Lesser Known Race Results 2020

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Nelson Soto takes the win! His first victory for Caja.

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Feb 20, 2010
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Carlos Barbero takes the final stage, ahead of Óscar Pelegrí and Luis Mendonça, Edgar Pinto managing to get himself up into 5th place on the stage means that he takes the final GC on countback away from Duarte and Caicedo, with Rosón 4th and Errazkin 5th. All of the top 14 are on the same time. They really need to reinstate the more difficult Manzanares El Real stage, this race could be so much less terrible.
 
Jun 16, 2015
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Re: Lesser Known Race Results 2018

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The legend has done it again. Victory in Algeria at the Tour d'Oran. His team mate looks like a hipster version of Laurent Fignon. :D
 
Jun 27, 2013
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Re: Lesser Known Race Results 2018

Max Rockatansky said:
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The legend has done it again. Victory in Algeria at the Tour d'Oran. His team mate looks like a hipster version of Laurent Fignon. :D

Discount Daniel Oss
 
Mar 28, 2011
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Stage 3 of the 4 Jours de Dunkerque. About 1 km from the finish. Who did the spectacular flying crash into the ditch? Hope he was unhurt.
 
May 5, 2010
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That awkward moment when you think Lotto Soudal is riding for Greipel, until you realise he's pulling with less than a kilometer to go.

Stage was won by Coquard.

---

Stage 1 of Aragon won by Aberasturi.
 
Jun 27, 2013
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RedheadDane said:
Stage 1 of Aragon won by Aberasturi.

It's wonderful to see the return of an old race that I was sure would forever stay dead, after over a decade :)

Not to mention how desperate the spanish calendar is for more races and teams
 
May 5, 2010
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Re: Re:

GuyIncognito said:
RedheadDane said:
Stage 1 of Aragon won by Aberasturi.

It's wonderful to see the return of an old race that I was sure would forever stay dead, after over a decade :)

Not to mention how desperate the spanish calendar is for more races and teams

Honestly, I didn't even know about the race until I saw it in the "currently on" list on Eurosport Player.
I got a bit bored during the Giro stage today...
 
Feb 20, 2010
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Re: Re:

GuyIncognito said:
RedheadDane said:
Stage 1 of Aragon won by Aberasturi.

It's wonderful to see the return of an old race that I was sure would forever stay dead, after over a decade :)

Not to mention how desperate the spanish calendar is for more races and teams
Things are improving again though. Asturias seems to be re-integrating itself, Aragón and Valencia are both back, Madrid has grown back up from a one-day race to a stage race too, a shame they're all 3 day races and that Castilla y León is so bad compared to its heyday now, but with two more ProConti teams and a couple more decent level guest teams, it's slow progress but it's progress nonetheless in the Spanish national calendar.

Also about Aragón returning, it's nice to see Cerler for the first time in over a decade; suspect the anticipated rise of some young Aragonese climbing talents (Castrillo, Samitier, Barceló) might be a factor in increased interest in the region lately.
 
Nov 16, 2013
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What a boss Greipel is.

Horrible TV work not showing the sprint for second and more importantly, Greipel's gap.
 
May 10, 2015
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tobydawq said:
What a boss Greipel is.

Horrible TV work not showing the sprint for second and more importantly, Greipel's gap.

Greipel is 4" behind in GC now. So he needs a 2nd place tomorrow to be sure. I don't know who would win if he's 3rd tomorrow.
 
May 15, 2011
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Samamba said:
tobydawq said:
What a boss Greipel is.

Horrible TV work not showing the sprint for second and more importantly, Greipel's gap.

Greipel is 4" behind in GC now. So he needs a 2nd place tomorrow to be sure. I don't know who would win if he's 3rd tomorrow.
I'm guessing it would go down to countback on placings. Claeys is currently on 182 total, Riesebeek 185 and Greipel is on 230. So unless Claeys and Riesebeek both finish outside top-50 today (would be silly), Greipel would have to finish 2nd.
 
Feb 20, 2010
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Aramón-Cerler is a Vuelta classic.

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It was first introduced in the 1987 Vuelta, when Laudelino Cubino, a great underrated escalador in the classic Spanish tradition, was the first to win at the summit. It became an almost annual staple through the late 80s and early 90s as the Pyrenean counterpart to the more legendary Lagos de Covadonga, and also as a common transition from stages to Rassos de Peguera or the Andorran climbs (Andorra was really getting into hosting MTFs at its ski stations in the early 90s). Other winners there in this era included fellow traditional Spanish inconsistent climber José María Jiménez and Roberto Laiseka, GT winners like Delgado and Rominger (twice), Colombian escaladores like Fábio Parra, Oliverio Rincón and Martin Farfán, and the underrated Soviet climber Ivan Ivanov. It fell out of favour in the 2000s, especially once the owners of the resort, the Aramón Aragonese resort group (a joint venture of Ibercaja and the Aragonese regional government), started to funnel interest towards their southern resort, Valdelinares, in order to promote the Sistema Central as a holidaying and skiing area, where they held a much stronger base than in the Pyrenees where they had to compete with the French, Andorran, Catalan and Navarrese resorts. After one final ascent in 2007, won by Leonardo Piepoli after doing a deal (as ever) with eventual Vuelta winner Denis Menchov, the climb disappeared off the map; when the Aramón group got interested in hosting again a few years later, as well as Valdelinares, it was the Formigal resort they were keen to promote, so that got the Vuelta.

Similarly, the Aramón resorts used to rotate the important mountain stages of the Vuelta a Aragón, with Cerler hosting most recently in 2000, 2002 and 2003, all of which were also won by Leonardo Piepoli, so he can be considered the king of Cerler. Mikel Zarrabeitia, Lucho Herrera and Fernando Escartín have also been winners there.

Essentially this year it's the base of the whole race as obviously the first two stages are about jockeying for position but the mountaintop finish will settle everything. I'd expect Castrillo, Samitier and Barceló are the younger names targeting this, but the likes of Soler, Rosón, Javi Moreno, Duarte, Pardilla and Joaquim Silva may be among the main names to watch, while there's always the Spaniards jetting in from the overseas tours like Prades, Pujol and Mancebo to consider (and also Dan Whitehouse) because they always wreck the field in those Asia Tour mountain stages, but what that really means as against a European péloton is never truly clear. Alex Cano and 38-year-old Luis Felipe Laverde being in town is also interesting, but like the Portuguese péloton (which contributes a few decent names like Ezquerra and Nocentini) we're a way away from their season's peak so goodness only knows what their form will be like.
 
Feb 10, 2015
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Dimitri Claeys (Cofidis) wins Les Quatre Jours de Dunkerque.

Le Gac (Groupama-FDJ) wins solo from the breakaway, Lotto-Soudal being unable to reel it in for Greipel.