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Vuelta a España Vuelta a España 2024, stage 8: Úbeda - Cazorla, 158.7k

The second weekend starts with a deceptively-tricky uphill finish.

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Rolling for most of the day - mercifully for the riders, at slightly higher elevations than today, every degree helps a bit in this heat. The only point of interest is Puerto Mirador de las Palomas, near the source of the Guadalquivir river which flows through Córdoba and Sevilla.
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After more rolling terrain on a local circuit, it's time for the HTF. This is not the hardest possible way up to the summit (Cazorla is littered with steep roads), but it's significantly tougher than the 2015 finish here, which was the first 60% of the same climb. Considering that Chaves won that stage solo and Dan Martin and Dumoulin also took some seconds on the other GC riders, it would be rather surprising to see this extended version fail to produce GC-relevant gaps. Yes, 4.9k at 7.0% doesn't sound like much, but it's really irregular and also gets quite narrow past La Iruela.
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I very distinctively remember those 2 stages Chaves won being stages where my mind was blown and couldn't understand what the absolute *** was happening.

Hard to see past the breakaway, because EVERY team other than Bora and maybe Movistar should want to be in the break/want the break to win here.

Still think Roglic should try just hammer the final 500m even if boni's aren't in play
 
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Bora and Roglic realize that Roglic is not Pogi and can go on a 50 km attack to win back time, so it'll be a little every day and keep on the pressure until the ITT in Madrid. Of course he runs the risk of dragging Almeida or someone else with him, but there's really no other course of action.
O'Connor's first real test today to see how his legs are after stage 6. Hope AG2R/Decathlon send Gall up the road just for giggles.
Be interesting to see what UAE cook up in an attempt to get back time.
 
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Isn't that a lot more regular than this?
Yes, but the average gradient is also a bit higher. Can't think of a closer comparison in any case.
The official profile looks a lot harder, but there must be a mistake, I guess. The numbers don't fit with the average, at least

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(this is from AS, but it's the same in the official roadbook)
In my experience, Vuelta climb profiles are about as reliable as your average paid blue-tick account on Twitter. And as you mention, the percentages for each kilometre would give an average gradient of 9.9% which is obviously impossible. I sourced my data from both the Andalucian and Spanish geoportals and cross-referenced everything with Streetview, so pretty confident in the accuracy of my profile.