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Giro d’Italia review: Six talking points

The 2011 Giro d’Italia concluded in Milan on Sunday, confirming what had become increasingly obvious since the stage nine finish on Mount Etna: that Alberto Contador was, by some distance, the best rider in this year’s race. It was a point he repeatedly underlined during the final two weeks, winning two stages with devastating accelerations and finishing a massive 6:10 ahead of Michele Scarponi without looking like he was ever in the slightest trouble. It was one of the most utterly dominating performances the sport has seen in recent memory.

However, the nature of the race – and the ease with which Contador won it – raises a number of key talking points which I believe detracted from the overall spectacle and point towards potential improvements. Here are my top six.

1. Was this year’s Giro too hard?

Seven summit finishes. The monstrous Zoncolan – all 10.1km of it, with an eye-watering average gradient of 11.9% – at the end of a day which would have seen the peloton climb the marginally less torturous Monte Crostis immediately before it had it not been removed at the last minute. A marathon stage the following day which took 7½ hours to complete. Even the designated ‘flat’ stages were rarely straightforward, often featuring challenging climbs in their closing stages to tax tired legs. Several riders complained after the end of the race that this year’s edition had been too hard. It’s easy to see why.

Alberto Contador keeps a watchful eye on his rivals on the punishing ascent of the Colle delle Finestre on the Giro's penultimate stage (image courtesy of Graham Watson)

It has now reached the point where it now seems no longer feasible for a top rider to have realistic aspirations in both the Giro and the Tour de France (the two are separated by just five weeks). Certainly this was the case last year, where only four of the Giro’s top ten also attempted the Tour, with significantly poorer results:

  • Ivan Basso – won the Giro, 32nd in the Tour
  • Cadel Evans – 5th in the Giro, 26th in the Tour (although hampered by a fractured elbow)
  • Alexander Vinokourov – 6th in the Giro, 16th in the Tour
  • Carlos Sastre – 8th in the Giro, 26th in the Tour

Although Contador won in Italy and is also making noises about racing in France too, he would probably be the only major Tour contender to attempt both. Denis Menchov‘s Geox-TMC team were not invited to the Tour, and Roman Kreuziger will play second fiddle to Astana team leader Vinokourov (if he competes at all). Other top riders from the Giro will skip the Tour and focus instead on September’s Vuelta a España. Of those who skipped the Giro, Basso and Evans will certainly be major contenders, as will 2010 runner-up Andy Schleck, who opted instead for the less tiring Tour of California.

All this meant the Giro was missing too many of the sport’s biggest names, and points increasingly towards a split calendar where riders either focus on the Tour, or target the Giro/Vuelta double. If so, that would be a real shame.

2. Who’d be a sprinter?

It came as no surprise that virtually all the sprinters withdrew from the race after stage 12.

In fact, the Giro offered pretty meagre fare for the fast-twitch men in general, with only four stages – two, three, ten and 12 – offering a realistic opportunity for a bunch sprint. (Stages eight and 18 were also designated as ‘flat’, but both featured late difficult climbs which were always going to eliminate the sprinters.)

Mark Cavendish celebrates a rare victory for the sprinters on stage 10 (image courtesy of Graham Watson)

Consequently the race for the maglia rossa - traditionally the carrot for the sprinters to focus on – became little more than a reflection of the general classification, with the top three the same in both competitions. The organisers cannot pretend to have been surprised by this, having planned a parcours dominated by mountain-top finishes which did not feature even a sniff of a bunch sprint in its final days. Mark Cavendish, Alessandro Petacchi and their ilk were always going to climb off the bikes after stage 12 – with nothing left to race for, what was the point of them continuing?

No one wants an endless procession of flat 200km drags at a Grand Tour – something the Tour de France has often been guilty of in its early stages – but long transition stages are part and parcel of the fabric of moving a race around a big country without logistically challenging air/rail transfers (another frequent riders’ complaint at the Giro). The balance and distribution of sprinters’ stages this year was clearly wrong, and the Giro would be a poorer place if the top fast men started to miss it for lack of opportunity.

3. Where was the excitement in the final week?

By the second rest day, the competition for the maglia rosa was effectively over. With a succession of tough summit finishes peppering the back end of the second week – Grossglockner, Zoncolan, Gardeccia – Contador pulled out a lead of 4:20 over the pack and, after winning the stage 16 mountain time trial, was able to cruise through the less strenuous final week with the luxury of needing only to cover the big moves, while those lower in the order were forced to take the initiative in chasing down early breaks or later attacks.

All this meant the final week’s stages included several successful breakaways and repeated attempts by Movistar to win a stage to dedicate to Xavier Tondó (which Vasil Kiryienka finally achieved on the last road stage). And with Vincenzo Nibali lacking the legs/will to attack Scarponi in an attempt to seize second, the only movement at the upper end of the GC involved the minor placings.

In truth, the final week was a desperate anti-climax. Some of that was down to Contador’s crushing supremacy, but putting so many of the big climbs in the middle of the race certainly didn’t help either.

4. What’s the point of a mountain time trial?

The result of the stage 16 mountain time trial told us what we already knew  - that Contador was the best climber in this year’s race, with Nibali, Scarponi and José Rujano not far behind. The time gaps on the 12.7km stage, the first 5km of which was relatively flat, were relatively small and had virtually no impact on the general classification. Although Contador did win by an impressive 34 seconds, the gap between the next ten riders was a trifling 31 seconds.

Much of the preceding week had been spent sorting out the men from the boys and establishing a clear order on GC, which the time trial did nothing but underline. Why have a relatively short uphill time trial with less than 8km of serious climbing which has virtually no impact on the overall race? Surely it would have been better to have either a longer, more testing climb to offer the opportunity of some meaningful time differences or, as has been suggested by others, one which incorporates a technical descent to offer a different challenge to the riders. Nibali, for one, would have enjoyed the opportunity to test Contador’s mettle against the clock on a tricky downhill, and could have led to more significant changes in the overall rankings.

5. Is Alberto Contador beatable?

All other things being equal, the simple answer is: no. Having laid low during the formative early stages, he featured in the top three finishers on eight of the final 14 stages, a record of consistency underlined by the huge margin by which he won the points classification over Scarponi (202 points to 122). Whenever he needed to be at the front to cover a move or launch his own attack, he inevitably was.

Contador launches his stage-winning attack on Etna, leaving everyone in his wake (image courtesy of Graham Watson)

A record of two wins, four second places and two thirds speaks for itself. Cavendish was the only other man to win more than once, and had Contador not gifted wins to Rujano (stage 13) and former teammate Paolo Tiralongo (stage 19), he would have claimed four wins. He was effectively untouchable no matter what anyone else tried, and the one potential chink in his armour – descending – was never seriously tested.

Can he now pull off the seemingly impossible Giro/Tour double? If anyone can, it is Contador.

6. When will we know who the winner of the Giro is?

Of course, the biggest threat to Contador’s Giro win is still to come. His hearing at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) – in which the UCI and WADA will attempt to overturn the Spanish federation RFEC‘s decision not to impose a ban after a positive test at last July’s Tour de France – was originally scheduled for June, but now looks likely to take place after the Tour. A finding in favour of the UCI and WADA would almost certainly result in the annulment of the Spaniard’s results in the time since his failed test, including the Giro. This would promote Scarponi to race winner after the event – and over a year after the doping test in question.

To say the situation is unsatisfactory from both a sporting and procedural perspective is putting it mildly. But, for those who follow the sport closely, it is hardly a surprising state of affairs. Too many race results are ‘provisional’ or cast under some kind of cloud of doubt, and it does the credibility of the sport no good whatsoever.

Finally, a note to acknowledge the deaths of Wouter Weylandt, who died after a crash on stage three, and Xavier Tondó, who was not competing at the Giro but was killed in a freak accident involving his car and a garage door on the second rest day.

The peloton has lost two of its most popular members. Rest in peace. May the wind always be at your backs.

Giro d’Italia recaps

Stage 1: Pinotti swaps red, white and green for pink

Stage 2: Petacchi celebrates, Cavendish remonstrates in ham-fisted Parma finish

Stage 3: Weylandt’s death casts a long shadow

Stage 4: Peloton rides in tribute to Weylandt

Stage 5: Weening takes maglia rosa as Millar bites the dust

Stage 6: Ale-Jet runs out of gas as Ventoso wins uphill drag

Stage 7: De Clercq claims first professional win by a whisker

Stage 8: Gatto gets the cream as Contador shows his claws

Stage 9: Explosive Contador erupts on Etna

Stage 10: No tow required as Cavendish opens Giro account

Stage 11: Gadret times his finish to perfection

Stage 12: Cavendish doubles up and retires from the Giro

Stage 13: Contador’s gift leaves Rujano singing in the rain

Stage 14: All pain, few gain as Antón triumphs on the ascent to Hell

Stage 15: Nieve wins marathon stage, Contador sails serenely on

Stage 16: Contador victory confirms Giro rivals are racing for second

Stage 17: Ulissi wins, Visconti relegated when push comes to shove

Stage 18: Capecchi finally puts Liquigas in the winner’s circle

Stage 19: Rain cannot dampen Tiralongo’s day in the sun

Stage 20: Victorious Kiryienka pays tribute to Tondó

Stage 21: Millar wins stage, Contador wins overall – at least for now

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The week in numbers: w/e 29/5/11

Donald replaced Westwood as world number one (image courtesy of Wikipedia)

1Luke Donald defeated fellow Englishman Lee Westwood in a play-off to not only win the PGA Championship at Wentworth but also replace him as the world number one golfer.

203Jonathan Trott‘s 203 in the first Test in Cardiff was the highest ever score by an England batsman against Sri Lanka.

11Lancashire‘s Kyle Hogg recorded match figures of 11/59 as Hampshire were routed by ten wickets in their County Championship match.

340Marcus Trescothick scored a total of 340 runs (189 & 151) as Somerset beat Yorkshire by ten wickets.

5 – Reigning world champion Sebastian Vettel won for the fifth time this season at the sixth race on the Formula 1 calendar, the Monaco Grand Prix.

6Alberto Contador won his sixth Grand Tour (only the seventh cyclist ever to do so) as he wrapped up his second Giro d’Italia win in Milan yesterday.

Xavier Tondo, 1978-2011. RIP (image courtesy of brassynn)

32 – Age of cyclist Xavier Tondó, who died last Monday after being killed in a freak accident when he was crushed between his car and a garage door.

17 – It had been 17 years since a British player had progressed beyond the first round of the French Open women’s singles, but two players managed it this year – Elena Baltacha and 19-year old Heather Watson.

3Vera Zvonereva’s defeat by fellow Russian Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova marked only the third instance in Grand Slam women’s singles history that none of the top three seeds (Caroline Wozniacki, Kim Clijsters, Zvonereva) have reached the quarter-finals (also 1997 Australian Open, 2008 Wimbledon).

2 – Britain’s Dan Wheldon won his second Indianapolis 500 after race leader J R Hildebrand crashed on the final turn of the final lap. His damaged car slid over the line to finish second.

The UEFA Champions League final in numbers

6Barcelona‘s 3-1 win over Manchester United meant the Spanish side have won six of their seven European finals against English sides.

5 – Five of the last six teams to lose in the final have come from England (Arsenal, Liverpool, Chelsea, Manchester United, Bayern Munich, Manchester United).

Messi scored his 53rd goal of the season (image courtesy of Wikipedia)

1 – In scoring the opening goal of the game, Pedrobecame the first ever Spanish scorer for Barcelona in a European Cup final.

1Wayne Rooney‘s 34th-minute equaliser was his first ever goal against a Spanish side, after 624 minutes of action.

1 - Rooney’s goal was the only shot United had on target in the game.

53Lionel Messi put Barcelona 2-1 up with his 53rd goal of the season, tying the Spanish club record set last weekend by Real Madrid‘s Cristiano Ronaldo.

1 – It was Messi’s first goal in his ninth appearance in a competitive match in England.

777 - Total number of passes made by Barcelona during the game, more than double United’s 357.

(Some statistics courtesy of Opta Sports, The Times@InfostradaLive and @StatManJon.)

Giro d’Italia stage 16: Contador victory confirms Giro rivals are racing for second

Stage 16: Belluno to Nevegal, 12.7km individual time trial

A commanding 34-second win by Alberto Contador in today’s mountain time trial underlined his dominance over the Giro d’Italia field and confirmed that, barring a major mishap, he will be crowned champion for the second time in Milan on Sunday. The remainder of this final week is now likely to boil down to a battle between Michele Scarponi and Vincenzo Nibali for the runner-up spot and the competition for the minor jerseys.

RIP Xavier Tondó, seen here competing for Cervélo at the 2010 Giro. (image courtesy of brassynn)

The day began with a minute’s silence to mark the death of Xavier Tondó. The popular 32-year old Movistar rider was killed in a freak accident yesterday (Monday) when he was crushed against his own garage door by a car.

The 12.7km parcours from Belluno up to the resort of Nevegal started with a short descent on twisty but fairly wide roads out from the middle of town before gently rising to the intermediate checkpoint after 5km. The steep part of the climb came after that, a punishing middle section which averages over 10% before easing off towards the end.

With the 165 starters setting off in reverse order of the general classification, Rabobank‘s Stef Clement set the early benchmark with a time of 30:08. Nearly 70 more riders would pass the finish line before Movistar’s Branislau Samoilau became not only the first man to better Clement, but also the first to dip under the half-hour mark by stopping the clock at 29:54. Italian national time trial champion Marco Pinotti (HTC-Highroad) and Stefano Garzelli (Acqua & Sapone), with a new best of 29:41, beat Samoilau’s time, but the Belarusian would not be surpassed again until the top eight set off.

Unsurprisingly, given the nature of this year’s race, which has seen the top of the general classification dominated by the strongest climbers, the top of the order in this mountain time trial would closely resemble the GC. After ninth-placed Joaquim Rodríquez (Katusha) had registered 30:00 dead, good enough for 11th at the end of the day, six of the top eight overall would finish in the day’s top seven (along with Garzelli). The only exceptions were Sunday’s winner and overall fifth-placed man Mikel Nieve (Euskaltel-Euskadi) – whose mediocre 31:14 was only 36th-fastest – and AG2R‘s John Gadret, fourth overnight, who was surprisingly only 16th-fastest, having finished an impressive third on the equivalent stage last year.

First to ride the course from the top eight was Astana team leader Roman Kreuziger, who stopped the watch at 29:44 to slot in behind Garzelli. Denis Menchov (Geox-TMC), an accomplished time-triallist, was three seconds slower, which would be good enough for seventh. And then, surprisingly, stage 13 winner José Rujano (Androni Giocattoli), for whom this Giro has been something of a renaissance, went fastest with 29:34. Nieve and Gadret then failed to trouble the top of the timesheets, setting the stage for the top three.

Vincenzo Nibali (Liquigas-Cannondale) set off like a man possessed, with his body and bike screaming ‘maximum attack’ as he flew through the corners on the way out of Belluno. He set what would stand as the fastest time at the – relatively meaningless – intermediate check, and kept the power down all the way up to the finish to set a stunning time of 29:29, taking 12 seconds off Garzelli. He was followed by Michele Scarponi (Lampre-ISD), whose relatively languid pedalling style was no less effective. It was touch and go all the way along the final kilometre, but he would fall just four seconds short of Nibali – still good enough to be the third best time.

That left only the maglia rosa, Contador. Hustling along the road with his customary high-cadence, low-geared rhythm, he was 13 seconds down at the check-point but kept calm and dosed his effort up the climb perfectly, eventually becoming the only man to break the 29-minute barrier. His winning time of 28:55 was a massive 34 seconds faster than Nibali, and he extended his overall lead over Scarponi to a massive 4:58.

Contador reacquianted himself with the pink jersey before dedicating his win to Xavier Tondó (image courtesy of Graham Watson)

Overall, however, there was little change in the order in the GC, with the differences between most riders being a matter of a few seconds. Rujano’s strong performance moved him above Nieve into fifth, while Igor Antón pushed David Arroyo out of the top ten.

Contador dedicated the win to Tondó:

His death has affected me deeply. Xavi was a good friend and in the last few races we always worked together for the victory. He was a very good guy, always happy and he was an incredible person. This victory is for him.

Nibali pronounced himself pleased with second place on the stage, and conceded that he is now racing only for the runner-up spot:

I did my best today, I could not do better. With second place more than five minutes before Contador, we have to say that now we are racing for second place.

Scarponi too admitted that the best man had won, but vowed to keep fighting to the end:

It’s clear that Contador is at another level. I will keep fighting. There are still some hard stages ahead of us. I would like to win a stage, but winning the Giro is complicated. I will try to remain optimistic.

However, Garmin-Cervélo’s David Millar summed up the race situation most succinctly when he said:

Alberto — you cannot touch him. He’s on a different level. It’s a race for second. No one else has a chance.

Stage 17 takes the peloton westwards for 230km across the northern edge of the country from Feltre to Tirano. This long day takes in a pair of categorised mountains, the testing Passo del Tonale (15.2km, 6.0% gradient) and the longer but more benign Aprica (15.4km, 3.1%). The descent from the final climb leads into a short, 7km run to the finish. Overall, the stage probably favours either a break or a small bunch sprint, although it would not be a surprise to see Nibali attack over the final summit and use his descending skills to look for either a stage win or at least an opportunity to close the 47-second deficit to Scarponi. It should be a relatively easy day for Contador and his Saxo Bank Sungard team.

Stage 17 profile

Stage 16 result:

1. Alberto Contador (Saxo Bank Sungard) 28:55

2. Vincenzo Nibali (Liquigas-Cannondale) +0:34

3. Michele Scarponi (Lampre-ISD) +0:38

4. José Rujano (Androni Giocattoli) +0:39

5. Stefano Garzelli (Acqua & Sapone) +0:46

General classification:

1. Alberto Contador (Saxo Bank Sungard) 62:43:37

2. Michele Scarponi (Lampre-ISD) +4:58

3. Vincenzo Nibali (Liquigas-Cannondale) +5:45

4. John Gadret (AG2R La Mondiale) +7:35

5. José Rujano (Androni Giocattoli) +9:18

6. Mikel Nieve (Euskaltel-Euskadi) +9:22

7. Denis Menchov (Geox-TMC) +9:38

8. Roman Kreuziger (Astana) +9:47

9. Joaquim Rodríquez (Katusha) +10:25

10. Igor Antón (Euskaltel-Euskadi) +10:58

Points classification:

1. Alberto Contador (Saxo Bank Sungard) 158 pts

2. Michele Scarponi (Lampre-ISD) 103

3. Vincenzo Nibali (Liquigas-Cannondale) 95

4. José Rujano (Androni Giocattoli) 87

5. Stefano Garzelli (Acqua & Sapone) 77

Mountains classification:

1. Stefano Garzelli (Acqua & Sapone) 64 pts

2. Alberto Contador (Saxo Bank Sungard) 53

3. Mikel Nieve (Euskaltel-Euskadi) 39

4. José Rujano (Androni Giocattoli) 29

5. Gianluca Brambilla (Colnago-CSF Inox) 27

Links: Giro d’Italia official websiteSteephill.tv

Giro d’Italia recaps

Stage 1: Pinotti swaps red, white and green for pink

Stage 2: Petacchi celebrates, Cavendish remonstrates in ham-fisted Parma finish

Stage 3: Weylandt’s death casts a long shadow

Stage 4: Peloton rides in tribute to Weylandt

Stage 5: Weening takes maglia rosa as Millar bites the dust

Stage 6: Ale-Jet runs out of gas as Ventoso wins uphill drag

Stage 7: De Clercq claims first professional win by a whisker

Stage 8: Gatto gets the cream as Contador shows his claws

Stage 9: Explosive Contador erupts on Etna

Stage 10: No tow required as Cavendish opens Giro account

Stage 11: Gadret times his finish to perfection

Stage 12: Cavendish doubles up and retires from the Giro

Stage 13: Contador’s gift leaves Rujano singing in the rain

Stage 14: All pain, few gain as Antón triumphs on the ascent to Hell

Stage 15: Nieve wins marathon stage, Contador sails serenely on

Tour of the Basque Country stage 4: Sánchez doubles up, Rodríguez defends lead

Stage 4: Amurrio to Eibar (Arrate), 179 Km

Samuel Sánchez proved fastest on the closing downhill sprint to win the queen stage of the Tour of the Basque Country (Vuelta al Pais Vasco) for the second year in succession. Joaquim Rodríguez maintained the race lead ahead of Andreas Klöden and Sánchez, with all three on the same aggregate time. Barring a major miscalculation, the race will now be decided in Saturday’s individual time trial.

On a hot, sunny day Michael Albasini (HTC-Highroad), Maxim Belkov (Vacansoleil-DCM) and Julián Sánchez (Caja Rural) formed the day’s breakaway, pulling out a lead of 12 minutes before the first of the day’s seven climbs. This forced the Katusha team of yellow jersey Rodríguez to ride hard in leading the pursuit. Only in the closing stages of the chase, as Katusha tired, did Euskaltel-Euskadi and RadioShack add their fresh legs in support of Sánchez and Klöden.

The catch was completed with around 8km left, just before the peloton reached the Usartza, the final climb of the day. A 5.8km ascent with an average gradient of 8.4%, it was made doubly difficult by the combination of unseasonal heat (temperatures touched 30ºC) and the cumulative effect of the previous six climbs.

Leopard-Trek‘s Maxim Monfort and Andy Schleck attempted to set the tempo in the early part of the climb, but that did not dissuade Geox-TMC‘s Fabio Duarte from launching an early one-man attack for the third day in a row. As on stages two and three, however, he was only able to eke out a small gap, and with plenty of distance to go to the finish he was easily drawn back in.

Next to attack, with around 5.5km to go, was Fränk Schleck. This was an altogether more meaningful acceleration, and only Movistar‘s Xavier Tondó covered the move as the other leaders were either confident of recovery or simply unable to respond immediately at the end of a long, hot day. Certainly Rodríguez, Klöden and Sánchez appeared comfortable enough and seemed more intent on watching each other than pursuing. However, other big names such as Damiano Cunego, Jurgen van den Broeck and Paris-Nice champion Tony Martin could not sustain the pace and were shelled out of the back.

With Schleck and Tondó 14 seconds up the road, it was left to Rabobank‘s Robert Gesink to force the pace in the leaders’ group. Tondó then kicked again, leaving an exhausted Schleck for dead. However, as first Alexandre Vinkouorov and then Sánchez had a couple of little digs themselves as they approached the summit, Tondó’s chances evaporated and he was absorbed back into the group.

Sánchez won the sprint easily to claim stage four

The lead group, now numbering 11, crested the top of the climb and on the descent to the finish Andy Schleck put in a big effort of his own. Vinokourov immediately marked him, but the pair were unable to make the break stick and Sánchez timed his counter-attack perfectly, reeling the pair in and leading everyone across the line to win by at least three bike lengths over Klöden. Vinokourov was at least as far behind in third, with Rodríguez a similar distance in arrears in fourth. The commissaires, somewhat generously, awarded them all the same time.

It had been an exciting finish to the stage, but not one which affected the general classification. With stage five unlikely to create any further time gaps, it leaves the overall win up for grabs in Saturday’s concluding individual time trial. The top 11 riders are currently separated by just 18 seconds.

Sánchez was delighted to have won the stage for Euskaltel-Euskadi on home territory, and with so little to choose between the top riders:

It’s always important for us to win here. The temperatures are like summer here, that’s costing everyone. Today on the final climb, everyone was on the same level, so I had to race with a little bit of cold blood and wait for the final moment to attack. Everyone in the top ten now on GC is very close. Anyone can win because the differences are very small. Without a doubt, the time trial is going to be spectacular.

A relieved Rodríguez was happy to hang on to the overall lead, even tough his deficiencies as a time-trialist are likely to cost him the win on Saturday:

I’m glad to keep the jersey. The pace was high on the climb and I lack a bit of explosivity to try to win the stage and couldn’t follow the accelerations from Sánchez. Tomorrow I hope to keep the jersey and that will allow me to start the final time trial last. That will give me an extra motivation to give everything in the time trial.

Stage five from Eibar to Zalla is the final road stage before Saturday’s decisive time trial. There are seven categorised climbs spread out over the 177km route, with the toughest ones up front. The run-in to the finish is lumpy, with four third-category climbs in the second half of the stage, the last being 12.5km from the finish. Expect an early breakaway and a competitive finish again.

Stage 4 result:

1. Samuel Sánchez (Euskaltel-Euskadi) 4:42:37

2. Andreas Klöden (RadioShack) same time

3. Alexandre Vinokourov (Astana) s/t

4. Joaquim Rodríguez (Katusha) s/t

5. Ryder Hesjedal (Garmin-Cervélo) s/t

General classification:

1. Joaquim Rodríguez (Katusha) 17:12:46

2. Andreas Klöden (RadioShack) same time

3. Samuel Sánchez (Euskaltel-Euskadi) s/t

4. Chris Horner (RadioShack) + 0:01

5. Ryder Hesjedal (Garmin-Cervélo) + 0:06

Link: Steephill.tv

Tour of the Basque Country posts

Stage 1: Rodríguez climbs into top spot

Stage 2: Kiryienka goes it alone

Stage 3: Vinokourov wins with trademark attack

Barredo and Nieve pick up the crumbs as Rodriguez eyes the biggest prize

After the drama of stage 14, when Igor Antón crashed out of the race lead, the Vuelta a España welcomed two new faces to its storied ranks of stage winners. Meanwhile, the battle for the red jersey kicked into high gear, with the race lead changing hands on the slopes of the Alto de Cotobello, which was making its Vuelta debut.

With just five racing days remaining, including the individual time trial and one last monster climb on the penultimate day, the outcome remains very much in doubt, with less than a minute separating the top three, and less than five minutes separating first from tenth.

Stage 15: Solares > Lagos de Covadonga

Quick Step‘s Carlos Barredo, one of the most attacking riders in the professional peloton,  finally added a Grand Tour stage win to a palmarès which already includes a stage of Paris-Nice and the 2009 Clásica de San Sebastián, courtesy of a committed solo attack in difficult wet conditions at Lagos de Covadonga.

Stage 15 winner Carlos Barredo

Featuring a flat route leading to the iconic climb of the Covadonga, this stage was always likely to favour a successful breakaway, particularly with the leaders looking to conserve energy for the following day. Consequently, the day’s six-man break of Barredo, Nico Sijmens, Pierre Cazaux, Olivier Kaisen, Greg Van Avermaet and Martin Velits reached the start of the 12.5 km ascent with a seven-minute advantage over a largely disinterested peloton.

After Martin Velits attempted an early attack on the lower slopes Barredo, the strongest climber in the group, quickly reeled him in and continued on up the road, leaving the rest to fend for themselves in the rain and mist.

In the main pack, Liquigas assumed control from Xacobeo Galicia to protect new red jersey Vincenzo NibaliCarlos Sastre and Ezequiel Mosquera attacked, but were quickly chased down. Mosquera subsequently attacked again and managed to escape, but would eventually gain just 11 seconds as Nibali and Joaquim Rodriguez, his closest rival, finished together 2:26 down on Barredo. Peter Velits finished with them to move up to fourth overall. The day’s big loser was Xavier Tondó, who finished 1:40 behind Nibali and dropped to fifth.

Barredo, who comes from nearby Oviedo, was overjoyed to win on ‘home’ territory:

It’s a great joy to win at home. I was born in Gijon and I’ve lived 30 kilometres away from the stage finish here. I got my first road bike as the result of a bet I made with my father, who told me that if I could ride from our house to Lagos de Covadonga and back on my mountain bike, he’d buy me a road bike. Today, so many years later, I’ve won here. That’s why today is the greatest win of my career from a sentimental point of view.

Nibali, who remains in the overall lead by four seconds, was grateful for the hard work put in by his team:

I only looked at saving my leadership. My team did a great job of that. They rode on the front from the start till the bottom of the climb; Oliver Zaugg and Roman Kreuziger did the final part. Roman did the maximum effort at the right time. He’s been brilliant.

Stage 15 result:

1. Carlos Barredo (Quick Step) 4:32:09

2. Nico Sijmens (Cofidis) +1:07

3. Martin Velits (HTC-Columbia0 +1:43

4. Greg Van Avermaet (Omega Pharma-Lotto) +2:06

5. Pierre Cazaux (FDJ) +2:10

Stage 16: Gijón > Cotobello

Stage 16 winner Mikel Nieve

Mikel Nieve secured his first win as a pro, riding solo to become the Vuelta’s first ever winner at the summit of the new climb of the Alto de Cotobello. Behind him, some brave attacking riding by Fränk Schleck distressed all the leaders, resulting in Vincenzo Nibali losing the red jersey to Joaquim Rodriguez.

With a pair of first category climbs – the Puerto de San Lorenzo and the Alto de la Cobertoria – to negotiate before the final ascent of the beyond-category Cotobello, the peloton was braced for a tough and nervy day’s racing, with the Liquigas team of race leader Vincenzo Nibali always likely to come under pressure from multiple attacks.

After some early unsuccessful breaks, a decisive ten-man escape featuring Caisse d’Epargne‘s Luis León Sánchez and also Euskaltel-Euskadi‘s Juan José Oroz was finally established after the initial third-category climb of Alto de Cabrunana. They built up a lead of around four minutes before starting to fragment on the slopes of the San Lorenzo.

At this point Nieve and teammate Amets Txurruka jumped clear of the peloton in an attempt to make the junction to the lead group, with Oroz dropping back to assist them. The three-man Euskaltel-Euskadi group yo-yoed backwards and forwards in no man’s land between the breakaway and the peloton for several kilometres before their determination finally paid off and they latched on to the leaders.

Saxo Bank moved to the front of the peloton on the lower slopes of the Cobertoria with just under 50 km to go. Fabian Cancellara did a massive turn on the front, thinning the red jersey group down to around 20-25 riders, setting up Schleck to attack near the summit of the climb. With Liquigas unwilling to burn themselves out in the chase, Schleck briefly looked like he might get away, but he eventually dropped back and reintegrated with the group.

Averaging 8.2% over its ten kilometre length, the Cotobello is a steep but relatively steady climb, favouring steady, tempo climbers rather than more explosive ones. The remnants of the breakaway arrived at its foot with an advantage of  2:45 over Nibali’s group, and Nieve quickly set about establishing a consistent pace which no one else could live with.

Behind him, Schleck was quickly back on the attack, cranking up the tempo and immediately putting the likes of Xavier Tondó and Rubén Plaza into the red zone. Garmin-TransitionsTom Danielson was the only rider to go with the Luxemburger, and the pair gradually established a gap of between 10 and 15 seconds, with Roman Kreuziger towing teammate Nibali and a select GC group including Ezequiel Mosquera and Nicolas Roche along at the front.

Joaquim Rodriguez claimed the overall lead by 33 seconds

From the back of this group, Carlos Sastre launched a counter-attack of his own, quickly leaping across the gap to Schleck and Danielson and then surging past them, forcing the pair to give chase. Sastre tried to attack again, but Schleck was equal to the challenge, catching and then riding steadily away from him with an impressive effort which he sustained all the way to the finish. He passed the remaining stragglers from the breakaway to claim second – overtaking Quick Step’s Kevin de Weert 70 metres from home – 1:06 behind Nieve but nearly a minute ahead of Nibali, and claiming a valuable 12 bonus seconds as well.

In the red jersey group behind, Kreuziger finally blew after a sterling effort, setting the scene for a series of attacks to which Nibali was unable to respond. Rodriguez, Mosquera and Roche all went clear, with Rodriguez taking 37 seconds out of Nibali to become the new race leader by 33 seconds.

Nieve was delighted to win on a stage he had reconnoitred in advance of the race, and dedicated his win to Igor Antón, who had crashed out of the race while in the red jersey two days previously:

Everything went perfect today. I dedicate this to my team and to Igor Antón. We were doing a great job, working for Antón to win this Vuelta.

After Igor’s crash we felt it was the end of the world. Our sports directors told us we had to get through Sunday’s stage and put our minds back in the race before fighting again. I knew the climb to Cotobello, I had done it at training in August with Igor and Samuel Sanchez. It helped me a lot today. The encouragements of the crowd and above all my sports directors helped me forget the suffering.

Schleck has ridden himself back into form over the first two weeks of the race following his Tour de France crash, and was only mildly disappointed to have missed out on the stage win here:

I tried to attack and I’ve succeeded. Unfortunately there was one rider who remained ahead and he was too far to be caught. I would have liked the stage win but I’ve regained some time over all the other GC contenders, so it’s a positive day.

Despite claiming the red jersey, Rodriguez admitted he faces a huge battle to keep it all the way to Madrid:

My lead (33 seconds) over Nibali on GC isn’t big enough before the time trial at Peñafiel. Nibali is a great time triallist; he’s better than me. Ezequiel Mosquera isn’t a bad time triallist. I’ll have to ride the best time trial of my life. If I limit my loss [in the time trial] to one and a half or two minutes, it could work. Every second will count before the last mountain stage [on Saturday]. The hills of Bola del Mundo are very steep.

Nieve’s fine solo win leapfrogged him up to 11th overall. Mosquera is third, 53 seconds behind Rodriguez, with Schleck and Roche jumping up to fourth and fifth, respectively 2:16 and 3:01 behind. Schleck certainly has a chance of claiming a podium place, although the red jersey is probably now beyond him, but with the individual time trial and the 22 km beyond-category climb of Bola del Mundo on the penultimate stage still to come, he has an outside chance of one final shot at glory.

King of the Mountains leader David Moncoutié claimed the three points on offer for leading over the first third-category climb of the day, consolidating what looks increasingly like an impregnable ten-point lead over Serafín Martínez in the climbers’ competition.

The second rest day today affords the riders a much-needed opportunity to recharge the batteries before tomorrow’s 46 km time trial around Peñafiel, after which there are just four stages remaining. The race remains tight, and one mistake or moment of inspiration could yet make all the difference.

Stage 16 result:

1. Mikel Nieve (Euskaltel-Eusakdi) 4:51:59

2. Fränk Schleck (Saxo Bank) +1:06

3. Kevin de Weert (Quick Step) +1:08

4. Joaquim Rodriguez (Katusha) + 1:22

5. Luis León Sánchez (Caisse d’Epargne) +1:32

General classification:

1. Joaquim Rodriguez (Katusha) 70:24:39

2. Vincenzo Nibali (Liquigas) +0:33

3. Ezequiel Mosquera (Xacobeo Galicia) +0:53

4. Fränk Schleck (Saxo Bank) +2:16

5. Nicolas Roche (AG2R-La Mondiale) +3:01

6. Peter Velits (HTC-Columbia) +4:27

8. Tom Danielson (Garmin-Transitions) +4:29

9. Xavier Tondó (Cervelo) +4:43

10. Carlos Sastre (Cervelo) +4:53

Points classification:

1. Mark Cavendish (HTC-Columbia) 111 pts

2. Joaquim Rodriguez (Katusha) 93

3. Tyler Farrar (Garmin-Transitions) 90

4. Vincenzo Nibali (Liquigas) 88

5. David Moncoutié (Cofidis) 72

Mountains classification:

1. David Moncoutié (Cofidis) 48 pts

2. Serafín Martínez (Xacobeo Galicia) 38

3. Luis León Sánchez (Caisse d’Epargne) 25

4. Gonzalo Rabuñal (Xacobeo Galicia) 25

5. Mikel Nieve (Euskaltel-Eusakdi) 21

For up-to-the-minute news, results and analysis of the race, visit either the official Vuelta website or the always excellent steephill.tv.

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