As always a rather mountainous Vuelta in 2011. As several have noted on the forum, stage 14 to La Farrapona is notable due to the final climb immediately following the second-to-last climb. Well done by the organisers.
However, I think it highlights the usual lack of the major, epic mountain stage that often dominates the Giro and the Tour. I don't know enough about the geography of Spain to know whether it is possible to create a 5 mountain-stage in Asturias or other places - if not, then they should "borrow" the Pyrenees from the Tour, like they have done previously. Something like 2003, when they had 3 MTF in the Pyrenees.
The final week looks weak - it could be like 2007, when Menchov had the Vuelta wrapped up several stages before the finish. I usually like when they include a MTF at the second-to-last stage, near Madrid.
No doubt that the mountains will decide the Vuelta. Stage 14 and 15 will be key.
Some on the forums have discussed whether there is too few ITT-kms in the recent Grand Tours. It is remarkable that all three Grand Tours are in the midst of using plenty of mountains, but not too many time triale. Definitely a good idea, especially compared to the 80s and 90s with the many, long ITT, which settled the GC before the mountains were even ridden.
But is the resulting smaller time differences the reason for the tendency to use the final mountain for an attack. We hardly see the large and epic breakaways from the GC-climbers anymore, like previously. Is it because of the risk involved, or because doping was more pronounced in the past ?
Not the best, nor the worst Vuelta-route. But the final week should have had an influential stage, to ensure the possibilty of suspension until the end.