The Vuelta starts in earnest with the most wide-open first mountain stage of a GT in a long time… and it’s a pretty hard mountain too.
Plasencia is right on the edge of the Sistema Central, which means we’re getting a hard start to the day. With an early red jersey potentially up for grabs, there will be a lot of climbers looking to take advantage of Puerto de Cabezabellosa. And perhaps, there will be riders thinking of Javalambre…
There is no respite after that, with Alto de Piornal up next. It’s the first 14.2k of the profile below. This is where the last big Robert Gesink heartbreak happened - and Evenepoel won - in 2022.
Things calm down after that, with only Puerto de Miravete and its rather pointless bonus seconds to break up the flat.
After the intermediate sprint, it’s showdown time. Pico Villuercas was introduced to the race in 2021, but unlike that stage the MTF is from the hardest side this time. It is a climb in three parts: 13 kilometres at 3.6% to soften the legs, the three-kilometre brutal concrete ramp averaging 13.6% used mid-stage in that 2021 stage, then the final 2.2 kilometres, identical to the 2021 MTF, at an irregular 5.9%. The finish is in the same place, 300 metres before the end of the profile below (to clear up any possible confusion: they moved the stage finish down here from the actual summit in 2021 after the stage profile had already been published).
Plasencia is right on the edge of the Sistema Central, which means we’re getting a hard start to the day. With an early red jersey potentially up for grabs, there will be a lot of climbers looking to take advantage of Puerto de Cabezabellosa. And perhaps, there will be riders thinking of Javalambre…

There is no respite after that, with Alto de Piornal up next. It’s the first 14.2k of the profile below. This is where the last big Robert Gesink heartbreak happened - and Evenepoel won - in 2022.

Things calm down after that, with only Puerto de Miravete and its rather pointless bonus seconds to break up the flat.

After the intermediate sprint, it’s showdown time. Pico Villuercas was introduced to the race in 2021, but unlike that stage the MTF is from the hardest side this time. It is a climb in three parts: 13 kilometres at 3.6% to soften the legs, the three-kilometre brutal concrete ramp averaging 13.6% used mid-stage in that 2021 stage, then the final 2.2 kilometres, identical to the 2021 MTF, at an irregular 5.9%. The finish is in the same place, 300 metres before the end of the profile below (to clear up any possible confusion: they moved the stage finish down here from the actual summit in 2021 after the stage profile had already been published).

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