Saturday, May 4, 2024

La Vuelta a España 2014 – Stage 20; Santo Estevo de Riba de Sil – Ancares, 163.8 km. Contador Dominates

-

HomeRaceRace ReviewsLa Vuelta a España 2014 - Stage 20; Santo Estevo de Riba...

vuelta_espana_logo_2014

Samuel Sanchez summed it up best in the BMC press release for Stage 20 to Ancares;

“To understand how was hard it was, you only have to look at the riders’ faces.”

That was certainly true of Chris Froome, his face ashen, skin tight on his skull, eyes popping, gasping for air like a dying fish.

Not just from the effort but from the disappointment of having burned his Sky team to last match head then given his all, only for Alberto Contador to sit there as cool as a glass of Pimm’s on a summer’s day, soak up all the punishment then put 16 seconds into the Englishman in the last few hundred metres.

To use a Sean Kellyism, the smiling man from Pinto was; ‘moightily impressive.’

Ancares
Alberto Contador shows his dominance. Photo©Unipublic

Depending on your point of view on these things, the Puerto de Ancares was either a fitting and symbolic ‘high’ to mark the end of the race’s climbing days, or, as young IAM rider, Marcel Aregger said;

“A final climb like I have never seen before – it was pure madness!”

We can rest assured that VV’s answer to Nostradamus, Viktor will be with Aregger on that one.

Ancares
Contador consolidates his lead over Froome and everyone else. Photo©Unipublic

But back to Froome, there can be little but admiration for the way he attacked and attacked again but whilst it’s easy to be a ‘SDS’ – that’s ‘sofa director sportif’ – maybe he shouldn’t have committed his boys from quite so far out?

It would have been better to have more support at the death, surely?

But he tried hard and gave us a great race.

Ancares
Froome used his team and rode as best he could, but it just wasn’t enough to overcome Contador. Photo©Unipublic

Fourth placed Joaquin Rodriguez is being criticised for his attack on Ancares; but again, he rode, he tried, he didn’t just sit there and wait on the inevitable Froome/Contador grapple to the death from which he was always going to get shelled.

Of the three ‘Bigs’ who sustained injuries earlier in the season – along with Contador and Froome – the little Catalan is the one who has found it toughest to get back to full fitness.

As we say in Scotland; ‘old age doesn’t just come on it’s own…

Ancares
At least Purito gave it a go and wasn’t afraid of losing GC places as a result. Photo©Unipublic

Valverde defended the sixth Vuelta podium placing of his long career and whilst he bears the stigma of ‘bad doper’ because there’s been no remorse filled book/tearful confession or ride with Saint Jonathan’s Garmin, you have to respect the man – he’s a bike racer.

His season isn’t just about one or two three week periods.

He opened the year with victories in the prologue, two stages and the GC in the Ruta Del Sol; then there was the Tour of Murcia, Lazio, GP Indurain, Fleche Wallonne, the Spanish TT Champs, fourth in le Tour and San Sebastian.

This Vuelta has yielded a TTT and individual stage win, a spell in the red leader’s jersey and (God willing in Santiago) Valverde’s sixth appearance on a Vuelta final podium – quality.

Ancares
Valverde rides at a high level all through the season. Photo©Unipublic

Astana’s Aru confirmed that he’s an exciting prospect for the future with his two stage wins but, as in the Giro the tank was rapidly draining on the last day, however he fought and fought up Ancares finishing totally drained but conserving fifth on GC.

Ancares
Fabio Aru will be a name we’re talking about a lot in the future. Photo©Unipublic

Oviedo man Sammy Sanchez has to be due a round of applause, a rider who we thought might be past ‘sell by’ rode a good race for sixth spot on GC – albeit he’s in a different Vuelta from the first five, some six minutes behind Aru and ten behind Contador.

Ancares
Sammy Sanchez. Photo©Unipublic

Last words then must go to Alberto Contador – there’s little left for us say except that this Vuelta confirms him as one of the all time great stage racers.

Ancares
2004 Asturias and Contador is seriously ill.

Apparently I’m not supposed to mention that he came back from being ‘close to death’ – too close to Lance’s story, I’m told – but the fact is that he did, curled in a ball on the hard roads of the 2004 Vuelta a Asturias with blood seeping from his ears.

And on the subject of the The Texas Turd, when Contador was on Astana with Lance in the 2009 Tour the Madrileno not only had to beat all the other teams on the race, he had to fend off half of his own squad, too.

Six men in the history of cycle sport have won all three Grand Tours; Jacques Anquetil, Felice Gimondi, Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault, Vincenzo Nibali and Alberto Contador – enough said.

And even though the race is won, I still wish I was going to be in Santiago de Compostella, this night.

Adios.

Ancares
Today’s amazing landscape. Photo©Unipublic
Ed Hood
Ed Hood
Ed's been involved in cycling for over 50 years. In that time he's been a successful time triallist, a team manager and a sponsor of several teams and clubs. He's also a respected and successful coach and during the winter months was often working in the cabins at the Six Days for some of the world's top riders. Ed remains a massive fan of the sport and couples his extensive contacts with an inexhaustible enthusiasm for the minutiae and the history of our sport. In February 2023 however, our dear friend and beloved colleague Ed suffered a devastating stroke and faces an uncertain future; Ed has lost his ability to speak, to read, and has lost movement on the right side of his body. He's working with speech and physical therapists on rehabilitation, but all strokes are different and each patient responds differently, so unfortunately recovery is one day at a time. Ed ran his own business installing windows, and will probably not be able to work again. Please consider joining us to make a contribution to Ed's GoFundMe page to help stabilise and secure his future.

Related Articles

La Vuelta a España 2014 – Stage 10; Monasterio de Veruela – Borja (ITT), 34.5 km. Nairo Crashes, Contador Leads

Alberto Contador Velasco (Tinkoff & Spain) pulled on the red jersey, raised his bouquet to his adoring fans in Borja then offered his clenched right fist up to his chest. The man has a big heart in there, for sure – all that was missing was Kiss pumping on the PA, ‘Back in the New York Groove,’ the line which goes; ‘this place was meant for me!’

Chris Lawless takes GC at the 2019 Tour de Yorkshire – Stage 4

Chris Lawless became the first British winner of the Tour de Yorkshire after defending champion Greg Van Avermaet won an enthralling final stage in Leeds. Van Avermaet (CCC Team) forged clear with Lawless and his Team Ineos team-mate Eddie Dunbar as the 175km trek from Halifax neared its conclusion, and while it was Van Avermaet who sprinted to victory along The Headrow, Lawless came home in second to seal the biggest overall race win of his fledgling career.

Le Tour de France 2017 – Stage 9: Nantua – Chambéry, 181.5km. Rigoberto Uran stuck in the 11

Many are the times that VeloVeritas answer to Nostradamus, the Legend that is Viktor, has discussed Warren Barguil with me; two beautiful stage wins in the Vuelta in 2013 – and since then? Two wins, one a criterium – Vik’s making assessment that; ‘he’s milking it’ hard to argue with. Forgive us, Warren – today makes up for those fallow years.

Scottish Cycling Super 6 Series – Event 3, Greenacres

"I was needing a win! I've had too many second places!" was how Gordon Murdoch (Pedal Power) explained his strongman's victory over 62 windy, potholed, crash-plagued miles in Saturday's Dooley's Grand Prix, part of the Scottish Cycling Super 6 series, high on the bleak moors to the south west of Paisley.

At Random

Tom Zirbel: What a Waste of a Great Career

Fourth in the Worlds Elite TT, second only to Zabriskie in the US TT champs and with a Garmin contract neatly signed. But scratch all of the above and file under, "Another one bites the dust!" albeit the 'B' sample might just be 'clean.' We asked Paul Coats, who's a lecturer at Strathclyde Institute of Pharmacy & Biomedical Sciences, for an expert view.

Le Tour de France 2013 – Stage 15: Givors > Mont Ventoux, 242km. Froome Stamps.

It was a long day for VeloVeritas, yesterday. But it was a cracker – positioned 800 metres from the line on Mont Ventoux, we were there from when Froome spun past like a madman on rollers until Jonathan Hivert ground past us, oh so painfully, some 50 minutes later.

Tadej Pogačar – Reprising our Lockdown 2020 Interview

Tadej Pogačar is showing he's an amazing rider with an immense, versatile talent. Given his latest run of historic wins in the Spring Classics, we thought it would be interesting to revisit an interview we did with him three short years ago during lockdown.

Le Tour de France 2016 – Stage 2; Saint-Lô – Cherbourg-en-Cotentin. Heartbreak for Stuyven as Sagan Takes Control

Peter Sagan is a breath of fresh air, the accent, the sense of humour, the hair, the bike handling, the speed, the versatility – third behind Cav and Kittel then beating Alaphilippe and Valverde. There’s no one more deserving of the maillot jaune – with all mention of the ‘curse of the rainbow jersey’ forgotten.