Sep 6, 2012

Vuelta Stage 18 - Degenkolb finally loses a sprint


Today's Stage: Sprinter's day. Days like this at this point in Grand Tours are often left for the breakaway, but with the sprinters having had few opportunities and the breakaway fulling a fast one on one of those opportunities, the sprint teams were always going to control this and hope they could beat John Degenkolb (Argos-Shimano).

Who won today's stage? And beat Degenkolb they did. Daniele Bennati (RSNT) finally got his stage win after a couple of close calls with Bennati. Ben Swift (Team Sky) was second and Allan Davis (Orica-GreenEdge) was third. Degenkolb ended up fifth.

What matters in the GC race? Nothing. And it will be that way tomorrow too. With no climbing today and none tomorrow, the wait is now on for Bola del Mundo to decide the ultimate winner. Alberto Contador (Saxo Bank-Tinkoff) is the leader followed by Alejandro Valverde (Movistar) and Joaquin Rodriguez (Katusha). Everybody else is at least 9 minutes behind Contador.

What matters in the other competitions?
Green Jersey (Points) – If Degenkolb were to have a chance at a miracle comeback here, he needed to win the stage today. He did not. Rodriguez leads followed by Valverde and Contador.
Polka Dot Jersey (King of the Mountains, it's blue in Spain, not red) – Simon Clarke (Orica-GreenEdge) retained his lead again. And he will until Saturday as there are no categorized climbs tomorrow before the final massive stage to Bola del Mundo. Rodriguez is second and Thomas De Gendt (Vacansoleil) is third. Expect both Clarke and De Gendt to try and get in the breakaway on Saturday searching for the points needed to take the final jersey as that is the only day remaining with points available.
White Jersey (Allround, instead of young rider, calculated by adding the rankings in GC, Points and KoM, lowest score wins) – Ho hum. Despite the issues today, Rodriguez retains the lead here and still won't be wearing the jersey (he will be wearing Green tomorrow). This jersey, worn by Contador will return to Valverde, at least during the race.
Team Classification (top 3 times by team on each stage) – Valverde's Movistar team has blown this open. Barring a catastrophe, the team will win this prize as it now leads by over 17 minutes.

Biggest surprise: Degenkolb was beaten. The only thing we hadn't seen was Degenkolb sprint after lots of mountains and it didn't go as well as earlier in the race. Still, when the only man to win a sprint stage during the race finishes fifth, it is a shock.

Biggest disappointment: Elia Viviani (Liquigas) was not there for the sprint at the end. Viviani was dropped and finished in the second group, six seconds behind the sprint. For Viviani, the race has been increasingly difficult in his quest to get a stage win as it becomes evident that his team doesn't care at al about this race. The top stage racers on the team (Vincenzo Nibali and Ivan Basso) both were sent to Colorado for the US Pro Challenge (where Viviani won two stages last year). Peter Sagan is on a different program for World Championships preps. Just an all around frustrating Vuelta for Viviani.

Other items of note: The topic of doping in cycling has been back in the public eye ever since the Lance Armstrong case came to the forefront of the discussion. Yesterday, Garmin-Sharp team manager Jonathan Vaughters, who previously confessed to doping during his career in a New York Times op-ed, outed three former teammates of Lance Armstrong who actively ride for his team: David Zabriskie, Tom Danielson and US Pro Challenge winner Christian Vande Velde. Beyond that former Lance Armstrong teammate Tyler Hamilton's book came out and while there is the usual stuff about Lance in there, the book also goes after Bjarne Riis, current manager of Saxo Bank-Tinkoff for organizing doping within his team at that time (Saxo Bank's precursor was CSC and Hamilton rode for it after leaving US Postal before ultimately getting caught after he changed teams again and went to Phonak and was caught in 2004)...In Vuelta news, we are down 20 riders to withdrawals now. Linus Gerdemann (RSNT) was involved in a crash today and had to abandon.

What is coming tomorrow? Sprint stage. No climbs. Boredom.

Tomorrow's Prediction: Degenkolb. He will recover after the beating he took today.

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