Saturday, April 20, 2024

La Vuelta a España 2014 – Stage 10; Monasterio de Veruela – Borja (ITT), 34.5 km. Nairo Crashes, Contador Leads

-

HomeRaceRace ReviewsLa Vuelta a España 2014 - Stage 10; Monasterio de Veruela -...

Borja

Alberto Contador Velasco (Tinkoff & Spain) pulled on the red jersey in Borja, raised his bouquet to his adoring fans then offered his clenched right fist up to his chest.

The man has a big heart in there, for sure – all that was missing was Kiss pumping on the PA, ‘Back in the New York Groove,’ the line which goes; ‘this place was meant for me!’

Joy for the man from Pinto but pain for the race leader from the other side of the world as Columbia’s Nairo Quintana (Movistar) chose exactly the wrong place to faff with his shoes, took his eye off the ball and stacked hard against the crash barriers on a right hander.

Borja
Quintana get the apex wrong, locks his rear wheel, he drops off the road and his ‘bars hit the armco, firing him over the front of the bike. Oh, and he breaks his saddle off with his own seat.

He lost more than three minutes to Contador to make overall victory a difficult – but not impossible – proposition.

And not a good day for Sky; Britain’s Chris Froome was expected to challenge for the win today and sail into red – instead he dropped 40-plus seconds on Contador and must hope he can challenge in the mountains.

I’ve had to bet money on anyone falling off today, it would have been Froome – he’s just not at one with his machine and his ‘thrupenny bit’ cornering makes one wince.

Borja
Chris Froome looking down, where else? Photo©Unipublic

Meanwhile Germany’s Tony Martin – if he starts a chrono behind you then it’s like driving on the autobahn, best keep to the right – reinforced his right to wear that pristine white speedsuit and have the coolest of paint jobs on his QuickStep Specialized as he won yet another joust with Old Father Time.

Borja
World TT Champion Tony Martin takes another solo victory. Photo©Unipublic

In the process giving the Emperor’s thumbs down to the man who’s happy to have ‘Spartacus’ – like Lance said, I think I’ll start calling myself ‘Big Tex’ – written on his machine, Fabian Cancellara who it must be said ran the German to 18 seconds at the line for third.

Alberto Contador
Fabian Cancellara. Photo©Unipublic

But splitting them, at 15 seconds was another of the QuickStep Mean Machine, Rigoberto Uran – his ride should be no surprise given he won the Giro time test this year and started life as Junior Time Trial Champion of Colombia.

Uran’s ride hiked him up to third on GC @ 59 seconds on the man who took fourth spot in the test – Contador.

As others’ nerves showed on the start ramp, it was ‘another day at the office’ for the Spaniard who for a skinny little climber has beautiful form and oneness with his machine.

Alberto Contador
Rigo Uran has found his TT legs at the top level. Photo©Unipublic

Fifth spot went to an inspired home boy Sammy Sanchez (BMC) – needing a contract does that to a man – who’s stellar first half to the top of the climb built a solid foundation for a good performance.

His Aussie BMC team mate Cadel Evans was just one second behind; I keep writing that man off but he keeps bouncing back – but we’ll wait for the high sierra before we send off our Cadel Fan Club application form.

Alberto Contador
Sammy Sanchez. Photo©Unipublic

Sky automaton Vasili Kiryienka was seventh – remember that the man has been a Worlds medallist for Belorus in the TT – with eighth spot going to a very impressive Alejandro Valverde (Movistar & Spain), turning the 11 into the finish with real power to give him second on GC, 27 seconds behind Contador.

Ninth spot belonged to big, strong Trek Kiwi pursuiter Jesse Sergent with Froome in 10th spot.

Biggest surprise of the day was the strong ride by Stage Nine victor – notice how I avoided saying ‘winner’ – Lampre’s Colombiano, Winner Anacona who now sits fourth on GC between Uran in third and Froome and in fifth spot.

As we said of Stage Nine; ‘dull this Vuelta is not.’

Stage Eleven starts in Pamplona of bulls, Hemingway and Indurain fame and finishes 151 K later at the thousand year old monastery of San Miguel de Aralar atop a cat. 1 ascent on concrete pavement.

Let’s hope it doesn’t rain…

Ve con Dios.

Alberto Contador
Bert takes over the lead after the TT. Photo©Unipublic
Ed Hood
Ed Hood
Ed's been involved in cycling for over 50 years. In that time he's been a successful time triallist, a team manager and a sponsor of several teams and clubs. He's also a respected and successful coach and during the winter months was often working in the cabins at the Six Days for some of the world's top riders. Ed remains a massive fan of the sport and couples his extensive contacts with an inexhaustible enthusiasm for the minutiae and the history of our sport. In February 2023 however, our dear friend and beloved colleague Ed suffered a devastating stroke and faces an uncertain future; Ed has lost his ability to speak, to read, and has lost movement on the right side of his body. He's working with speech and physical therapists on rehabilitation, but all strokes are different and each patient responds differently, so unfortunately recovery is one day at a time. Ed ran his own business installing windows, and will probably not be able to work again. Please consider joining us to make a contribution to Ed's GoFundMe page to help stabilise and secure his future.

Related Articles

World Road Championships – Day Five, Mens Time Trial 2012

There are time trials – and then there are time trials. this is the Mens Time Trial 2012. Dual carriageways with high traffic counts on balmy Essex afternoons are one thing; Limburg in the autumn rain with a parcours which includes the Cauberg is another.

Il Giro d’Italia 2014 – Stage 20; Maniago – Monte Zoncolan, 167 km. Michael Rogers Rides Clear

That final horrible grind up the mountain didn’t affect the GC much at all but Michael Rogers’ (Tinkoff & Australia) ride was wonderful to watch. It looked very much like he had the better of fellow breakaway survivor Francesco Manuel Bongiorno (Bardiani & Italy) anyway, but we were denied their duel going any further by the moron who gave the man in green a push.

Scottish National Series 2014 – Event 1, Gifford

This year the winner of the Gifford Road Race 'A' event this year was also clearly the strongest rider on the day; Tom Bustard (Velosure - Giordana RT) was the first to make a serious attack on the first lap, pulling a break of several riders clear which cemented itself as more riders made it across over the next couple of laps.

Il Giro d’Italia 2014 – Stage 8; Foligno – Montecopiolo, 174 km. Diego Ulissi Scores a Second!

Diego Ulissi (Lampre & Italy); if the broader world of cycling didn’t really know who he was before this Giro – they do now. His first win on Stage Five wasn’t a surprise if you were aware of his terrific end to last season - Milano-Torino, the Coppa Sabatini and the Giro dell’Emilia. Three Italian semi-classics - all very desirable and hard fought – ‘tough and hilly’ is right up his street. But Saturday was different, the real deal, first and second cat. montagnes; and just look at who he beat – Evans, Uran, Quintana, Pozzovivo... As Kris said, it restores your faith in bike racing.

At Random

Scottish Olympic Time Trial Championship 2007

Showing he's lost none of the form which would have kept David Millar (Saunier Duval) in Slipstream Argyle pattern - rather than the red and blue hoops of British champion -- in time trials next year (had the Fort William man's front tyre not exploded), Jason MacIntyre (Edge RT) put more than four minutes into second placed Arthur Doyle (Ivy CC) in Sunday's Scottish Olympic Time Trial Championship 2007 over 27 technical miles at Irvine.

Paul McHugh – “Big Mac”, the Show-Stopper

Before ‘The Plan,’ Britain had a sprinter who looked like he was the real thing. He had the bulldog build, the aggression and fast twitch muscles; but most importantly - the stopwatch confirmed that he was seriously quick. It wasn’t until the likes of Craig Maclean and Sir Chris Hoy came along that Paul McHugh’s British 200 metres record was beaten.

The VV View: The USADA Reasoned Decision Should Be the Start, Not the End

The USADA Reasoned Decision; just like those CNN images from Iraq when the Saddam statues crashed to the ground, Lance is in pieces in the dust – the legend shattered. The Zealots told us that it was a great day and the start of a new era in cycling.

Jack Simes – American Track and Six Day Legend

Daniel Holloway and Colby Pearce are regulars on the Six Day scene, and this season we've been helping to look after two other young American riders at the races; Jackie Simes and Brad Huff. US riders win classics and Grand Tours and there are US Pro Tour teams. It was different in 1970 though, with not one single US rider holding a professional licence — enter Jackie's dad, Mr. Jack Simes.