This year’s Vuelta A Espana has already been described by
some as even more exciting than the whole of the Tour De France and while that
may be an unfair dig, it’s certainly provided us with plenty of thrills and
spills, not least the spectacular summit finish which saw Chris Froome in
trouble for the first time since the Tour De France. Our joint outright pick of
Joaquim Rodriquez still leads by 33 seconds to Froome, which is a good position
to be going into. The next big test is the ITT on Wednesday, which is a great
opportunity for Froome to get back into the thick of things on a course that
should realy suit with a Category 3 climb, all of this after a rest day.
Today’s stage looks set to provide none of the fireworks
that we’ve seen so far due to the peculiar nature of a course that leaves Andorra
with a Category 3 climb and ends in Barcelona’s Olympic stadium after the Alto
de Montjuic - a 1 kilometre climb that has an average gradient of 8.1%. It has
breakway written all over it unless the sprinters teams can keep them in touch.
When the Tour De France came here in 2009 a huge break was established but
caught just in time and if it’s to be a bunch sprint then the same’s likely to
happen again.
Relatively speaking, it could be like either Stage 15 (where
the break had 11 minutes on the Peloton and Pierrick Federigo outsprinted Christan
Vandevelde with ease) or Stage 18 of this year’s Tour De France (where Mark
Cavendish was carried over the climb to get a fantastic win as repayment for
the efforts of others).
Should the latter situation arrive there would be only one
man I’d really look to for a stage win – John Degenkolb, who has won three
bunch sprints already and is clearly much the best sprinter on this tour. 4/1
would be massive if he’s delivered anywhere near close to the line, although
there’s a worry that this uphill finish could blunt his speed.
Of the others, Simon Clarke – who got into the break and
stayed there to take stage 3 – and Pim Lighart – who comes from a breakaway
team and hasn’t been seen much, so presumably is sure to be fresh enough for an
attack – also make appeal, with more preference for the former.
Advice
1 pt John Degenkolb (4/1 Stan James)
1 pt Phillipe Gilbert (8/1 Stan James)
1 pt Simon Clarke (33/1 Stan James)
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