El Pistolero said:
In 2008 Contador only entered the Vuelta because the Tour didn't want to have him. Same goes for Levi Leipheimer. Sastre already won the Tour that year.
In 2009 Valvere only rode the Vuelta because the Giro and Tour didn't want to have him. Cadel Evans already did the Tour that year and only did the Vuelta to get over a bad hangover(the Tour) and prepare for the Worlds. Don't know about Samu, probably just wanted to ride the Vuelta.
In 2010 we have Nibbles winning. Fair enough, he's a star, a small one. Mosquera got second who isn't a star at all. Peter Velits is not a star.
In 2011 you have Cobo winning: not a star. Froome second: what the hell? Wiggins third: he only did the Vuelta because he crashed out of the Tour and he was not even in top shape after that.
So if you mean the Vuelta is the thing people do when they got no other choice then you're very right
Don't pretend that Sastre in '08 or Valverde in '09 wouldn't have done the Vuelta regardless. Don't pretend that Mosquera's not a star when he'd been top 5 twice already. The wildcard teams live all year for that one race. Unless you're going to claim that Scarponi wasn't a star when he featured in the GC in the 2010 Giro? What about Garzelli? I mean yea, he was a star once upon a time, but now...
Samu openly and clearly targeted the Vuelta in 2009 (Astarloza was the GC man for the Tour, and Antón lost most of his off-season after his horror crash in the '08 Vuelta so wasn't considered ready for a repeat of his leadership role). You could argue that he would probably have won if he hadn't been caught up in the Liège pile-up. Although you could equally say, well, Valverde also was in that, of course. But no Liège pile-up, and Samu and Mosquera probably don't get dropped so far on Xorret del Catí. Though Samu was also dropped on Sierra Nevada (he's the justification for not waiting for Evans - why would they want to let Samu back on?), he dropped Evans from the chasing group further up the climb.
The Vuelta has become very much a race for the following:
- riders attempting to do the Giro and Vuelta (Basso '09, Nibali '10, Antón '11, Rodríguez '11) or Tour and Vuelta (Sastre '08, Valverde '08, Menchov '07, Rodríguez '10)
- riders who had a disappointing time at the Tour or could not attend (Evans '09, Valverde '09, Contador '08, Menchov '11, Wiggins '11)
- Spanish riders who focus on it (dwindling in number as the number of Spanish ProConti teams falls)(Sánchez '09, Antón '10, Rodríguez '11)
- young riders who've supported team leaders being given a free hand to see what they can do leading a team (Gesink '08, '09, Antón '08)
The Vuelta is the runt of the GT litter, sure. But it's a GT nonetheless. There are plenty of people who use the Giro as a tuneup for the Tour and small wildcard teams leaving their fingerprints all over the race there too.
Do not let the lack of star names at the top of the Vuelta GC fool you. In 2010 in that top 10 alongside the surprises like Roche you had proven GC men or at least well-known talents like Rodríguez (who had had a very long season), Sastre (3xGTs), Kreuziger (who was domestiquing for Nibali), Fränk Schleck (who had been injured at the Tour) and Xavi Tondó (who had attempted the Giro-Vuelta), and in 2011 you similarly had Nibali (attempting Giro-Vuelta), Menchov (who would probably have at least been on the podium if he hadn't made a mistake in week 1), Antón (attempting the Giro-Vuelta and missing the mark completely) and Rodríguez (attempting the Giro-Vuelta and hitting form too early). Include those guys in your GC mix and all of a sudden the Vuelta doesn't look as weak.
Especially when we consider some of the guys that made the Tour de France top 10 this year.