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Vuelta a España 2008 route
issoisso
Full route to be announced December 5th.

first rumours say that, the Anglirú is included.

as I've been saying for months, the Anglirú will most likely be there, as Victor Cordero has been saying for two years now that it will be back in 2009 AT THE LATEST.

EDIT: it's now on cyclingnews.com as well

The General Sport director of Asturias, Misael Fernández Porrón, has revealed that the Alto de l'Angliru will be part of the 2008 Vuelta a España. During an exhibition in Mieres, Spain, the Spaniard also indicated that Fuentes de Invierno would host as mountain top finish in the three-week Spanish race slated to run August 30 to September 21. Race organizer Unipublic will officially announce the entire route on December 5.

"This is a decision of the government of the principality [of Asturias] in consultation with the town mayor of Aller," affirmed Fernández Porrón, according to as.com. "We think that it's a very interesting way to show the ski region of Fuentes de Invierno in the Spanish and international media."

The fact that a stage of the Vuelta finishes in Fuentes de Invierno is "a way to make publicity, and will generate an economical activity for the zone," noted Fernández Porrón.

The 12.55-kilometre climb to Angliru last featured in the 2002 Vuelta, and is renowned for its stiff gradients – there is a sector of 23.6 percent in the final three kilometres. Spaniard Roberto Heras won five years ago, and before him it was Italian Gilberto Simoni (2000) and the late José Maria Jiménez (1999).

Edited by issoisso on 13-11-2007 13:46
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"I love him, I think he's great. He's transformed the sport in so many ways. Every person in cycling has benefitted from Lance Armstrong, perhaps not financially but in some sense" - Bradley Wiggins on Lance Armstrong
 
CrueTrue
As long as the route is tougher this year than last year, I'm happy.
 
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issoisso
yup. the difficulties this year were supposed to be different ones. but the way everyone was tired (since it was the end of the season), there were no menacing breaks, so it became very easy for the leaders to defend their advantage.
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"I love him, I think he's great. He's transformed the sport in so many ways. Every person in cycling has benefitted from Lance Armstrong, perhaps not financially but in some sense" - Bradley Wiggins on Lance Armstrong
 
Setzel
hope for a nice vuelta next yearSmile
Eating my daily Breakfast at 9 pm

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issoisso
Rubiera stressed that "the Angliru is too hard ... it is impossible, even if hearing that it is what keeps cycling alive."


"We know that we can not include it every year in the Vuelta because it would burn out [the riders]," added Cordero.


impossible is right. the gaps between the favorites are always measured in minutes on the Anglirú.
Edited by issoisso on 14-11-2007 14:44
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issoisso
The penultimate stage will be a mountain time trial, and the last stage will start in Miguel Perdiguero's birthplace as a tribute to his career
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CrueTrue
I'm looking forward to this! Smile
 
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issoisso
the quality of the field is definitely going to suffer. the big riders will be there, but since they'll have gone to the olympics, they won't be in top form for the Vuelta because it takes approximately one day to recover from each hour of time difference. and from Beijing to Spain there's a lot of difference.
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rodda
i cant wait to see that stage Grin
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issoisso
the last time there was a mountain TT on the penultimate day was in 2003 when some random unknown by the name of Isidro Nozal lead the whole way only to lose the jersey that very day to Heras. then he never had any other good results
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turismo
issoisso wrote:
the last time there was a mountain TT on the penultimate day was in 2003 when some random unknown by the name of Isidro Nozal lead the whole way only to lose the jersey that very day to Heras. then he never had any other good results


And what a great Vuelta that was. Supposed to be ONCE's swansong, they dominated the first week, but Nozal was looking much better than his team leader, Igor Gonzalez de Galdeano. Manolo Saiz continued to use Nozal as a domestique far too late into the race, which must've been a huge contributor to him burning out and cracking under the pressure, losing massive amounts of time in the final couple of stages when he seemed to have the race sewn up. It was a very exciting race, and a huge upset from Heras.

Hopefully this year's race will provide similar feelings, without having the nasty drug-tainted aftertaste that comes when you look retrospectively at the 2003 edition.
 
p3druh
Know where Izidro Nozal is now? Liberty Seguros. He's moving up in the world :lol:

Now seriously, can't wait to see that Angliru stage... Just remembering when Heras won it sends a shiver up my spine...
I bet that the fatest on the Angliru will ride at a speed of 4km/h (I wish...):lol:
img401.imageshack.us/img401/3756/91640730.png
 
issoisso
a difference between 1st and fifth placed on the Anglirú is around about 3-4 minutes. not the usual few seconds.
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issoisso

Mountains rather than time trials define 2008 Vuelta a España

The 2008 Vuelta a España looks set to be fought out by climbers rather than time trial specialists due to the nature of the route which was disclosed at the launch in Madrid today. Beginning with a seven kilometre team time trial prologue in Granada on August 30 and concluding in Madrid 3173 kilometres later on September 21, the Grand Tour features eight mountain stages, amongst them a long-awaited return to the gruelling Angliru, one individual time trial of 40 kilometres and one hill-climb TT of 16 kilometres.

Unlike the Giro d'Italia, the climbers have little to fear in the races against the clock and will welcome a route which has been tailor-made for them.

Following the team time trial, the next five stages are mainly flat. The first of these takes the riders 167 kilometres from Granada to Jaén, the second covers 165 kilometres from Jaén to Córdoba and the third travels 153 kilometres from there to Puertollano. Stage five is a 40 kilometre pan-flat individual time trial starting and ending in Ciudad Real, and will be followed the next day by a 162 kilometre stage to Toledo. Each of the road race stages contains just one categorised climb, with stage three's Alto de San Jerónimo (category 2) the most difficult.

A lengthy transfer to Andorra and the first big mountains follows. Friday, September 5 is the first rest day, then the action resumes with three tough days in the Pyrenees. Stage seven covers 224 kilometres from Barbastro to the summit finish of Andorra (Naturlandia - La Rabassa), crossing second, third and first category climbs before the Categoría Especial (hors catégorie) grind up to the line.

The next day sees the riders hit four more climbs along the 160-kilometre route from Andorra towards the second summit finish. The big guns will tussle it out on first, second and first cat ascents before the final Categoría Especial Pla de Beret. The true contenders will be far clearer at this point, and further selections could be made on stage nine from Viella to Sabiñánigo. This 198-kilometre leg is less difficult than the previous two but nevertheless features climbs of third, second, second and first category before the drop down to the finish.

The sprinters and rouleurs should come back into the picture on the next three days, intermediate stages to Zaragoza (173 kilometres), Burgos (178) and Suances (180). The second rest day then takes place, with the riders once again hitting the high climbs on Saturday September 13.

The 199 kilometre race from San Vicente de la Barquera to the Alto de L'Angliru will be one of the most decisive of the race thanks to the final climb, one of the toughest in cycling. This is preceded by two category three ascents and two category one mountains, making it certain that there will be a worthy winner at the end of the stage.

Another summit finish follows on the 158 kilometre leg from Oviedo to E. E. Fuentes de Invierno, with the final two climbs being category one. Some respite then follows; stage 15 from Cudillero to Ponferrada is 198 kilometres in length and is lumpy rather than saw-toothed in nature, while the next three stages to Zamora (185 km), Valladolid (160 km) and Las Rozas (179 km) are much flatter.

The general classification is almost certain to be decided on the 19th and 20th stages. The first of these crosses two category one climbs en route to Pedro Delgado's hometown of Segovia, but the flat run in to the finish may prevent big time gaps and allow the sprinters to get back into the picture before the end. However Saturday, September 20's hill climb time trial will certainly be one for the GC men; the 16 kilometres from La Granja de San Ildefonso to the Alto de Navacerrada will settle things once and for all, giving a clear race victor prior to the final processional stage to Madrid.

Apart from climbing, another big theme of the 2008 race will be clean racing. Race director Victor Cordero emphasised as much during the presentation, saying that it was more important than ever to return to a credible sport and thus guarantee the future of cycling.

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"I love him, I think he's great. He's transformed the sport in so many ways. Every person in cycling has benefitted from Lance Armstrong, perhaps not financially but in some sense" - Bradley Wiggins on Lance Armstrong
 
turismo
Looks good to me. I'm only going off what it says on the website, mind.
 
issoisso
mountain stage profiles

www.cyclingnews.com/road/2008//vuelta08/graphics/profile7.gif
www.cyclingnews.com/road/2008//vuelta08/graphics/profile8.gif
www.cyclingnews.com/road/2008//vuelta08/graphics/profile9.gif
www.cyclingnews.com/road/2008//vuelta08/graphics/profile12.gif
www.cyclingnews.com/road/2008//vuelta08/graphics/profile13.gif
www.cyclingnews.com/road/2008//vuelta08/graphics/profile14.gif
www.cyclingnews.com/road/2008//vuelta08/graphics/profile15.gif
www.cyclingnews.com/road/2008//vuelta08/graphics/profile19.gif

The preceding post is ISSO 9001 certified

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"I love him, I think he's great. He's transformed the sport in so many ways. Every person in cycling has benefitted from Lance Armstrong, perhaps not financially but in some sense" - Bradley Wiggins on Lance Armstrong
 
Addy291
1, 2, 5, 6 look like right beasts of stagesPfft
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Crommy
Looking good B)
 
SportingNonsense
The Fuentes one looks scary Pfft

Purpose built for clients of Dr Fuentes!
farm8.staticflickr.com/7458/9357923136_f1e68270f3_n.jpg
 
issoisso
SportingNonsense wrote:
The Fuentes one looks scary Pfft

Purpose built for clients of Dr Fuentes!


the previous one looks worse (meaning: better Grin)
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"I love him, I think he's great. He's transformed the sport in so many ways. Every person in cycling has benefitted from Lance Armstrong, perhaps not financially but in some sense" - Bradley Wiggins on Lance Armstrong
 
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