Category: Vuelta a Espana

  • Fabio Aru turns up

    I’d predicted that the final climb on stage 11 would deliver an ‘every man for himself’ scenario. As it turned out, it was Chris Froome for himself and then everyone else together. Fabio Aru was the one man to successfully detach himself from the leaders’ group. The young Italian, who came third in the Giro,…

  • Alberto Contador steals Tony Martin’s headlines

    I think I’ve said this before, but the problem with being Tony Martin is that everyone expects you to win time trials, so when you do, it’s literally unremarkable. What’s newsworthy is when you lose. Tony Martin won the stage 10 time trial, so let’s move on. Over the handlebars The most dramatic moment of…

  • Resting with Carlos Betancur

    It occurred to me that I neglected to keep you up to speed with Carlos Betancur’s performance after stage nine – although ‘up to speed’ would appear to be entirely the wrong phrase to use. Betancur finished 26m42s down, but went soaring up the leaderboard into third-to-last position after Dominic Klemme finished 29m37s behind the…

  • Winner Anacona lives up to his name

    That’s ‘Winner Anacona,’ not ‘winner, Anacona’ – although on this occasion misuse of commas and capital letters doesn’t actually matter that much because Winner won and is therefore also a winner. Let’s just call him Anacona for clarity. Anacona, who was only a couple of minutes down on the general classification, got himself into the…

  • Nacer Bouhanni finds a flat stage in the middle of the Vuelta

    It’s unusual for the Vuelta to get through an entire stage without taking a detour to go up some hill or other, but on stage eight it managed it. However, the Vuelta being the Vuelta, it still managed to fill this seemingly most predictable of days with its fair quota of uncertainty. It was a…

  • All I know about Alessandro De Marchi

    Alessandro De Marchi was out in the break a handful of times during the Tour de France. He didn’t win. On stage seven of the Vuelta, he spent the day in the break again. This time he did win. I put ‘de marchi’ into Google translate and it came up ‘de brands’. Alex of Brands.…

  • Alejandro Valverde adds to the uncertainty

    I love the Vuelta. I really, really love the Vuelta. I’ve been thinking this a lot recently and can’t put my finger on precisely why I enjoy it so much more than other races. Sometimes it’s best not to scrutinise these things lest you inadvertently dissipate the magic, but one thing I’ve concluded is that…

  • It can be hard to get round John Degenkolb

    It was another sprint finish and another John Degenkolb win. Nacer Bouhanni managed to stay in the front group, but couldn’t get round the German at the finish. Bouhanni says this was because Degenkolb was in his way. More accurately, he tried to overtake where there was little room when he could just as easily…

  • John Degenkolb v Michael ‘Bling’ Matthews

    John Degenkolb and Michael Matthews are suited to similar sorts of stages, but yet I much, much prefer the former. Why? I’ve given it some thought and I think it boils down to name, appearance and interests. Name Michael Matthews’ nickname is ‘Bling’. I might be alone in this, but I find that spectacularly annoying.…

  • Michael Matthews can sort-of-sprint and sort-of-climb

    There was much dicking about in captain’s hats and aeroplane cockpits at the start of the day, with the stage beginning aboard The Don Juan Carlos I aircraft carrier. The ship managed to remain afloat despite being subjected to the weight of Carlos Betancur, but later on kilograms proved more of an issue with the…