Defending champion Primoz Roglic retook the Vuelta a Espana overall lead yesterday when he led the main contenders up a steep incline finish, just failing however to catch early escaper Magnus Cort Nielsen, who won stage six.
The final ascent to a hilltop castle on a sunny afternoon at Cullera was an imposing 1.9km climb at 9.4 percent gradient and delivered a confrontation between the overall contenders.
EF’s Cort Nielsen clung on impressively to beat Roglic by a bike length, and could barely raise his arms in celebration at the finish.
“It was very close, I looked back at 150m and saw Roglic. I’m so happy,” said the 28-year-old Dane.
EF teammate, and one of the pre-race fancied riders, Hugh Carthy, was dropped and lost around three minutes after Ineos, Jumbo and Movistar powered away in the final part of the stage.
Other potential GC riders to lose time on the steep incline were Briton Adam Yates who dropped 25sec and Spain’s Bahrain Victorious leader Mikel Landa who was 27sec adrift of Roglic on the day.
The defending champion initially took the overall lead by winning the opening day time-trial, before giving it up on day three in the hopes of avoiding the 90-minute daily media commitment facing the red jersey holder. “Welcome to my world,” Roglic told Rein Taaramae, who took the red on stage three and then complained of how long he had to spend in interviews.
Roglic now leads a trio of Movistar riders in the overall standings with Enric Mas at 25sec, Miguel Angel Lopez at 36 and Alejandro Valverde at 41 with Egan Bernal in fifth, also at just 41sec. The Slovenian appears to be on powerful form after crashing out of the Tour de France in July before winning Olympic time-trial gold in Tokyo. “At the end I had good legs so I did a little sprint,” he said.
“We’ll see who will be the strongest in Santiago,” he said in reference to the stage 21 individual time-trial at the pilgrim town Santiago de Compostela.
“It’s a long way until then,” said the man who won the Vuelta in 2019 and 2020.
He reclaimed the red jersey from Kenny Elissonde of Trek who was one of the first riders dropped on the slopes up to the fortified summit finish line.
Friday’s stage seven has six climbs, starting and ending with big ones as the race heads to a plateau behind the tourist region of the Costa Blanca.
Twins peak in 1-2 finish at Cycling’s Tour de l’Avenir
Norway’s Anders Halland Johannessen beat his own twin brother Tobias to the line in the Jura mountains on stage 6 of the prestigious Tour de l’Avenir Cycling race yesterday.
For under-23s, the race is seen as a test of future talent and was won by Egan Bernal in 2017 and Tadej Pogacar in 2018. Both men went on to win the Tour de France. The Norwegian twins are just 21 and Tobias is fourth in the overall standings at the nine-day stage race with Dutch rider Mick van Dijk in the lead.
Team Jumbo’s Slovenian rider Primoz Roglic celebrates on the podium wearing the overall leader’s red jersey after the 6th stage of the 2021 La Vuelta in Cullera, Spain, yesterday. (AFP)