A bit like Cobo on Angliru though, how much was due to being on the right gear and how much was due to being in the right gear is another question. He clearly was pushing a smaller gear when he rode back to Teuns and Majka and once he had got away from them too, but unfortunately the cameras didn't pick up the moment he dropped them to see how he did it to see if he just rode away pushing his lower gear or if he managed to launch a genuine attack, which I'd find probably more suspicious as he opened up a fairly significant gap. I don't think it's quite Gonzalo Najár, he didn't do this from the péloton but from the break, even if it was with some strong riders in it, and it's not like he rode away at the start of the climb and stuck it out increasing his gap all the way; he rode his way back and attacked with just over 1km to go. The thing that was weird was him saying actually he didn't know the climb, because he seemingly paced it a lot better, coming back to the others rather than duelling on the front all the way. But then, I didn't think Foliforov was as out there as Najár either and while he's never been busted, he's also never come close to replicating that show. Is this really any crazier than Victor de la Parte's Österreich-Rundfahrt, Riccardo Zoidl's 2013 season, Jelle Vanendert winning on Plateau de Beille, or all manner of other performances which are huge outliers in those riders' careers but never tripped any wires?
I'm not sure that he or Euskadi-Murias will be naïve enough to have tripped the wire here, but their cards will quite likely be marked (internally within the péloton and externally) after this and replicating this kind of result will be more difficult than achieving it in the first place. They are on the biopass so it's not like Najár or the Törku guys, even if it's a huge, huge outlier. Like I say, I'm surprised it was Rodríguez that pulled this off as I'd have been much more ready to buy it from Samitier or Barceló, and he's more of a 'nobody' than Foliforov, who was an excellent espoir (and also he was in the same espoir age as Lambrecht and de Plus, who outperformed him then but were behind here), but he is a climber by nature and he did finish ahead of Majka on La Covatilla too. Obviously the likes of Teuns and Mollema, who were the strongest other riders in that break today, were also in the break that day which limits its usefulness for comparison.
Overall, what I'd say is, there are plenty of questions to be asked about how Óscar Rodríguez pulled off today's ride. Having the best gearing and riding your own pace à la Carlos Sastre may give us an answer, but it's not necessarily the answer, or at least not the only answer. It's a huge, huge outlier in terms of his achievements to date and nobody even really considered him a contender for the stage even once he was in that breakaway. However, I would argue that Óscar Rodríguez is also not Gonzalo Najár or Mustafa Sayar. He may kick on from this to become a decent stagehunting climber or, given he's actually half decent against the clock, something more. But just as likely is that he might be Aleksandr Foliforov or Matteo Rabottini.