Lesser Known Race Results 2017

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May 5, 2010
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So, I guess you could argue that there was a slight Danish dominance in stage 4 of the Tour du Loir et Cher...

1. Kamp, Alexander (Den) - Team Veloconcept
2. Vinther, Troels (Den) - Riwal Platform Cycling Team (st)
3. Vingegaard Rasmussen, Jonas (Den) - ColoQuick CULT (st)
4. Klaris, Magnus Bak (Den) - ColoQuick CULT (st)
5. Guldhammer, Rasmus (Den) - Team Veloconcept (st)
6. Galta, Fredrik Strand (Nor) - Team Coop (0:29)
7. Rostollan, Thomas (Fra) - Equipe Cycliste Armée de Terre (0:46)
8. Trondsen, Trond (Nor) - Team Sparebanken Sør (1:10)
9. Frame, Alex (NZL) - JLT Condor (1:18)
10. Clausen, Patrick (Den) - Riwal Platform Cycling Team (st)
 
Feb 20, 2010
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Well, top 10 for Cara de Niño, but he couldn't beat Nairito.

W52 have been markedly more prominent outside of Portugal than usual this season, though - of course their biggest joy has been at home, with Amaro's win on the Alto do Malhão, but while Dayer opened up proceedings with his attack, when his brother made the decisive move the only one with him was Raúl Alarcón, who was 3rd in the Trofeu Agostinho and 4th in the Volta last year - also Gustavo César Veloso was in the break of the day (!).

Alarcón was 5" ahead of Nairo in stage 1 so assumes the race lead. But the most interesting thing to note is 21-year-old amateur Fernando Barcelo in 3rd place on the stage, just 30" back - he's been top 5 in two big amateur climbing races in Spain already this season, the Memorial Balenziaga and the GP Torredonjimeno. He was 2nd in the Subida a Gorla last year and looks like a genuine climbing prospect, however he lost a bunch of time yesterday so is not a GC relevance; Alejandro Marque, Sérgio Pardilla, João Benta, Óscar Sevilla and Ricardo Mestre on the other hand are dangerously close at hand. The remaining single stage, from Cangas del Narcea to Oviedo, is only 120km in length and only has two small climbs, La Cabruñana and El Violeo, though the latter is less than 10km from the line and potentially decisive:

el-violeo-n.gif
 
Dec 28, 2010
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Re:

Libertine Seguros said:
But the most interesting thing to note is 21-year-old amateur Fernando Barcelo in 3rd place on the stage, just 30" back - he's been top 5 in two big amateur climbing races in Spain already this season, the Memorial Balenziaga and the GP Torredonjimeno. He was 2nd in the Subida a Gorla last year and looks like a genuine climbing prospect, however he lost a bunch of time yesterday so is not a GC relevance;
Someone on this forum mentioned him as a great prospect back in 2014 or 15, after he had won the junior national TT, tipping him to win some prestigious amateur climbing race, I think (which he didn't, as far as I remember). Since then I've been checking on Barcelo's progress every once in a while, and this is the first time I've fully understood why he was so highly rated by that poster back then. :)
 
May 15, 2011
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I've been following his progress since he joined the Fundacion Contador youth team some years ago so I'm really excited to see him perform so well :)
 
Sep 8, 2009
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Sevilla would have followed nairo but he had a mechanical
W52 went nuclear today, it will be very hard for nairo to win this.
 
Feb 20, 2010
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Nairito tried his best, attacking on El Violeo, but was unable to shake Alarcón, who eventually managed to gap the chase and take the win solo in the leader's jersey to put an exclamation point on his overall GC win. Alejandro Marque was the other one who could go with Quintana's attack, but the elites came back together on the short descent into Oviedo. With the aid of bonus seconds, the evergreen El Niño Óscar Sevilla managed to haul himself up from 6th onto the GC podium, but posing nothing remotely like a challenge to Alarcón and Quintana.

It's the first time the race has been won by an extranjero team since Tino Zaballa escaped the clutches of Duarte's Colombia es Pasión team in 2010, since then Movistar and Caja Rural have been taking it in turns (Moreno, Txurruka and Carthy for Caja Rural, Intxausti and Antón for Movistar) until Alarcón's imposition this week.

Stage result:
1 Raúl Alarcón (W52-FC Porto) ESP 2'48'12
2 Óscar Sevilla (Medellín-Inder) ESP +7"
3 João Benta (Radio Popular-Boavista) POR +7"
4 Mikel Bizkarra (Euskadi Basque Country-Murias) ESP +10"
5 Nairo Quintana (Movistar) COL +15"
6 Benjami Prades (Team Ukyo) ESP +40"
7 José Herrada (Movistar) ESP +40"
8 Ricardo Mestre (W52-FC Porto) POR +40"
9 Alejandro Marque (Sporting-Tavira) ESP +40"
10 Mikel Iturria (Euskadi Basque Country-Murias) ESP +40"

The GC issued by the officials is weird, and doesn't tally up mathematically; it appears to have confused the two Quintana brothers as it promotes Sevilla and Benta above Nairo based on the time gaps Dayer had. Nairo is in fact in 2nd on the GC and was on the podium accordingly. Still waiting on confirmation if Dayer was in the group at +40" or not as he's gone walkabout from the GC as a result of the confusion. Movistar have now corrected their tweet that said Nairo was 2nd on the GC between Alarcón and Sevilla to say he was in fact 2nd on the GC between Alarcón and Benta - confusion seems to reign - it looks like Óscar and João are tied on time once bonuses are factored in, so it comes down to placements?

Further edit: looks like we have a reissued GC that makes much more sense, and Niño is restored to the podium.

1 Raúl Alarcón (W52-FC Porto) ESP 12'20'42
2 Nairo Quintana (Movistar) COL +32"
3 Óscar Sevilla (Medellín-Inder) ESP +1'07"
4 João Benta (Radio Popular-Boavista) POR +1'07"
5 Alejandro Marque (Sporting-Tavira) ESP +1'40"
6 Sérgio Pardilla (Caja Rural-Seguros RGA) ESP +1'42"
7 Ricardo Mestre (W52-FC Porto) POR +1'50"
8 Ricardo Vilela (Manzana-Postobon) POR +2'10"
9 Joaquim Silva (W52-FC Porto) POR +2'17"
10 Hernán Ricardo Aguirre (Manzana-Postobon) COL +2'46"

It looks like, after a rough few years, Asturias is back where it belongs - late April timeslot, Alto del Acebo MTF, and a GC punctuated heavily by Portuguese and Colombian guest teams.
 
Feb 20, 2010
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DNP-Old said:
Mightily impressive for a 31 year old, who hadn't done anything noteworthy in his life, to not just stay with Nairo, but also beat him with rather ease. What a talent. Future Vuelta winner for sure.
*Volta

He looks like the perfect candidate for that and he'll reach his peak for that in about four years' time. All joking aside though, he won a mountain stage of the Volta back in 2013 and has become César's right hand man in August since Délio went to France, and since this is one of the few shop windows that the Portuguese teams get, they quite often go ballistic in Asturias, or they used to before the downturn, the race seems to be getting back to its old role - while they do all the Spanish races, they tend to go best at the Asturias-Madrid period in late April-early May because the teams like Movistar don't have guys tuning up for País Vasco and the Ardennes in the team at that point, they're either resting or preparing for the Giro. And hey, if David Belda and Victor de la Parte can get promotions to higher levels at that age...
 
Sep 20, 2011
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DNP-Old said:
Mightily impressive for a 31 year old, who hadn't done anything noteworthy in his life, to not just stay with Nairo, but also beat him with rather ease. What a talent. Future Vuelta winner for sure.

Not the only Spaniard in his 30's riding for a small team who is going nuclear in the last few years. My guess is he'll use the coming 14 years as one big prep race and show Papi Horner how it's really done.
 
Aug 3, 2015
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Thanks for the great update, LS!

Great to see Nairo fine tuning himself, attacking on every stage and winning the most important one. I'd obviously have loved to see him win the overall GC (he would then have an impressive palmarés of Spanish stage races - still has tho) but hats off to Alarcon, thats mightily impressive even though Nairo obviously isn't firing on all cylinders yet at this point. Must have been a very entertaining race to watch.
 
Jun 20, 2015
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How about Robert Stannard of Mitchelton Scott - Wins stage 3 of Rhones Alpes Isere at 18 years of age - Impressive effort.
 
Feb 20, 2010
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Quite a few smaller races on at present.

First up, Vuelta a Madrid: I was looking at the parcours and the startlist and thinking this could be a good race for Carapaz to show what he can do. I suspect that he will get to do the Vuelta - he's not as young as many first year pros because of how he's been brought in. The team almost never take on stagiares so they have definitely seen something in him. Castilla y León should be good too, as we can see how he reacts with a real MTF as they're finishing at La Camperona. However, I hadn't banked on Balarcón... still, that's a small group from whom the GC is almost certain to be settled, as the two remaining stages are - hilly with a flat run-in in which I don't think it too likely any of that 9 will be dropped or that a group that gets away can get sufficient time to threaten them, and - a sub-100km circuit race.

Santo Domingo has the Pan-American Championships, in which the 22yo Chilean José Luís Rodríguez, who was a stagiare for Trek last year and was top 10 in the Valle d'Aosta last year so can clearly also climb, took the gold medal, ahead of former Quick Stepper Rodrigo Contreras and veteran Guatemalan Manuel Rodas.

There's also the former Szlakiem Grodów Piastkowskich, now renamed CCC Tour-Grody Piastowskie, which links a series of castles and fortified towns in southwestern Poland, where Filippo Fortin has won stage 1 in a sprint, and the Five Rings of Moscow, returning to the calendar, but without the bigger name teams from a few years ago, and where Russian U23s have locked out the prologue podium.
 
Sep 20, 2011
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Barbero wins stage 2 in Madrid, in front of the young and hugely talented ladz Oscar Sevilla and Raul Alarcon.

Spanish cycling :lol:
 
Aug 11, 2010
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Interesting to see Sevilla racing in Europe again at Asturias and mow Madrid. Other than a one-off appearance at the 2015 Spanish national championships, these are his first races in Europe since 2009 (if his CQ results are complete).

He ia about the right age for a Horner-esque run at the Vuelta.