And that's what we basically seen. So the danger when you're in a 24-man break like that, it breaks split. You've got to keep vigilant all day for all the stuff we mentioned. You know, slippy torns, white lines, shores, wet clinkers, all that stuff. But then you also have to be vigilant for those splits in the breakaway because all your efforts can come to zero very fast if you miss one of those splits. And we did see one of those splits because we had Irishman or Henry Irishman and former roadman soipling podcast guest Chris Yol Jenson pushing on under the scent and he brought two of the most hungover lads in the peloton. He brought Ryan Taramey and Quintet Herman's both from Wonti Grouper Guber. That's a tongue twister. Wonti Group Guber clear with him. They forged on a good lead. I think there were up a minute and a half from the Jasters behind and I tasked for a long long time we were going to see Chris Yol Jenson pulling off are famous as you're at Italia stage when we haven't seen a win from Chrisio Jensen since tour of Suisse 2018. So where's really rooting for him, he's a man who rides super well in the rain, Joker as he's fondly known, he is a funny motherfucker. Up front we're roing Taira May, it looked like they both had a mutual accord gone. Taira May was going into the Maglia Rosa, Chrisio Jensen and what's gonna win the stage. But alas, cycling is not a fairytale, folks. And if you've read that brilliant cycling book from Charlie Wigailius, Domesti, Cree, Painter, vivid picture of a final stage he had in the Vuelta and it looks like all along he's gonna win it. And then he gets caught and he comes up with the famous line, cycling. It's not a fucking fairytale. And it's not because the boys hit the finishing ramp and the legs just came off them. Back behind, we had a couple of guys really looked after themselves well and read the race very well. Jo Donbrowski and Aleksandro D'Amourki from Israel's start-up nation. They timed it brilliantly. Jo Donbrowski followed D'Amourki and they really ate into that later. I think they took 30 seconds out of two boys up front inside one kilometer. So they were really, really smashing it. Back to road, the GC boys were turning the heat up. We had Mika Landa, the Bahrain-Marita captain, and he called for pace and the pace. It ripped the bunch to pieces, and we've seen some high profile guys already at GC. Show, I made a quick step, just could not follow. So, we, Marita, turned it up, Landa obliged, and he went on the attack, and we only had a very select group of Reuters who could follow Mika Landa. And we had some big boys missing out, we had Bernal, they could follow, we had Chacon, they could follow, We had Landa, obviously, and we had Hugh Carton. And the rest noticeable absinthees from that list, that very much overhiped, if you ask me, pre-race favorites. Remko Evan Paul couldn't follow, Bride couldn't follow, Yates couldn't follow, Betteo couldn't follow, Dan Martin couldn't follow. Now, they weren't gapped massively, but it's just an early indication. And then we had Yewa and Madea just wheels coming off completely and meebly. I'll give you their time splits in a second at the line. But we Joe Dombrowski on the hardest slopes. And he pushed on from Alexandra to Marquis. And he hit out solo. And I really had a vested interest in trying to see Joe got jumped, Joe Dombrowski do well today. He's a writer I've followed really closely and I've raced him a couple of times. And he's a super nice kid. And he raced out in the US with Axon Merck's development team. And he was really competitive in Utah, Tour de California. And it looked for all intensive purposes. like he was gonna be the next big thing. And then as so often happens, he went to Skye and the wheels just came off for the last. And he went to Skye, I didn't hear anything about him for four years and he's back now and he's back with UAE, teammates will put that and he is, this is the biggest result of his career at 29 years old.