 11 results 1. Mark Cavendish 2. Tyler Farrar 99. Julian Dean 102. Bradley Wiggins 106. David Millar 152. Tom Danielson 171.David Zabriskie 172. Danny Pate 186. Cameron Meyer |
Team Garmin-Slipstream, GC results 1. Danilo Di Luca 38. Bradley Wiggins 95. Tom Danielson 119. David Millar 140. Tyler Farrar 150. Julian Dean 152. Danny Pate 161. Cameron Meyer 167. David Zabriskie |
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