Spain is an awesome country. It has amazing scenery, culture, cities and chicas… oh, the chicas. Its football competition features the world’s best players, their national team are the reigning World Cup holders, and they boast world champions in tennis, Moto GP, Superbikes and Formula 1. They regularly kick the collective asses of France and Italy, and a lot of other European countries when it comes to bicycle racing, although most of their recent heroes have somewhat of a cloud hanging over them. So why does their Grand Tour hardly raise an eyebrow when compared to the other two big tours, and why the fuck do they still allow cowards on horses armed with poison darts to taunt and kill a beast as noble as el toro for ‘entertainment’?
I can’t really answer the last one, but the fact that La Vuelta is treated like the road racing equivalent of a red-headed stepchild is about as fair as the Corrida itself. To me, and to many pros, it is seen as a tour of redemption. Those who, for one reason or another, either due to bad luck, bad management or bad form suffered a less-than-stellar Tour de France, now get a chance to make something of their season and add a ‘major’ to their palmares. Riders like Jan Ullrich, who in 1999 took the amarillo jersey after sitting out Le Tour with a dicky knee. 2008 saw Contador make amends after his Astana team was prevented from starting le Grande Boucle under a doping cloud. In fact, La Vuelta and doping have more than a passing aquaintance, with Valverde winning while under a pending hearing in 2009, and of course little Robbie Heras getting stripped of his 05 title after an EPO positive. Last year wasn’t without its own scandal, with a positive for 2nd place ‘sensation’ Ezequiel Mosquera dragging La Vuelta’s name through the red dust again. It could well be the dirtiest tour of them all, a race that itself seeks atonement as much as those who race it.
This year’s edition has the same sense of redemption written all over it, with some of Le Tour’s unfortunates having a crack at it. There’s Wiggo, who was in the self-proclaimed form of his life before snapping his twig-like collarbone early on. Can he show us what he had promised on the roads of France in the Dauphine, or will the Spanish heat and steep, long climbs be too much for him? How about Jurgen Van den Broeck, also looking great before his own clavicle calamity ended his July. Invisible Denis will also be there, his Geox team considered not good enough for the Tour, out to show that he’s still a force and add to his two Spanish victories. Other battered old warhorses who will never give up easily are Andreas Klöden and Carlos Sastre, but father time may have finally taken its toll on this duo.
In reality, it’ll probably come down to the younger brigade made up of last year’s winner Vinnie Nibali, J-Rod, Scarponi, and Anton. It could be a blow-out, or one of the best races of the year. We may even get another drug controversy to keep up the status quo of years gone by. Whatever happens is anybody’s guess, which is why this race is one of the hardest to pick for VSP contenders, and one that might even be as exciting, vibrant and colourful as the country it traverses for three hot weeks.
So pour yourself a glass of Sangria, give the start list a long or glancing look, and post your picks before 5am Pacific time (yeah, I don’t know when the hell that is either…) and if you have any doubts, confusion or questions, head to the VSP page for clarification, rules and/or rebuttals. No horsing around, no bullshit.
Buena suerte!
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@Netraam
Yes, and I'm also getting updates from a collegue who is a avid cyclist and went bonkers when she saw Cuddles. She lives near the TT, I guess.
I tried to get a biz trip scheduled back to the hope office in Denver to check the race out, but nothing doing.
steampunk - Yeah, slow news feed here in NC. Coupled with the TdF hangover I'm suffering, it's rough. Nice work on the flower. My VMH identified that for me, she's great with trees and flowers.
scaler - Yeah, I think I could be convinced to wear that hat, a baseball hat, any hat around those ladies. Wimmin' weaken hat wearin' anxiety!
Frank - you chose to challenge the mtn. again when you could have been in CO? Good man, good man, challenging yourself, and that damn mtn. again.
For the first time I'm sitting on the podium. Of course, to stay there several miracles have to happen and Nibali has to stay put.
I'll savor it for now.
Just found this posted on the OBRA (Oregon Bicycle Racing Assoc.):
http://obra.org/posts/obra/show/77984
There's a team here that has HTFU on their shorts. Kool Mo De.
Jens cracks me up. http://liten.be//hrKRd
@Dr C
http://ridewithgps.com/trips/369288
Did some hill reps on Wednesday and this ride yesterday, one of the hardest I've done, some fairly steep hills, hot and the last leg of the triangle was on some truly awful surfaces! Cracked Tarmac of a pave like nature!
Holy shit. Massive carnage at La Vuelta today. Sadly, Tyler was the first to go down. Hope he's ok. He laid on the ground for quite awhile.
EDIT: He lay on the ground...
Nibali, Rodriquez and Scarponi have light injuries. Baukema looked bad but he only has strained a muscle in his neck.
Boonen claimed he could've won the stage if he didn't go down. Freire looking rather OK, despite being ill at the start of the Vuelta.
Got to love Oscarito, he uses a Grand Tour to ride into form and overcome illness. Oh boy.