60th Vuelta a España - GT
Spain, August 27-September 18, 2005
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Next Stage Stage 14 - Saturday, September 10: Nestlé La Penilla-Lagos de Covadonga, 172.3 km
Complete live report
Commentary by Shane Stokes, with additional reporting from Hernan Alvarez
14:58 CEST
Good afternoon and welcome to Cyclingnews' live coverage of the 14th stage of
the Tour of Spain, a 172.3 kilometre mountain stage from Nestle La Penilla to
Lagos de Covadonga.
15:05 CEST
There were two non-starters this morning, Belgian sprinter/classics rider/world
championship hopeful Tom Boonen and the Spaniard David de La Fuente. Boonen
had already indicated he was to leave the race, preferring to return home and
fine-tune his form in training rather than continue in the Vuelta.
He didn't manage to beat chief rival Alessandro Petacchi for a stage win during
the race, but remains upbeat about his chances for Madrid on September 25th.
15:14 CEST 102km/70.3km to go
There is a group of 15 riders clear. These went away in the first hour of racing
and now have a lead of over seven minutes on the rest of the field. They are
gambling that the difficult finish of this stage means that the peloton will
give them a bit of leeway, with the strongest then trying to hold off to the
finish.
15:16 CEST
Historically, the Lagos de Covadonga finish has always ensured a worthy winner,
reflecting perhaps the difficulty of the hors categorie climb. It is 14.3 kilometres
long with an average gradient of 6.5% and a maxiumum pitch of 13%; more than
enough to put riders under serious pressure.
15:19 CEST
The Covadonga finish was first introduced in 1983, when Marino Lejaretta won.
More recently, Pedro Delgado, Laurent Jalabert, Lucho Herrera, Raimond Dietzen,
Robert Millar, Alvaro Pino, Oliveiro Rincón, Pavel Tonkov, Andrei Zintchenko
and Juan Miguel Mercado have been victorious, with Jalabert and Herrera each
taking two wins there.
15:23 CEST
Today's stage could prove of vital importance to the race. Three time Vuelta
winner Roberto Heras (Liberty Seguros) started this morning with a deficit of
47 seconds to Rabobank's Denis Menchov. Taking time back today is crucial, as
he will need to have a buffer over Menchov in the final time trial; however,
Heras' knee has been giving him problems since his bad crash earlier this week,
so it remains to be seen if he will be at full strength today.
15:40 CEST
The leading riders were clear at the 26 kilometre point. These were as follows:
Igor Gonzalez de Galdeano (Liberty Seguros), Martin Elmiger (Phonak), Unai Osa
(Illes Balears), Anthony Charteau (Boygues Telecom), Eladio Jimenez (Comunidad
Valenciana), Bart Cockx (Davitamon – Lotto), Aketza Peña (Euskaltel-Euskadi),
Heinrich Haussler (Team Gerolsteiner), Guido Trenti (QuickStep – Innergetic),
Bram De Groot (Rabobank), David Canada, Angel Gomez, Iñigo Cuesta, and Joaquin
Rodriguez (all Saunier Duval – Prodir) plus Marcus Brughardt (T-Mobile).
Gomez was dropped from this bunch, making it 13 clear.
15:46 CEST
One motivation for Saunier Duval’s strong presence in the lead group is the
mountains jersey of Joaquin Rodriguez. He started this stage with 96 KOM points,
30 more than the total of Heras. Scoring heavily today will do him a lot of
favours.
And, sure enough, that is what he has done. Rodriguez took maximum points on
the three second category climbs – Alto de Carmona (49 km), Collada de Ozalba
(66.3 km) and the Collada de la Hoz (80.2). Where possible, his team-mates have
also snuck into the mountain points, providing a buffer against others who may
harbour ambitions of going after the KOM jersey.
15:47 CEST 130km/42.3km to go
The break is now on the third category Alto del Ortigueiro, holding an advantage
of 8 minutes and 12 seconds on the peloton. They've got just over 40 km of racing
left, so that's not a bad lead.
15:51 CEST
CSC and Euskaltel are riding behind.
16:00 CEST
Generally, the rule of thumb is that the bunch should be able to take back 1
minute every ten kilometres, so by that reckoning the break looks like it is
home and dry. However, the same doesn't apply on mountain stages, where the
fresher, stronger climbers in the bunch can dynamite the race once they hit
the final climb. That said, there are some strong riders up front so it's by
no means guaranteed that guys such as Heras and Menchov will catch everyone
in the break. It will be interesting to see what happens...
16:11 CEST 148km/24.3km to go
The bunch has become more active, slicing a chunk of time off the lead of the
break. With about 24 km left to race, they are now 5 minutes and 10 seconds
behind the front runners.
16:14 CEST 157.3km/15km to go
Liberty are now driving the pace as the riders near the start of the final climb.
So perhaps that suggests that Heras is feeling okay at the moment and that his
knee has settled down.
CSC are also helping out, as the gap drops to 3 minutes and 42 seconds. The
break have lost considerable time and so they must be getting worried.
16:19 CEST
The break is now on the final hors category climb of the Lagos de Covadonga,
and in the process of breaking apart. The friskier guys are applying the pressure,
aware that they need to ramp up the speed if they are to stand a chance of staying
clear of the charge behind.
16:21 CEST
Liberty are still charging along, going for all they are worth as the slope
steepens.
Up front, the break has officially broke...Jimenez goes clear of the rest while,
behind, Joseba Beloki leads the chase.
16:23 CEST 162.3km/10km to go
Heras is riding hard, with Menchov looking relatively composed on his wheel.
In terms of style, the Spaniard looks more under pressure. Mancebo looks to
have blown, as does Danielson.
Sastre pushes the pace and gets a slight gap on the rest of the leaders.
16:25 CEST
Michele Scarponi is the only one of Heras' Liberty team still left at the front
of the bunch. Sastre is now clear on his own. He started this morning 4th overall,
1'57 back, and is drawing away of the three riders ahead of him in GC. Good
riding!
16:26 CEST
Eladio Jimenez is still clear up front. Sastre looks good, concentrating on
the task at hand as he tries to increase his 12 second lead.
16:27 CEST
Sastre has just flown past mountains leader Rodriguez.
16:28 CEST
He now passes Dockx and Bram de Groot, picking off those in front one by one.
16:31 CEST 164.3km/8km to go
Sastre now has 18 seconds on the Menchov/Heras group. He is closing up on those
in front, passing Pena now.
Behind, Robert Laiseka (Euskaltel) has come back up to the Heras group.
16:36 CEST
The riders are now at the La Huesera section of the climb, the 13% section.
Jimenez is out of the saddle but riding strongly. Sastre is a picture of concentration,
whipping the pedals around as he approaches that section.
Gonzalez de Galdeano has come back to the front and puts in one last burst in
an attempt to springboard Heras. The treble Vuelta champion goes, with Menchov
looking good on his wheel. Gilberto Simoni's form has awoken and is up there,
too, although he looks a bit rougher than the other two.
He's gone...
16:39 CEST 167.3km/5km to go
Now he's back...kinda. Simoni yo-yo's off the back as Heras does what he can
to drop Menchov. No cracks so far, the Russian is looking strong.
Sastre is now just 9 seconds clear of the Heras-Menchov-Simoni group.
16:45 CEST 169.3km/3km to go
Simoni now attacks as the climb levels out somewhat! He's got a good chance
of getting a gap as Heras and Menchov will be watching each other.
Jimenez has reached the downhill section and is looking good, holding a decent
lead as he gets ready for the final couple of kilometres. He's heading uphill
again.
Sastre is 13 seconds ahead of Heras and Menchov. The Spaniard is doing what
he can to get rid of the race leader, but no joy as yet.
16:47 CEST
Heras and Menchov are now on the downhill section. Looking good for Jimenez,
surely he'll hold on now...
Sastre goes under the 3 km to go banner, 1'47 back. Then Heras and Menchov,
10 seconds later.
16:50 CEST 171.3km/1km to go
Jimenez is stomping along nicely, less than 2 km to go now..
Behind, Simoni catches Sastre. They are on a section of 7-8 % steepness. Some
crazy fans are running alongside the two of them, but drop back.
Jimenez goes under the kite and is on the fast downhill towards the line. It
goes up again just before the finish. He's got this won, unless he falls off.
16:51 CEST
He does it! The Comunidad Valenciana rider crosses the line, waving to the crowd.
16:52 CEST
Sastre and Simoni go under the kite, as do Menchov and Heras about 5 seconds
later.
16:52 CEST
Cuesta is still up there, taking second on the stage.
16:57 CEST
He was 1'21 seconds back, with Simoni at 1'31 and Sastre at 1'36. Menchov leads
Heras across the line 1'43 back. Other riders come in in dribs and drabs, with
Menchov finishing 2'35 down. He'll slip down the GC tonight..Sastre will move
up to third.
16:58 CEST
Danielson comes in 3'46 down...that's a shame, he was riding well in this Vuelta
and had picked out this stage as one he wanted to do a big ride on. However,
these aspirations were compromised as he had stomach problems last night. We'll
hopefully get a diary from him later on with more details of his stage.
17:04 CEST
So Menchov preserves his overall lead over Heras..things are certainly looking
more difficult now for the Liberty Seguros rider, who is running out of opporunities
to win his fourth Vuelta. He's got another summit finish tomorrow, though, so
look for him to try again on the road to the Puerto de Pajares.
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