Redrawing the mountain stages (these have all been beefed up, I wouldn't expect them to go with ALL beefed up versions!!!):
Stage 4:
Same stage but with El Purche added.
Stage 5:
Heading down to the coast and adding the Collado del Retamar (first 8,5km of
this profile - 8km @ 5,8%) before descending to the finish, so a not dissimilar stage but with a few more selective ramps on the final climb and a shorter descent.
Stage 8, a flat stage on the weekend, is proof that ASO's influence is growing.
Stage 9:
Very long mountain stage using similar lead-ins to original La Covatilla stages in the early 2000s. However instead of using the cat.2 El Cerro and then a flattish run-in, or the tempo grinder of La Garganta by the normal route, I've gone for the
less consistent side via La Hontilla which includes 3km at almost 9% in the middle.
Stage 9 (option 2):
Presumably the reason for the route going as it does, with such a long break between the leg-softeners and the final climb, is that the province of Ávila wants to see the race. Here I've souped it up a bit so they get more of the early going, with an underrated Sierra de Gredos opening with
La Centenera followed by a variation of the Puerto del Pico via
El Sidrillo (the super steep ramp is a tracking error, so the stage should probably be about a kilometre longer), then
Las Erillas with its steep middle section. After that it's more or less the same as the real stage, save for the late addition of
the Puerto del Tremedal, which is only just over 25km from the line, so will still be in the legs when they start the (abridged) La Covatilla.
Stage 10 should have the loop be around the same little climb, they could change the stage very little but instead of having the pan flat circuit, loop back south and repeat the climb so they do it twice. Easy.
Stage 13, you can't really do anything that won't be Unipuerto with La Camperona, it's such a garage ramp and there's nothing you can put close enough to prevent it being the only relevant climb. Maybe they could have continued past Tarna to Las Señales and approached from the west, but that's all.
Stage 14:
Would prefer to end this in Nava rather than atop another garage ramp, but then with Lagos de Covadonga the next day riders would probably be shy about attacking and regretting it the next day. I've stuck to the gameplan of the original stage but added in a few bonus climbs to make this a relentless medium mountain stage. First up, after San Isidro and La Collaona (which I've downgraded to cat.2, because it's more realistic), comes
La Bobia. Not to be mistaken for the bigger, borderline ESP La Bobia in the west of the province, this is a cat.2 short sharp Asturian miner's climb, which joins La Mozqueta at the village of La Nueva, on
this profile. Keeping it to a 6,5km climb therefore, I move it down to cat.2 although it is consistently over 8% - however it is consistent so more rhythmic than many Spanish climbs of comparable gradient. On the way down via La Colladiella, however, I make a brief detour to take in a Montée Laurent Jalabert-type wall, called El Cabo, or El Cau in Asturianu. It's
nasty - 3,3km @ 10,8%. Instead of just climbing La Faya de los Lobos after returning to the Valle del Nalón, however, I've taken a slight side road that takes us up to
La Campeta - or to what's marked 'cruce' on that profile, as we stay on the main road in order to have a descendable road. This makes the climb 3,5km @ 8,3%, before joining up for the last 2,5km of
this side of La Faya de los Lobos which averages 8,0%. After that the stage is as per the real one.
Stage 15:
For the most part the start of the stage is the same, but I have included the 'other' La Camperona, this one a
borderline cat.2/3 climb near Siero, and among the many training climbs around here for José Manuel Fuente in days of yore, and Chechu Rubiera more recently. It's optional. Then, after heading over the Mirador del Fito, instead of the long loop to do it again (you could do a shorter loop and add Cueto Argüeri if you wanted) we head southwards, up into the mountains, to try a bit more of the edges of the Picos de Europa where they merge into the Parque Natural Ponga. Here we take on some more tough climbs with steep gradients, the first being the toughest, this being the
Alto de los Bedules, also known as the Collada Llomena. This is followed by the Collada Mohandi/Moande (depending on dialect or Castilian), which is
a solid cat.2 then the small
Alto de Bada - 2,7km @ 8,7% so not inconsiderable, but dwarfed by the other climbs of the day. That should put some more suffering into the legs before Lagos.
Stage 16: Instead of this, they should use the course they used between Torrelavega and Santillana del Mar-Cuevas de Altamira in 2004 and 2009 in the national championships. That course was 47,8km long, much more like it.
Stage 17:
This was the only stage I changed the finish of, moving it down to the Ermita de San Kristobal. I also brought the distance down to an Itzulia kind of length. I've eschewed the loop around Bilbao but kept the section around Bermeo using San Pelaio instead of the more famous Sollube as I assume Gernika is on the route for a specific reason, with it being the 80th anniversary. Instead of using the Balcón de Bizkaia climb and thus descending part of the final climb, I have arrived at Munitibar via an easier route, then flipped the circuit bit around into the opposite direction, so instead of climbing the easy side of Gontzegaraigane, we climb the harder side of a summit above that,
Parriolaburu. From here on, it gets very, very Basque. We back immediately into a narrow and difficult
Muniozguren (only from the junction marked to Munitibar[/url] then a tricky but shallow descent leads into a nice normal one into Ermua, then to Eibar where we climb the classic
Ixua. I've added an optional small climb into the descent to Markina-Xemein before
Lekoitz-Gane, then a repeat of Parriolaburu and the final climb being the first 6,5km of
this. You could potentially skip Iturreta entirely, or use the much easier Trabakua in place of Muniozguren if the road at the summit of Muniozguren is deemed a problem.
Stage 19:
La Rabassa isn't that bad a climb for a Unipuerto stage since its hardest gradients are at the bottom. With the short stage the day after this may work, but there's just so many options a _____/ stage is a disappointment. With that said, however, there's literally only been one HC climb in the race thus far, and damage is coming. ASO have a major stake in Unipublic, so why not go with an ASO trick, and use the same climb two days running? I've put the southern side of La Gallina here, because we'll see the northern side tomorrow. If using two sides of the same climb on two days is seen as a problem, why not do the double La Rabassa thing that they did in 2008?
Stage 20:
Keeping it short, keeping the easiest climb the penultimate one, sure, but beefing up the length of the climbing early in the stage to strengthen the break and also improve the opportunities to go early. Plus putting the ceiling of the race in this stage, with Port d'Envalira as high as we're going to go, meaning a bit of extra incentive in the battle for the GPM (in which case this ought to get cat.ESP). Using the tunnel to descend like in 2013, but putting the tougher Beixalis in place of Ordino. Suspect this "two sides of the same climb in the same stage" business may be about mimicking 2015.
Stage 21: I've done several things other than the tri-point parade with my Madrid stages in the Race Design Thread, including the 2006 Worlds course, an ITT, and there are other options I'll use in future. But for now, this is what we have.