Velominati Super Prestige: Vuelta a España 2012

Nibbles wins the 2010 edition of the Vuelta. Photo: Cyclesport Mag

One of the loveliest things about the Grand Tours is that you get a feel, by the nature of the route, of the country’s landscape and physical qualities. Italy is littered with mountains and coasts, France is bordered by mountains with large swaths of open landscape throughout, and Spain is like Tatooine; mostly desert with some rocky outcroppings. I might be oversimplifying here, but it seems like every edition of the Vuelta features a week or two of riders cutting through open desert on a freeway and then finishing it off with some climbs that require a buzz-saw gear to get up. Of the three Tours, this one is my least favorite, but it’s a bike race and I loves me a bike race.

The Vuelta also stands apart as being the event which generally decides the Velominati Super Prestige GC and the personalized Shop Apron that goes with it; in past editions, we’ve even had newcomers to the event debut at the Vuelta and win the overall, as was the case last year with @Nate’s performance. Unless I have that wrong, in which case I don’t really care. The important point here is that even though there is less interest in this event than others, it matters quite a bit to the year-long VSP, so you better be paying attention, corporal.

No fancy prizes on offer as we did at the Tour, but we do have our customary Symbol Pack up for grabs, in addition to second and third places winning a pair of Handlebar Cufflinks each when they come available in a few weeks. So, check the race details, get your picks in by the time the countdown clock goes to zero (5am Pacific time on Saturday), and buckle in for the ride. Regular GT VSP rules apply. Good luck.

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

  • @Daccordi Rider

    If the next 3 weeks are like that stage we are in for a treat. Welcome back Bertie.

    Yeah that last 5k's was brilliant, it seemed like he wanted to make sure Froome was out of it from the first week. Love a GT that has a finish like that 3 days. in.

  • @minion

    fuck it. We had a clean tour that was slated as boring (by others, not by me). Now that cheating W*****r C**t is back and everyone is wetting themselves because he attacks.

    Well, you get the racing you deserve, I suppose.

    Hey mate, you're from hobbit land - I'd have thought you'd be enjoying "The Return of the King"

  • @Duende

    @xyxax

    Wow, just caught the last 3 km of the 3rd stage.  Animated to say the least.  Nice.

    Contador definitely launched a lot of attacks in those last 3km, wow! He made it look as though he was just playing with the others. It will be interesting to see whether Froome has any more jump in his legs than he showed today.

    Funny how 2 people watching the same climb can have 2 completely different interpretations! I saw C make 3 orf 4 spirited attacks, and I saw Froome look up, and without bothering to leap out of the saddle close the gap in moments. So my interpretation was that Froome realised the C attack wasn't fast enough to be decisive so simply reeled him in with a minimum of effort. And then nip into third for good measure

    So my view of those last 3km was basically Froome saying to C "you're going to have to work a lot harder than that, my son, if you want to lose me".

    But I could be wrong........

    David

  • @Duende

    Based on yesterday's stage alone, methinks Contador would have systematically busted Sky over the course of the Tour.

  • @David

    Fair point"”Froome was there at the end. It looked, though, like Contador almost just wanted to see what would happen when he attacked"”only one of those seemed especially deliberate. And I also think that three weeks of elastic band could be a bit more than Froome can handle. Softening him up a little, maybe?

  • Watching Eurosport coverage and they seem to think Froome is unable to keep up. Yet, he's still there.  I think it is just style.  You don't have Contador's kick? Who does? But he keeps catching him.  We'll see.

  • Interesting to ponder the tactics, particularly in light of Contador's nipping ahead to claim a 2 second bonus in an intermediate sprint the day before.  Time wasn't the issue, as he lost it the next day letting Froome finish in front of him.  I also doubt that his attacks were an effort to open a gap that would stick this early in the show.  Perhaps he is just showing that the skytrain-type tactic (impressive in its own way and equally legit) won't be in play here.  Or even more likely, after saying that he would need a week of racing just to get his rhythm back, he was just doing that, racing for "practice."

    Not a fingerbang fanboy, btw.  Just nattering (for practice).

  • Also not from a fanboy, but really, eurosports comments seem way off base (I saw it on itv4 and I guess different commentators, unless these budget stations share!) as there is no way Froome looked like he was struggling at any point.

    I won't argue with those that say C was having a play, testIng himself and others. After all, this was the first proper climb and yes it's likely they were just looking at each other.

    To those more experienced than me in following these tours - do riders develop a sense of when a breakaway is for real, or whether it's just a little nibble?

    And we can discount post race comments by riders - they are hardly likely to tell the world ie their rivals what they were really thinking on the climb!

    David

  • Inasmuch as it seems to me a VSP is won or lost on how well you pick 3rd, 4th, and 5th... I need to stop picking Gadret.

  • @David You may be right. I guess that time will tell. However, I am more inclined to agree with @Steampunk. I thought that one of the more telling moments in that last climb came about 3kms from the end when Contador responded to a little dig by Igor Anton (I believe). Contador was sitting in fourth at that point and he simply flew past the three riders ahead of him to take the lead. Rodriguez and Valverde were able to go with him. But Froome seemed unable to respond (and he did seem to me to be trying to do so at that point). Froome settled back into the saddle and only caught the three leaders when Contador again slowed the pace. As I said, we'll see what happens. But thus far, my hopes for a very exciting next few weeks have certainly been raised.

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