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(English version)
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la vuelta a espana, 2015 - 9 new summits to fete 80 years
la Vuelta a España, 2014 - climbs to glory
la Vuelta a España, 2013 - race to the summits
La Vuelta a España, 2012 - climber's paradise
a climber’s
race - La Vuelta a Espana 2011
Vuelta a
Espana, 2010 - an eco-tour
watching the Tour
Le
Tour 2: preparing to watch the Tour
Le
Tour 3: the Great Day arrives
Le Tour
4: preparing to watch a mountain stage
the tour de france 2018 - celebrating france, celebrating the tdf
the 2018 Giro d’Italia
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- the spanish vuelta
the race map
- on the north coast - Galicia
at the east coast - mostly Valencia - and the last stage
- this year’s race
the stages
la vuelta race teams
2016 race favourites
watching, including on tv
a select dictionary
end notes
The third of the
trio of major Tour-type
cycle races starts on 21 August 2017 for the first time in France, and abroad for only the third time in the Vuelta a Espagna's 72-race history. La Vuelta starts at the Provence city of Nîmes, with a team time trial.
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this year’s
race
From Saturday 20th August to Sunday 11th September 2016, the 21-stages of the Vuelta d'Espagna covers 3,277 kilometres/ 2036 miles. The race comprises:
- 5 flat stages (1 with a 'high-altitude finish- stage x)
- 8 hill and 5 mountain stages
- 10 high-altitude finishes - stages 8, 9, 10, 11, 14, 15, 17, 20
- 40.2 km team time-trial stage - stage 1
- 13.7 km individual time-trial stage - stage 19
- 50 summits
- 2 rest days
- Bonuses will be awarded: 10, 6 and 4 second bonuses will be awarded during all stages except 1 and 19, to the top three classified riders, respectively. Stages 1 and 19 will have 3, 2 and 1 seconds bonuses.
- There will be a Fair Play award of 100€ per stage (except stage 1) that aims to value those riders who show good sportsmanship, or fair play. The award will be given at the end of each stage, except for the first one (TTT). It will be awarded to the rider who, up until that stage, has incurred the least penalties and who is best classified in the individual classification, or to one who has made an outstanding sporting gesture.
The Fair Play award is being sponsored by Ecopilas - Ambilamp.
- Full race rules, in 22-page pdf form, including "technical sports regulation handbook" from the pdf's p.53. This part gives information, with diagrams on how car and motor bike drivers, reporters, photographers and other support technicians must proceed at the start of, during and at the end of each stage. Fascinating reading.
- The official Vuelta Road Book [264-page .pdf, text in Spanish] with more facinating and useful information, including the detailed stage routes and predicted day's timings.
New stage departure towns: Laias Health Resort, Marín, Betanzos, Monforte de Lemos, Maceda, Villalpando, Cistierna, Colunga Jurassic Museum, Los Corrales de Buelna, Urdax-Dantxarinea, Alcañiz, Requena, Xàbia
New stage arrival towns: Castrelo de Miño Nautical Park de Castrelo de Miño, San Andrés de Teixido, Luintra. Ribeira Sacra, Urdax-Dantxarinea, Aubisque - Gourette, Llucena. Camins del Penyagolosa.
Recorrido / Parcours / Route in 3D - La Vuelta... par la_vuelta
The route in 3-D 8:47 mins
seven stages in galicia
Starting with a very short team time trial in on the Costa Sol, this year's Vuelta is concentrating on climbing, with nine mountain top finishes in the first two weeks. The first part of the Vuelta will therefore benefit climbers, with three arrivals at high altitude in northern Spain at the end of the second week between Cantabria and Asturias. The traverse across the north of Spain continues with two stages going into France, and a grand finish on the 15th stage at Ermita del Alba, a stage with six categorised climbs.
Route profile for the 14th stage of the Vuelta, the second day in France
of interest or to visit:
Puente
de Vascaya, Portugalete, Spain (stage 13)
le
petit train of the Rhune funicular railway (stage 13)
Saint
Jean Pied de Port, France (stage 13) |
advertising
disclaimer
advertising
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Barcelona
and St George
Franco
was not a fascist
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at the east coast - mostly Valencia - and the last stage
the stages
time trial flat - on the plain hilly medium mountains mountains rest day |
1 |
France : Nîmes > Nîmes
19 August [13.8 km/ 9 mi]
team time-trial |
12 |
Motril > Antequera
31 August [161.4 km / 100 mi] |
2 |
France : Nîmes > Gruissan, Grand Narbonne
20 August [201 km / 125 mi] sprint finish |
13 |
Coín – Tomares
1 September [197 km / 122 mi] |
3 |
France : Prades Confluent Canigó > Andorra : Andorra
21 August [158.5 km / 98 mi] |
14 |
Écija – Sierra de La Pandera
2 September [185.8 km / 115 mi] summit finish - 1,830 m |
4 |
Spain: Escaldes-Engordany >Tarragona
22 August [19.3 km / 120 mi] |
15 |
Alcalá la Real – Alto Hoya de la Mora
3 September [127 km / 79 mi summit finish - 2,150 m |
5 |
Benicàssim > Alcossebre
23 August [173.4 km / 108 mi]
summit finish - 340 m on Ermita de Santa Lucía |
R |
Logroño
4 September - rest day |
6 |
Villarreal > Sagunto
24 August [198 km / 123 mi] |
18 |
Circuito de Navarra > Logroño
5 September [42 km / 26mi
individual time-trial |
7 |
Llíria > Cuenca
25 August [205.2 km / 128 mi
] |
17 |
Villadiego > Monumento Vaca Pasiega
6 September 173.3 km / 108 mi] summit finish - 880 m |
8 |
Hellín > Xorret de Catí
26 August [184 km / 114 mi] 20% gradient near finish |
18 |
Suances > Santo Toribio de Liébana
7 September [168.5 km / 105 mi uphill finish |
9 |
Orihuela > Cumbre del Sol
27 August [176.3 km / 1140 mi] uphill finish |
19 |
Caso – Gijón
8 September [153 km / 95 mi |
R |
Province of Alicante
28 August - rest day |
20 |
Corvera de Asturias – Alto de l'Angliru
9 September [ 119.2 km /74 mi] summit finish - 1545 m |
10 |
Caravaca Jubilar> ElPozo Alimentación
29 August [171 km / 106 mi] transition stage |
21 |
Arroyomolinos > Madrid
10 September 101.9 km / 63 mi] |
11 |
Lorca – Observatorio Astronómico de Calar Alto
30 August [188 km / 117 m] summit finish - 2,120 m |
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la vuelta race
teams
The 19 UCI World Tour teams have qualified automatically to race, and there are four wildcard teams that have been invited to participate:
- Caja Rural-Seguros RGA [ESP]
- Cofidis, solutions crédits [FRA]
- Bora-Argon 18 [GER]
- Team Direct Energie [FRA]
2016 race favourites
According to betting odds [as at 09/08/2016], the current favourites to win the Vuelta 2016 are as follows:
- Nairo Quintana (Movistar) 6/4
- Alberto Contador (Tinkoff) 9/4
- Chris Froome (Sky) 5/2
- Esteban Chaves (Orica–BikeExchange) 5/1
- Joaquin Rodriguez (Team Katusha) 9/1
watching, including on tv
In the UK, watch the Vuelta on Eurosport UK [schedule]. Eurosport provides between 1½ and 2½ hours broadcasting every afternoon when there is racing, but only less than 2 hours of the actual day's race.
Live broadcasting for 22 August, the first day with the team time-trial, starts from 18:45 CET. Stage 2 and all further stages will be shown from 16:00 CET. There are daily highlights at 20:00 CET on ITV4, though the first day will be shown at 23:00 CET.
In the USA, Universal Sports Network is providing live coverage of the first stage from 13:00 Eastern. The coverage for the other stageswill be from 10:00 Eastern.
Watching the Vuelta on the road in Spain is very similar to watching
the Tour in France. abelard.org
has several pages giving general advice on how to be a
effective road-side spectator.
- Note that Spain is very hot and dry. It is against the law in Spain
- • To light on fire in all kinds of opened spaces.
• In mountain areas, to smoke, throw away or leave any object in combustion or any material capable of causing a fire.
Steephill.tv provides information on many tv broadcasts for the Vuelta, from about halfway down the page.
x
- Use the drop down menu to go to current day’s
details
- For
route information
To navigate, use grey tabs a bit down the page:
- For wider information, use the black tabs at the
top of the page:
- To look at the overall standings while a stage is
taking place, click on the STANDINGS tab, then use the
drop down to go to the previous
stage's standings:
- While the current stage is taking place, there is
an animation, updated every sixty seconds, in a separate
smaller browser widow. It shows both breakaway and peleton
dispositions, as well as where the day’s race
has reached on the stage’s profile. At the bottom
of the window are regularly updated, blog-type reports.
This service is available during all of the day’s
stage, including prior to the TV broadcasts, which tend
to start about half way through the day’s stage.
Clicking on a rider’s name will open a small note
on the rider’s overall position, and a few other
details.
I love watching the little cyclists pedalling. They’re
even wearing an approximation of the different jerseys.
You reach the Vuelta Live display thus - HOME black
tab (which, of course, turns red when clicked on),
then LIVE grey tab (which turns black!), then click
on the link indicated by the small red arrow.
[If Adobe Flash Player 10.3.183.7 is not already installed
on your computer, the Dinamic [sic.] Route Summary box
will instruct you to install the necessary software.
This is a two-stage process: first, you download and
save [best on the desktop] the small installer program,
then you run that installer program [click on the icon
on your desktop]. The instructions provided in your
browser are comprehensive, but you need to close the
browser to effectuate the installation!]
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a select dictionary
- In Spanish, domestiques
are called gregarios.
- The hardest day’s cycling is called la etapa
reina.
- An uphill time trial is el chrono-escalada.
- Bonk
in Spanish is pájara.
- There is also a Vuelta climb known as Pajares between
León and Ovedo.
- A chuparruedas is a wheel
sucker.
For much more on cycling
tactics.
The following is an exceeding boring book, almost like
reading a telephone directory. It has notes on all previous
runnings of the Vuelta. But in among the addresses and
telephone numbers, you will discover all manner of hints
on cycling tactics, with interposed examples of dubious
practice and cheating. You will also find snippets on
the disturbed political background of Spain, from right
back to the Civil War and the Franco regime and up until
modern times, against which the Vuelta has been held,
or not held.
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Viva La Vuelta!:
The Story of Spain's Great Bike Race
by Lucy Fallon and Adrian Bell (foreword by Sean
Kelly)
£16.10
[amazon.co.uk] {advert}
Mousehold Press, pbk, 2005
ISBN-10: 1874739404
ISBN-13: 978-1874739401 |
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