Friday, March 29, 2024

La Vuelta a España 2014 – Stage 13; Belorado – Obregón, 182 km. Daniel Navarro for Spain and Cofidis

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HomeRaceRace ReviewsLa Vuelta a España 2014 - Stage 13; Belorado - Obregón, 182...

vuelta_espana_logo_2014We took a rest day for Stage 12; we said Bouhanni to win the ‘crit’ but also that Degenkolb might argue with us; the French dynamo got held up behind a stack whilst the 25 year-old German from Gera didn’t and duly took his third win of the race. Stage 13 took things back up a level with Daniel Navarro taking the honours but on a parcours which didn’t make for ‘The Bigs’ to do anything but mark each other.

Unlike the Tour de France where there have been years where the honour of France has been saved by a single stage win by the likes of Sandy Casar, the Vuelta has always inspired it’s children with Spaniards well to the fore.

Daniel Navarro
Luis-Leon Sanchez rode a crafty race in the break, ultimately to no avail. Photo©Unipublic

If the 2014 Tour de France was the first time since 1997 a Frenchman appeared on the podium, you have to go back to 1996 to find the last occasion there was no Spaniard on the Vuelta podium and that doesn’t look like changing.

Similarly, when it comes to stage wins the ‘Home Boys’ always reach deep into their top hats to find a rabbit with Dani Navarro at last giving Cofidis something to smile about.

The QuickStep machine may churn out the big wins; Tony Martin’s Vuelta ‘contra reloj’ victory was the 60th win for the Belgian team in three disciplines – road, six day and cyclocross – in 2014.

And the team has now won more than 60 races for three straight years and also won at least one stage of every Grand Tour this season and one stage of every Grand Tour for the last seven years.

But for Cofidis wins like Navarro’s don’t come every day and are a moment to savour.

Daniel Navarro
Daniel Navarro took a brave and well-executed victory. Photo©Unipublic

On the subject of QuickStep and harping back to our rest day crit it was telling to see Tom Boonen in second place in the finish line melee.

He’s serious about the Worlds.

Daniel Navarro
Degenkolb toook Stage 12, but look who’s up there in the sprint. Photo©Unipublic

And whilst Degenkolb was the man in the crit and Navarro was the local hero on Stage 13; a result which went unnoticed by many behind the Spaniard’s was Bouhanni’s fifth place.

A French world champion; that would be something, with the last time a Frenchman topped the podium being Laurent Brochard in 1997 in San Sebastian – enough said of ‘Broch,’ for me his hair was worse than his doping.

The last French rider to make the Worlds podium was Anthony Geslin in Madrid in 2005.

But with the Worlds in Spain again this year it just might be a good year for Spain, especially with ex-pro and one of the best amateurs in the world ‘when I were a lad,’ Bernard Bourreau at the helm of the Les Bleus.

Daniel Navarro
Katusha and Tinkoff work hard at the front for different reasons. Photo©Unipublic
Daniel Navarro
Froome gets a push after changing wheels. Photo©Unipublic

Stage 13 sadly saw the exit of 2013 Vuelta stage winner, Kenny Elissonde (F des J & France) and the man of whom Winston Churchill might have said; ‘never in the field of professional bicycle racing has so much hype been given to a rider with so few palmares,’ Jurgen Van De Broeck (Lotto & Belgium).

VeloVeritas sage, Ivan and I have decided that the Belgians have at least to pretend they have a GC rider – and Big Jurg is as close as they can get.

Daniel Navarro
Carlos Betancur at the finish of last year’s World Championships. He’s talented for sure, but just what is going on with him? Photo©Ed Hood

And on the subject of enigmas – languishing a remote 183rd on GC @ 2:36:22 in this Vuelta is a certain Carlos Betancur (AG2R & Colombia).

Still only 24, the man with the semi-mullet rode a brilliant Giro in 2013 and this spring won Haut Var and Paris-Nice – with two stage wins – before disappearing back to Colombia and ‘forgetting’ to come back to the ‘Old World’ and ride the Tour.

His best stage finish – TTT apart – in the race has been 141st but we can’t help but think there’s another reason for his letting himself be dragged round the Iberian Peninsula under a blazing sun other than AG2R stopping paying him.

Last year at the Worlds in Florence we were struck by the man’s sheer disappointment at the finish; he sat on the top tube of his bike for a good five minutes staring at his feet as if replaying the race in his mind and analysing where he’d gone wrong.

We think he’s serious about the Worlds and this Vuelta is just training – doing the kilometres but not going too deep, like Bradley Wiggins used to do in the Giro when preparing for the Worlds pursuit.

If he’s up there in Ponferrada then remember where you read it here first; if he’s not then it’s just us getting it wrong – again.

Daniel Navarro
Still only 21, Kazak rider Alexey Lutsenko showed his class by riding away from his four breakaway companions. Photo©Unipublic

Stage 14 tomorrow, Saturday, out of Santander is a beast; there’s the cat. 2 Collada de la Hoz at 77 K; the long, long cat. 1 Puerto de San Glorio at 129 K and the cat. 1 La Camperona with 24% ramps to the finish at 199 K.

The top ten will be distilled to an even higher proof on this tough day.

And there’s Covadonga on Sunday…

Vaya con Dios.

Daniel Navarro
With his team riding well, Bert is happy to retain Red at this point. 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.

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