Velominati Super Prestige: la Vuelta a Espana

The inaugural Velominati Super Prestige continues with its the final Grand Tour of the season, la Vuelta a España, on Saturday, August 28. This will be the final opportunity for contestants to rake in a load of points; and with the list of injuries, and non-starts together with riders using the race as preparation for the World Championships in October, it will make it all the more challenging to pull together some good picks.

This particular Grand Tour is simultaneously the most boring and most exciting; various sections of Spain features desert with dead-straight roads where little is to be seen aside from a colorful peloton gliding along a road for 6 hours.  On the other hand, the mountains are steep and brutal, and the weather this time of year can be atrocious, so the mountain stages tend to showcase fireworks like we don’t see elsewhere during the season.

Having run the VSP Giro and Tour editions where we tested the ruleset for picks, and I think by this time we’ve managed to set up a scoring system that seems fair and helps to close down the competition to afford newcomers the ability to catch up with some good picks. There is a full overview of the rules and standing at the VSP Schedule, Rules, & Results page, but here is the ten-second overview:

Every contestant is to choose their top five General Classification picks of the race.  The final podium of la Vuelta is worth 15 points to the winner, 10 points for second, 5 points for third, 3 points for fourth, and 2 point for fifth. Given the effect crashes can have on a tour, there are guidelines around making changes to your lineup during the race: you’re allowed to change your lineup if any rider in your pick list drops out for any reason without any penalty; rest days will allow contestants to make changes to their lineup, however those changes will come at a point penalty.  (Visit the VSP Schedule, Rules, & Results page for a complete breakdown of these points.)

Every day, the leader in the points standings will have the honor of wearing the Golden Jersey when posting on the site; the overall winner will wear the Golden Jersey for the remainder of the season and will also earn an “Obey the Rules” bumper sticker.  All reader’s points qualify towards the final prize of the free Velominati Artisan’s Shroud.  As always, if you are inclined to enter, simply post your predictions for the top five placings.

Continuing with our jersey picks from the Tour de France edition is the competition of naming the winner of the points and climber’s jersey winners.  There will be no points awarded towards these two jerseys, but the leader of the competition will have the honor of commenting with associated jersey badge throughout the competition and the winner will earn the right to comment with that badge until next year’s race.  The contestant who picks both the final points and climbers jersey winners correctly will win a Velominati Logo bumper sticker.   Tie-breakers will go to the first contestant who posts their entire lineup (all 5 GC picks plus points and climbers  jersey winners).  Given that this sub-competition has no points, pick substitutions will only be granted under the DNF regulations of the VSP; no rest-day substitutions are allowed.

Sub-competitions will be conducted while the Vuelta is underway for specific stages.  These stages will be chosen a few days prior to the stage being held and will be selected based on the current race conditions with the aim of choosing the most decisive and exciting stages of the race, so check back often to make sure you don’t miss out.  Sub-competitions will be held in separate editions.

Good luck!

Rules and results are posted Velominati Super Prestige page.

frank

The founder of Velominati and curator of The Rules, Frank was born in the Dutch colonies of Minnesota. His boundless physical talents are carefully canceled out by his equally boundless enthusiasm for drinking. Coffee, beer, wine, if it’s in a container, he will enjoy it, a lot of it. He currently lives in Seattle. He loves riding in the rain and scheduling visits with the Man with the Hammer just to be reminded of the privilege it is to feel completely depleted. He holds down a technology job the description of which no-one really understands and his interests outside of Cycling and drinking are Cycling and drinking. As devoted aesthete, the only thing more important to him than riding a bike well is looking good doing it. Frank is co-author along with the other Keepers of the Cog of the popular book, The Rules, The Way of the Cycling Disciple and also writes a monthly column for the magazine, Cyclist. He is also currently working on the first follow-up to The Rules, tentatively entitled The Hardmen. Email him directly at rouleur@velominati.com.

View Comments

  • I only mention shaved legs because it's easy to pick on and I'm in violation (for now). Before I stepped off my bike in 1997, (I only took a 13 year hiatus, I'm back now, I promise) I had spent more of my life shorn than unshorn.

  • @all

    No changes in the VSP. Althought I was glad to see my boy Le Grand Frere Grimpeur stay with the bunch today. His plan to peak later in the race may work out well, ala Basso at the Giro. If he's within 2 minutes entering the first rest day, we should be in pretty good shape.

  • As I have mentioned before. I'd rather be good-looking and shit, than a great bike racer and ugly.

    Good-looking and ugly refers to style in this context

  • @Jarvis
    Exactly. I'd rather be crap and look good than good and look crap. The aim, of course, is to look good and be good.

  • @frank
    it is unlikely that I'll achieve that statue again, but I think that for a while I managed to carry it off.

  • @Hawkeye
    I'm copping the penalty for swaps and punting Menchov and Kreuziger for Anton (3rd) and Rochey (4th).

    It is going to be a shit-off in the TT late in this race - JRod already has lost out big on an hour-long TT late in a Grandy this year, and I can't imagine Anton being any chop either. Nibbles just needs to not get dropped by them and his mediocre TT skills will shred the legs off them!

    And the Assos Guy is clearly riding a Speederbike. If you have one of those whiz-bang HD3D consoles and listen closely, you can even hear him making the sound they made while roaring through the forests of Endor at ludicrous speed.

  • Okay, usually I let 'em ride but that strategy hasn't worked for me (actually, it's usually that I'm on trail for rest days with no computer). So, I'll switch up my ponies, take my lumps, and move on. I knew better than to pick Sastrefier anyway, serves my ass right.
    I'm keeping my top three for win/place/show. Munchlove still has an outside shot I think but damn if I don't love Garmin and their darkhorses. Is this Mr. Turtleneck Sweater's gift, coaching good riders to have great one-off rides? And what of senor Tondo? Here's his riding tip for the "average cyclist" from his profile page on the CTT website: "Enjoy the bicycle safely, and with respect for the environment. And look for a group of friends to share good moments on the bicycle." Isn't that nice and altruistic, he even looks like Sastre.

    1. F. Grimp
    2. Nibali
    3. Jo-keem Rodriguez
    4. Danielson for Menchov
    5. Tondo for Sastre

  • Rest day replacements.

    1. Nibali
    2. F.Grimp
    3. A.GrimpAnton
    4. Invisible Denis
    5. J Rod

    @frank
    I assume, that moving a rider from say 5th, like J-Rod in my choices, to 2nd, would constitute a replacement?

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