It's Vuelta time
After the highs of the Tour de France
and the Olympics and a long season already, the cycling peloton
(minus a few top riders that either are done for the year or with US
leanings) heads to Spain for the Vuelta a Espana. Normally, the
Vuelta is the red-headed stepchild of the three Grand Tours, drawing
a weaker field reserved for Spaniards who aren't going to ever win
the Tour de France, riders that crashed out of the Tour de France and
those that targeted the Giro d'Italia and need some late season
racing. This year though, a combination of factors has seemingly
elevated the Vuelta above it's normal perch.
The field: Last year, JJ Cobo (now
Movistar, then the now defunct Geox-TMC) shocked the cycling world,
coming from nowhere to beat out of nowhere Chris Froome (Team Sky)
and a recovering from crash Bradley Wiggins (Team Sky) on a course
that didn't suit Wiggins nearly like the recent Tour de France course
that Wiggins won on did. This year, Cobo is about the 6th
choice in the field. While part of that is Cobo (the guy has done
basically nothing all season), part of that is the rest of the field.
It is one of the strongest Vuelta fields I have ever seen.
Starting at the top, we have Alberto
Contador (Saxo Bank-Tinkoff). Contador hasn't raced all season
because of his suspension, but he is still the best Grand Tour rider
in the peloton and is also by far the most explosive attacker in the
mountains. He enters as the favorite despite little racing up to this
point (he did finish 4th overall at the recent Eneco Tour
in his first race back after the suspension).
Also, Froome is back and while he was
beaten by Cobo last year, that was by a combination of time bonuses
and Froome waiting for Wiggins on the Angliru climb allowing Cobo to
get away. Beyond that, Froome is much more of a favorite than Cobo in
part because he followed up his Vuelta breakthrough last year with an
equally impressive result in the Tour de France (2nd to
his teammate Wiggins). The big question about Froome is how he will
recover from his Tour de France effort and the Olympic effort that
followed (Froome raced for Great Britain in the road race and then
won the Bronze Medal in the time trial).
Beyond the two favorites and the
defending champion Cobo, the two podium finishers from the Giro are
also here. Joaquim Rodriguez (Katusha) was likely salivating at the
thought of this course, until Contador's suspension came down and
allowed him to race here. Rodriguez does everything Contador does,
just not as well. If Contador is off form, Rodriguez could find
himself in a similar position to the Giro, battling for the race lead
into the final days. The big difference here is that the time trial
that cost Rodriguez the win at the Giro is much earlier, allowing him
to retake time in the mountains that remain after that.
Giro 3rd place Thomas de
Gendt (Vacansoleil) is also here for his first meaningful riding
post-Giro (he got married on the day of the first stage of the Tour
de France). In his last two Grand Tours, de Gendt has been incredibly
strong in the final week and especially the final days of the race
(at the 2011 Tour, he was five on both the Alpe d'Huez stage and the
time trial and then won the Passo del Stevio stage at the Giro and
finished in the top five of the time trial there as well). If he can
keep from losing time early in the race (no easy task, especially
here), de Gendt could be a threat for the podium again in the final
week.
Also, the crashed and wrecked
contingent of the Tour de France is stronger this season than in
recent years. In particular, Rabobank's Dutch pair of Robert Gesink
and Bauke Mollema are both here. Gesink has long been tapped for
Grand Tour success because of his incredible climbing ability (which
he used to win the Tour of California on the Mount Baldy stage in
May), but he generally struggles to stay on his bike, crashing with
regularity. His teammate Mollema was 4th in this race last
season but was caught along with Gesink and entire Garmin team in the
stage 6 crash in the Tour de France. He will be looking to rebound
and save a particularly disappointing season.
The route: The other thing that has
upped the Vuelta's prestige this season is the route, especially
after a couple of average bordering on dull and totally uninspired
routes at the Giro and the Tour. (Seriously, the Giro, while great in
the final week was dull as can be for the two weeks before that and
the Tour de France was suffocated by the two long time trials without
enough mountains close to the finish to dent the Team Sky train).
Here, there are mountains and summit
finishes pretty much everywhere. Enough that I expect everyone in the
peloton to crack at least once during the race. The key thing is to
manage the race, not crack on a key stage, and limit the time losses
when the inevitable crack comes.
The mountains start right off the bat
with summit finishes in stages 3 and 4. After that there is a mix of
sprints, uphill finishes and a time trial (along with a summit finish
in Andorra on stage 8). Then the race gets insane. Stages 14-16 are
all summit finishes with the stage 16 finale a monstrous climb to
Cuitu Negru that includes ramps up to 23% in gradient. Still, that is
not the climax. The climax comes on the second to last day when the
Bola del Mundo makes its return after a one year absence on a stage
with three category one climbs and a category 2 climb before the
peloton even reaches the foot of the fearsome Bola del Mundo.
Needless to say, with 10 summit finishes in the race, this is a
spectacle for the climbers (and one that likely will kill the legs of
any serious contenders here before the World Championships and the
Giro di Lombardia for those that will target those races).
Final pick: Contador. He will struggle
early in the race, likely ceding time on stage 3 or stage 4 before
getting his legs under himself and smashing the field on stage 14-16
and possibly again at Bola del Mundo.
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