Vuelta

Cadel Evans’ knee problems are more serious than first reported and he will therefore have to sit out the Vuelta a Espaa and probably the rest of the season, Team Silence-Lotto announced Wednesday evening.

Team doctor Daniel De Neve spoke with the Italian doctor handling Evans and reported that the lesions are more serious than first thought. Surgery is not being considered at this time, but healing and rehabilitation will take six to eight weeks “so Cadel’s return to top-level competition this year might be impossible,” the team said.

After the Olympic time trial in which the Australian finished fifth, it was disclosed that he had suffered a ruptured anterior cruciate ligament (ACL). He injured himself when he was celebrating his second-place finish in the Tour de France, an injury which at first was denied.

Evans is the second high-profiled rider to not start the Spanish Grand Tour, after Denis Menchov decided to skip the race. This will make it even more likely that the winner will come from the host nation of Spain. Three of the five riders who formed part of the successful Spanish Olympic road team. Alberto Contador (Astana), Alejandro Valverde (Caisse d’Epargne) and Carlos Sastre (Team CSC-Saxo Bank) have all good chances of taking out the overall win.

Olympic champion Samuel Snchez (Euskaltel-Euskadi) will ride the Tour of Poland in order to prepare for the World Championships in Varese.(SW)

[quote=“larryduff”]Cadel Evans’ knee problems are more serious than first reported and he will therefore have to sit out the Vuelta a Espaa and probably the rest of the season, Team Silence-Lotto announced Wednesday evening.

Team doctor Daniel De Neve spoke with the Italian doctor handling Evans and reported that the lesions are more serious than first thought. Surgery is not being considered at this time, but healing and rehabilitation will take six to eight weeks “so Cadel’s return to top-level competition this year might be impossible,” the team said.

After the Olympic time trial in which the Australian finished fifth, it was disclosed that he had suffered a ruptured anterior cruciate ligament (ACL). He injured himself when he was celebrating his second-place finish in the Tour de France, an injury which at first was denied.

Evans is the second high-profiled rider to not start the Spanish Grand Tour, after Denis Menchov decided to skip the race. This will make it even more likely that the winner will come from the host nation of Spain. Three of the five riders who formed part of the successful Spanish Olympic road team. Alberto Contador (Astana), Alejandro Valverde (Caisse d’Epargne) and Carlos Sastre (Team CSC-Saxo Bank) have all good chances of taking out the overall win.

Olympic champion Samuel Snchez (Euskaltel-Euskadi) will ride the Tour of Poland in order to prepare for the World Championships in Varese.(SW)[/quote]

anyone worth backing for the Vuelta a Espaa

Can’t see anyone other than Contador winning. Unfortunately. Menchov needed the break after riding the Giro as well.

Presume there’s no Irish interest is there Larry?

[quote=“therock67”]Can’t see anyone other than Contador winning. Unfortunately. Menchov needed the break after riding the Giro as well.

Presume there’s no Irish interest is there Larry?[/quote]
Not sure who to back yet ncc but will let you know nearer the time.
With Kloden, Valverde and Sastre also riding I wouldn’t say its a foregone conclusion. Valverde said he is riding it as more preparation for the worlds but never sure how much to read into comments like that. Roche is riding for Credit Agricole. Incomplete start list is below
TEAM CSC SAXO BANK
CUESTA LOPEZ DE CASTRO Iigo Spain
VAN GOOLEN Jurgen Belgium
1 SASTRE CANDIL Carlos Spain

AG2R- LA MONDIALE
DION Renaud France
DUPONT Hubert France
GADRET John France
LOUBET Julien France
MONDORY Lloyd France
NOCENTINI Rinaldo Italy
POULHIES Stphane France
USOV Alexandre Belarus
11 ARRIETA LUJAMBIO Jos Luis Spain

ANDALUCIA - CAJASUR
21 CARRASCO GAMIZ Jose Luis Spain

ASTANA
KLDEN Andreas Germany
LEIPHEIMER Levi United States
NAVARRO GARCIA Daniel Spain
NOVAL GONZALEZ Benjamin Spain
PAULINHO Sergio Miguel Moreira Portugal
RUBIERA VIGIL Jos Luis Spain
VAITKUS Tomas Lithuania
31 CONTADOR VELASCO Alberto Spain

BOUYGUES TELECOM
BONNAIRE Olivier France
CLEMENT Stef Netherlands
CLERC Aurlien Switzerland
FLORENCIO CABRE Xavier Spain
GESLIN Anthony France
JEROME Vincent France
LABBE Arnaud France
PICHOT Alexandre France
41 CHAMPION Dimitri France

CAISSE D’EPARGNE
ARROYO DURAN David Spain
ERVITI Imanol Spain
GARCIA ACOSTA Jos Vicente Spain
KARPETS Vladimir Russia
LASTRAS GARCIA Pablo Spain
LOSADA ALGUACIL Alberto Spain
MORENO FERNANDEZ Daniel Spain
PASAMONTES RODRIGUEZ Luis Spain
RODRIGUEZ OLIVER Joaquin Spain
ROJAS GIL Jose Joaquin Spain
ZANDIO ECHAIDE Xabier Spain
51 VALVERDE BELMONTE Alejandro Spain

COFIDIS, LE CREDIT PAR TELEPHONE
DE WEERT Kevin Belgium
DUQUE Leonardo Colombia
FERNANDEZ BUSTINZA Bingen Spain
HARY Maryan France
HOJ Frank Denmark
MINARD Sbastien France
NUYENS Nick Belgium
SCHEIRLINCKX Staf Belgium
61 CHAVANEL Sylvain France

CREDIT AGRICOLE
71 HINAULT Sbastien France
72 HALGAND Patrice France
73 HUNT Jeremy United Kingdom
74 KERN Christophe France
75 LEMOINE Cyril France
76 MARINO Jean-Marc France
77 RASCH Gabriel Norway
78 ROCHE Nicholas Ireland
79 TALABARDON Yannick France

EUSKALTEL - EUSKADI
ASTARLOZA CHAURREAU Mikel Spain
AZANZA SOTO Jorge Spain
FERNANDEZ Koldo Spain
LANDALUZE INTXAURRAGA Inigo Spain
MARTINEZ DE ESTEBAN Egoi Spain
PEREZ LEZAUN Alan Spain
PEREZ MORENO Ruben Spain
TXURRUKA Amets Spain
VELASCO MURILLO Ivan Spain
81 ANTON HERNANDEZ Igor Spain

FRANAISE DES JEUX
DELAGE Mickael France
DI GREGORIO Rmy France
GILBERT Philippe Belgium
JOLY Sbastien France
LADAGNOUS Matthieu France
MEERSMAN Gianni Belgium
MOUREY Francis France
VANENDERT Jelle Belgium
91 CASAR Sandy France

GEROLSTEINER
SCHUMACHER Stefan Germany
STAMSNIJDER Tom Netherlands
101 REBELLIN Davide Italy

KARPIN GALICIA
CASTANO PANADERO Carlos Spain
CESAR VELOSO Gustavo Spain
DOMINGUEZ LEMOS Gustavo Spain
GARCIA DA PENA David Spain
HERRERO LLORENTE David Spain
ISAICHEV Vladimir Russia
MARTINEZ Serafin Spain
MAYOZ Ivan Spain
MOURON DOLDAN Juan Francisco Spain
RABUNAL RIOS Gonzalo Spain
TRONCOSO SOBRINO Ramon Spain
VORGANOV Eduard Russia
111 MOSQUERA MIGUEZ Ezequiel Spain

LAMPRE
BALLAN Alessandro Italy
BINDI Emanuele Italy
BRUSEGHIN Marzio Italy
LONGO Roberto Italy
LOOSLI David Switzerland
MARZANO Marco Italy
MORI Massimiliano Italy
NAPOLITANO Danilo Italy
PELANEK Lubos Czech Republic
RIGHI Daniele Italy
SANTAMBROGIO Mauro Italy
TIRALONGO Paolo Italy
121 CUNEGO Damiano Italy

LIQUIGAS
131 BENNATI Daniele Italy

QUICKSTEP
BARREDO LLAMAZALES Carlos Spain
BOONEN Tom Belgium
GARATE Juan Manuel Spain
TONTI Andrea Italy
TOSATTO Matteo Italy
VAN IMPE Kevin Belgium
VIGANO Davide Italy
WEYLANDT Wouter Belgium
141 BETTINI Paolo Italy

RABOBANK
ARDILA CANO Mauricio Alberto Colombia
DE MAAR Marc Netherlands
ELTINK Theo Netherlands
FLECHA GIANNONI Juan Antonio Spain
GESINK Robert Netherlands
HORRILLO MUNOZ Pedro Spain
KOZONTCHUK DmitrIy Russia
NIERMANN Grischa Germany
151 FREIRE GOMEZ Oscar Spain

SILENCE-LOTTO
CORNU Dominique Belgium
DOCKX Bart Belgium
JACOBS Pieter Belgium
KAISEN Olivier Belgium
LLOYD Mathew Australia
SENTJENS Roy Belgium
TJALLINGII Maarten Netherlands
VAN AVERMAET Greg Belgium
161 POPOVYCH Yaroslav Ukraine

TEAM MILRAM
ASTARLOA ASCASIBAR Igor Spain
171 ZABEL Erik Germany

TINKOFF CREDIT SYSTEMS
KIRYIENKA Vasil Belarus
181 IGNATIEV Mikhail Russia

It’s obviously not a foregone conclusion but I thought Contador looked ominously strong in the TT at the Olympics and he won a tough Giro against a souped-up Ricco with ease.

Valverde doesn’t seem to have attained any sort of consistency and I can’t see Sastre having the same effect with a weaker CSC team around him. Not so much to do with the work they’ll provide for him but the distraction of the Schlecks was a big factor in him winning Le Tour.

I’d go for Contador. He will be seriously motivated after being excluded from the Tour. And it would mean him winning three major tours in a row.

At 8/11 Contador is unbackable so won’t be having any financial interest.

Should be a decent race though and it’s a strong enough field so gives us a chance to assess the strength of Astana at this stage.

[quote=“therock67”]At 8/11 Contador is unbackable so won’t be having any financial interest.

Should be a decent race though and it’s a strong enough field so gives us a chance to assess the strength of Astana at this stage.[/quote]

Looks as though it is a real climbers course this year with few tt km’s. Hard to discount Sastre or Andy Schleck so. Both seem decent value at 9/2 and 7/1 to me. Hoping Contador’s lack of racing could count against him.

Showing that the squad is rested and ready to take on the Vuelta a Espaa, the Astana squad took first and second in the Spanish 1.1 race, the Clsica Internacional a los Puertos in Guadarrama, outside Madrid. Levi Leipheimer soloed to the win after attacking 20 kilometers from the finish, and came in 41 seconds ahead of Giro d’Italia winner Alberto Contador.

“This is a very special victory for me,” said Leipheimer. “Today I raced for the last time in my USA national champion kit. It’s been a honor to wear the stars and stripes and win a medal for my home country, but this year I’ve decided to focus on the Tour of Spain, which has been a major team goal since early in the season.”

Leipheimer will miss out on the US Professional national championships which take place next weekend in Greenville, South Carolina, in favour of the Spanish Grand Tour, which begins the same day.

Leipheimer was part of the early breakaway of the race. On the Puerto de Navacerrada, a first category climb, Contador escaped from the chasing peloton to join the leaders; five of whom went to the finish in Guadarrama. Contador tried to escape, and when his effort was unsuccessful, Leipheimer used the same power which took him to a bronze medal in the Olympic time trial to solo to his sixth victory of the season.

Contador finished behind Leipheimer in second place ahead of the Burgos Monumental duo Diego Gallego Arnaiz and Sergio Pardilla Bellon and Iigo Landaluze Intxaurraga (Euskaltel - Euskadi). Contador felt his performance bode well for the upcoming Vuelta, which has been a major target after the team was excluded from defending his Tour de France title this year. “It was nice for me to race on my training circuit in the madrilene sierra. I’m feeling good and am very happy to see that my team-mates are in good condition as well. We are excited to start the last Grand Tour of the season on Saturday.”

Full start list below. No Schlecks which is disappointing. Astand look real strong and have targeted this race since the start of the year. Valverde and Sastre only other possibilities outside Astana. Valverde at 12/1 worth a bet perhaps.
Team CSC Saxo Bank
1 SASTRE CANDIL Carlos SASTRE CANDIL Carlos
2 BLAUDZUN Michael
3 BRESCHEL Matti
4 CUESTA LOPEZ DE CASTRO Inigo CUESTA Iigo
5 GUSTOV Volodymir
6 HAEDO Juan Jos
7 KOLOBNEV Alexandr
8 KROON Karsten
9 VAN GOOLEN Jurgen VAN GOOLEN Jurgen
Ag2r La Mondiale
11 ARRIETA LUJAMBIO Jos Luis ARRIETA Jos Luis
12 DION Renaud DION Renaud
13 DUPONT Hubert DUPONT Hubert
14 GADRET John GADRET John
15 LOUBET Julien LOUBET Julien
16 MONDORY Lloyd MONDORY Lloyd
17 NOCENTINI Rinaldo NOCENTINI Rinaldo
18 POULHIES Stphane POULHIES Stphane
19 USOV Alexandre USOV Alexandre
Andalucia Caja Sur
21 CARRASCO GAMIZ Jose Luis
22 CARRASCO RAMIREZ Jose Antonio
23 LOPEZ GIL Jos Antonio
24 MARTINEZ PEREZ Francisco Jose
25 MORENO BAZAN Javier
26 ORTEGA OCANA Manuel
27 REDONDO RAMOS Jos Antonio
28 ROSENDO PRADO Jesus
29 RUIZ SANCHEZ Jose
Astana
31 CONTADOR VELASCO Alberto CONTADOR VELASCO Alberto
32 KLDEN Andreas KLOEDEN Andreas
33 LEIPHEIMER Levi LEIPHEIMER Levi
34 MURAVYEV Dmitriy MURAVYEV Dimitri
35 NAVARRO GARCIA Daniel NAVARRO Daniel
36 NOVAL GONZALEZ Benjamin NOVAL Benjamn
37 PAULINHO Sergio Miguel Moreira PAULINHO Sergio
38 RUBIERA VIGIL Jos Luis RUBIERO Jos Luis
39 VAITKUS Tomas VAITKUS Thomas
BAZAYEV Assan
Bouygues Telecom
41 CHAMPION Dimitri CHAMPION Dimitri
42 CLEMENT Stef CLEMENT Stef
43 CLERC Aurlien CLERC Aurlien
44 FLORENCIO CABRE Xavier FLORENCIO CABRE Xavier
45 GESLIN Anthony GESLIN Anthony
46 JEROME Vincent JRME Vincent
47 LABBE Arnaud LABBE Arnaud
48 PICHOT Alexandre PICHOT Alexandre
49 SOKOLOV Evgeny BONNAIRE Olivier
Caisse d’Epargne
51 VALVERDE BELMONTE Alejandro VALVERDE BELMONTE Alejandro
52 ARROYO DURAN David ARROYO David
53 GARCIA ACOSTA Jos Vicente GARCIA Jos Vicente
54 LASTRAS GARCIA Pablo ERVITI Imanol
55 LOPEZ GARCIA David MORENO Dani
56 LOSADA ALGUACIL Alberto LOSADA Alberto
57 PASAMONTES RODRIGUEZ Luis PASAMONTES Luis
58 RODRIGUEZ OLIVER Joaquin RODRIGUEZ Joaquim
59 ZANDIO ECHAIDE Xabier ZANDIO Xabier
Cofidis, le Credit Par Telephone
61 CHAVANEL Sylvain CHAVANEL Sylvain
62 DE WEERT Kevin DE WEERT Kevin
63 DUQUE Leonardo DUQUE Leonardo
64 FERNANDEZ BUSTINZA Bingen MONCOUTIE David
65 HARY Maryan HARY Maryan
66 HOJ Frank HOJ Frank
67 MINARD Sbastien MINARD Sebastien
68 NUYENS Nick NUYENS Nick
69 SCHEIRLINCKX Staf SCHEIRLINCKX Staf
Credit Agricole
71 HALGAND Patrice HALGAND Patrice
72 HINAULT Sbastien HINAULT Sbastien
73 HUNT Jeremy HUNT Jeremy
74 KERN Christophe KERN Christophe
75 LEMOINE Cyril LEMOINE Cyril
76 MARINO Jean Marc MARINO Jean-Marc
77 RASCH Gabriel RASCH Gabriel
78 ROCHE Nicolas ROCHE Nicolas
79 ROLLAND Pierre TALABARDON Yannick
Euskaltel Euskadi
81 ANTON HERNANDEZ Igor ANTON Igor
82 ASTARLOZA CHAURREAU Mikel ASTARLOZA Mikel
83 FERNANDEZ DE LARREA Koldo FERNANDEZ Koldo
84 LANDALUZE INTXAURRAGA Inigo LANDALUZE Inigo
85 MARTINEZ DE ESTEBAN Egoi MARTINEZ Egoi
86 PEREZ LEZAUN Alan PEREZ Alan
87 PEREZ MORENO Ruben PREZ Rubn
88 TXURRUKA Amets TXURRUKA Amets
89 VELASCO MURILLO Ivan VELASCO Iban
Others
91 CASAR Sandy CASAR Sandy
92 DELAGE Mickael DELAGE Mickael
93 DI GREGORIO Rmy DI GREGORIO Remi
94 GILBERT Philippe GILBERT Philippe
95 JOLY Sbastien JOLY Sebastien
96 LADAGNOUS Matthieu LADAGNOUS Matthieu
97 MEERSMAN Gianni MEERSMAN Gianni
98 MONNERAIS Cyrille VANENDERT Jelle
99 MOUREY Francis MOUREY Francis
Gerolsteiner
101 REBELLIN Davide
102 DE BONIS Francesco
103 KLINGER Tim
104 LANG Sebastian
105 MOLETTA Andrea
106 SCHRECK Stephan
107 SCHUMACHER Stefan
108 WESTPHAL Carlo
109 ZAUGG Oliver
Xacobeo Galicia
111 MOSQUERA MIGUEZ Ezequiel MOSQUERA Ezequiel
112 CASTANO PANADERO Carlos CASTAO Carlos
113 CESAR VELOSO Gustavo CESAR VELOSO Gustavo
114 DOMINGUEZ LEMOS Gustavo DOMINGUEZ Gustavo
115 GARCIA DAPENA David GARCIA David
116 HERRERO LLORENTE David HERRERO David
117 MARTINEZ Serafin MARTINEZ Serafin
118 MAYOZ ECHEVERRIA Iban MAYOZ Iban
119 VORGANOV Eduard VORGANOV Eduard
RABUAL Gonzalo
TRONCOSO Ramon
ISAYCHEV Vladimir
MOURN Juan
Lampre
121 CUNEGO Damiano CUNEGO Damiano
122 BALLAN Alessandro BALLAN Alessandro
123 BINDI Emanuele BINDI Emanuele
124 BRUSEGHIN Marzio BRUSEGHIN Marzio
125 MARZANO Marco MARZANO Marco
126 MORI Massimiliano MORI Massimiliano
127 NAPOLITANO Danilo NAPOLITANO Danilo
128 SANTAMBROGIO Mauro SANTAMBROGIO Mauro
129 TIRALONGO Paolo TIRALONGO Paolo
LONGO Roberto
LOOSLI David
PELANEK Lubos
RIGHI Daniele
Liquigas
131 BENNATI Daniele BENNATI Daniele
132 AGNOLI Valerio
133 CORIONI Claudio
134 FRANZOI Enrico
135 POZZATO Filippo
136 QUINZIATO Manuel QUINZIATO Manuel
137 SANTAROMITA Ivan
138 STANGELJ Gorazd
139 VANOTTI Alessandro
Quick Step
141 BETTINI Paolo BETTINI Paolo
142 BARREDO LLAMAZALES Carlos BARREDO Carlos
143 BOONEN Tom BOONEN Tom
144 GARATE Juan Manuel GARATE Juan Manuel
145 HULSMANS Kevin VIGANO Davide
146 SCARSELLI Leonardo WEYLANDT Wouter
147 TONTI Andrea TONTI Andrea
148 TOSATTO Matteo TOSATTO Matteo
149 VAN IMPE Kevin VAN IMPE Kevin
Rabobank
151 FREIRE GOMEZ Oscar FREIRE GOMEZ Oscar
152 ARDILA CANO Mauricio Alberto ARDILA CANO Mauricio Alberto
153 DE MAAR Marc DE MAAR Marc
154 FLECHA GIANNONI Juan Antonio FLECHA Juan Antonio
155 GESINK Robert GESINK Robert
156 HORRILLO MUNOZ Pedro HORRILLO Pedro
157 KOZONTCHUK Dmitry KOZONTCHOUK Dmitri
158 NIERMANN Grischa NIERMANN Grischa
159 WEENING Pieter ELTINK Theo
Silence Lotto
161 POPOVYCH Yaroslav POPOVYCH Yaroslav
162 CORNU Dominique CORNU Dominique
163 DOCKX Bart DOCKX Bart
164 JACOBS Pieter JACOBS Pieter
165 KAISEN Olivier KAISEN Olivier
166 LLOYD Matthew LLOYD Matthew
167 SENTJENS Roy SENTJENS Roy
168 TJALLINGII Maarten TJALLINGII Maarten
169 VAN AVERMAET Greg VAN AVERMAET Greg
Team Milram
171 ZABEL Erik ZABEL Erik
172 DIUDIA Volodymyr
173 GAJEK Artur
174 GRIVKO Andriy
175 JURCO Matej
176 KUX Christian
177 SABATINI Fabio
178 SCHWAGER Sebastian
179 VELITS Martin
Tinkoff Credit Systems
181 IGNATIEV Mikhail
182 BRUTT Pavel
183 ESKOV Nikita
184 KIRYIENKA Vasili KIRIYENKA Vasily
185 PEDRAZA MORALES Walter F.
186 PETROV Evgeny
187 ROVNY Ivan
188 SERRANO GONZALEZ Ricardo
189 TRUSOV Nikolay

Nicolas Roche 5th in today’s stage, won by Tom Boonen.

Great effort from Roche - there’s a definite optimisim about our cyclists now and they’re starting to string respectable results together.

Yeah encouraging from Roche all right. Found it surprising that CSC and Astana came fifth and ninth in the team time trial respectivly. Individual time trial tomorrow of 40 odd km’s. Is only real time for the out and out specialists to gain time on others as only remaining time trial is a mountain one.
As a side point watching a bit of stage three now and must saw the scenery in this tour compares poorly to the Giro and Le Tour. Always seems to be barren landscape with far fewer fans on side of roads.

Leipheimer is in gold after today’s tt. Contador came fourth and lost 30 seconds or so to his teammate. Valverde performed very well and only lost 59 seconds on Leipheimer and remains ahead of Contador on GC. Would love to see a non Astana victory in this I must say.

Agree, think they are a cancer in the sport. Don’t expect to see too many positive dope tests in Spain however

Stage 8 - September 7: Andorra - Pla de Beret, 151km
Moncouti delivers solo punch ahead of Astana show
USA’s Leipheimer back in overall lead
By Gregor Brown, with additional reporting from Bjorn Haake in Pla de Beret

France’s David Moncouti of Team Cofidis launched an early escape bid that garnered him victory in the eighth stage of the Vuelta a Espaa – 151 kilometres from Andorra to Pla de Beret. It was his first win in three years. While the 33 year-old enjoyed solo success, Spaniard Alberto Contador of Team Astana led the classification battle behind. His moves dropped favourite Carlos Sastre of Team CSC-Saxo Bank by five seconds and helped team-mate Levi Leipheimer move back into the race lead.

America’s Leipheimer, 34, holds 21 seconds over Contador and 49 seconds over Spaniard Alejandro Valverde of Team Caisse d’Epargne.

“I had some difficult moments, but I have a lot of experience behind me and that helped. I am taking the Vuelta day by day, looking to Asturias,” said Sastre, winner of the Tour de France.

“I didn’t feel bad all day, but at the beginning of the last climb, after that letdown to La Bonaigua, I started to cramp and had little choice but to go at my own rhythm,” said Sastre with an eye toward how he might recover during tomorrow’s stage.

Moncouti looked to be within reach of taking his first win since 2005’s Tour de France stage at the base of Pla de Beret. He had dropped Sbastien Joly (Franaise des Jeux), who was the last remaining escape companion of the original group that contained Nikita Eskov (Tinkoff Credit Systems), Christophe Kern (Crdit Agricole) and Juan Manuel Grate (Quick Step).

Astana on the move
Astana put the polish on a day of solid pace-making for the 6.2-kilometre climb. Jos Luis Rubiera and Andreas Klden throttled the elite group along. Before three kilometres to the summit and six kilometres to the line, Contador’s team-mates had Sastre shooting out the back of the thinned peloton.

Sastre had little support. He joined with Vasil Kiryienka (Tinkoff Credit Systems) and John Gadret (AG2R La Mondiale), and the trio started to claw its way back. Contador got word of Sastre’s return and blasted off with Valverde and Spaniard Igor Antn (Euskaltel-Euskadi) at five kilometres to race. He attacked again at three kilometres, but Valverde and Antn held tight.

“The only thing I regret is that again the time differences are so small,” said Contador. “They could have been more substantial if Alejandro (Valverde) had cooperated a bit more with Igor Antn and me. I don’t understand why he didn’t do that. Also for him it was in his interest to gain more time on Carlos Sastre.”

Nonetheless, Contador continues to bide his time patiently. “The Pyrenees provoked no decision (in the overall). As I already thought at the start of this race, the Asturian mountains and the time trial in the last weekend will decide who will win this Tour of Spain.”

Valverde bounces back
Valverde took the sprint for second, 34 seconds behind the winner, and the four seconds bonus seconds on offer. He put in a great effort 24 hours after yesterday’s stage, where he looked to be writing himself out contention for the Vuelta overall.

“I completely recovered from the bad day I had yesterday,” said Valverde. "My legs hurt a little bit while climbing the first climb of the day but I soon felt very good. I ate correctly, and the day was totally different.

“In Pla de Beret, when I was with Contador chasing behind the French rider, I was almost not able to take my turn because we were riding at 35 kph and Contador, who is the best climber in the world, took me to the limit.”

“It is true that I am still very well placed in the general classification but the mountains in Asturias are still to come and that will be another story so that I will keep on going with my plan which is to see what happens day by day,” concluded Valverde.

Antn, eighth in last year’s Vuelta, marked himself as Euskaltel’s captain for the 2008 edition with an impressive tough ride. He finished fourth for the day, five seconds ahead of the group of the new race leader, Leipheimer.

Leipheimer, four days after his stage win in Chided Real, moved back into the race lead as a result of powerful Astana riding. Similar to the Giro d’Italia, he should act as a wild card for the team.

When asked if his team gave the jersey away to Sylvain Chavanal and Alessandro Ballan (Team Lampre) earlier in the race, Leipheimer said, “No, I think that Chavanel and Ballan both earned it. We didn’t contest Chavanel, but realistically I can’t beat him in the sprint. He would get the jersey, no matter what, but to make it easy we collaborated a little bit with him. It was good for us to save the team. Ballan on the other hand was really very strong yesterday. They both earned their jersey.”

Leipheimer affirmed that he is still working for his team-mate Contador. "I just have to follow everyone right now as I am ahead in the classification, but in the end, Alberto will be the captain. The final climb yesterday and the final climb today were not so hard. They are not steep and that big time differences can’t be made. Although I’ve never seen the Angliru, I am convinced that the mountains in Asturias are another story…

“It’s a long way to go,” said Leipheimer. “Now we have the leader’s jersey and everybody will look to us to control. There’s a lot of work to do.”

He took the overall lead from Ballan, who may have found the weather better in stage eight, despite the added pressure in the race overall. After a yesterday’s stage of longevity and inclement temperatures, riders were ready for a different stage today. The day took in four mountain passes, with the finish on the Pla de Beret, but it was shorter than yesterday – at 151 kilometres.

Lampre kept control for Ballan of a wily start out of Andorra. Riders were edging for freedom to form part of what could be the escape of the day. None other than former race leader, France’s Sylvain Chavanel (Cofidis), even made a move. A solid escape did not materialise until Kern, Eskov, Joly, Grate and Moncouti moved clear at kilometre 38.

The five held 2’23" over the 25-kilometre Coll del Cant. The gap stayed more or less the same over the top of Alto de Enviny – 27.7 kilometres later. The five had 2’52". The gap nearly doubled – 5’22" – which forced Contador’s Astana team to take responsibility of the pace-making with Lampre.

The five leaders kept working, but behind the peloton was falling apart before the climb of Puerto de La Bonaigua. Valerio Agnoli (Liquigas), Bingen Fernndez (Cofidis), Matti Breschel (CSC-Saxo Bank) and Matthew Lloyd (Silence-Lotto) all crashed at kilometre 113. Agnoli crashed again as he chased back.

Ballan’s gold faded fast on the 19.7-kilometre climb. He drifted back and so did his Lampre’s team-mates. Sastre’s CSC and Contador’s Astana team took over the muscle work.

Moncouti hit out on his own at kilometre 129.Joly gave chase and Grate faded. Over the top of the Puerto de La Bonaigua, Moncouti held around 20 seconds on Joly, Eskov, 55 seconds to Garate and Kern and 1’45" on the main chase group. Ballan’s golden days were over; he trailed two minutes back in the gruppetto.

Results

Stage 8 - September 7: Andorra - Pla de Beret, 151km
Moncouti delivers solo punch ahead of Astana show
USA’s Leipheimer back in overall lead
By Gregor Brown, with additional reporting from Bjorn Haake in Pla de Beret

France’s David Moncouti of Team Cofidis launched an early escape bid that garnered him victory in the eighth stage of the Vuelta a Espaa – 151 kilometres from Andorra to Pla de Beret. It was his first win in three years. While the 33 year-old enjoyed solo success, Spaniard Alberto Contador of Team Astana led the classification battle behind. His moves dropped favourite Carlos Sastre of Team CSC-Saxo Bank by five seconds and helped team-mate Levi Leipheimer move back into the race lead.

America’s Leipheimer, 34, holds 21 seconds over Contador and 49 seconds over Spaniard Alejandro Valverde of Team Caisse d’Epargne.

“I had some difficult moments, but I have a lot of experience behind me and that helped. I am taking the Vuelta day by day, looking to Asturias,” said Sastre, winner of the Tour de France.

“I didn’t feel bad all day, but at the beginning of the last climb, after that letdown to La Bonaigua, I started to cramp and had little choice but to go at my own rhythm,” said Sastre with an eye toward how he might recover during tomorrow’s stage.

Moncouti looked to be within reach of taking his first win since 2005’s Tour de France stage at the base of Pla de Beret. He had dropped Sbastien Joly (Franaise des Jeux), who was the last remaining escape companion of the original group that contained Nikita Eskov (Tinkoff Credit Systems), Christophe Kern (Crdit Agricole) and Juan Manuel Grate (Quick Step).

Astana on the move
Astana put the polish on a day of solid pace-making for the 6.2-kilometre climb. Jos Luis Rubiera and Andreas Klden throttled the elite group along. Before three kilometres to the summit and six kilometres to the line, Contador’s team-mates had Sastre shooting out the back of the thinned peloton.

Sastre had little support. He joined with Vasil Kiryienka (Tinkoff Credit Systems) and John Gadret (AG2R La Mondiale), and the trio started to claw its way back. Contador got word of Sastre’s return and blasted off with Valverde and Spaniard Igor Antn (Euskaltel-Euskadi) at five kilometres to race. He attacked again at three kilometres, but Valverde and Antn held tight.

“The only thing I regret is that again the time differences are so small,” said Contador. “They could have been more substantial if Alejandro (Valverde) had cooperated a bit more with Igor Antn and me. I don’t understand why he didn’t do that. Also for him it was in his interest to gain more time on Carlos Sastre.”

Nonetheless, Contador continues to bide his time patiently. “The Pyrenees provoked no decision (in the overall). As I already thought at the start of this race, the Asturian mountains and the time trial in the last weekend will decide who will win this Tour of Spain.”

Valverde bounces back
Valverde took the sprint for second, 34 seconds behind the winner, and the four seconds bonus seconds on offer. He put in a great effort 24 hours after yesterday’s stage, where he looked to be writing himself out contention for the Vuelta overall.

“I completely recovered from the bad day I had yesterday,” said Valverde. "My legs hurt a little bit while climbing the first climb of the day but I soon felt very good. I ate correctly, and the day was totally different.

“In Pla de Beret, when I was with Contador chasing behind the French rider, I was almost not able to take my turn because we were riding at 35 kph and Contador, who is the best climber in the world, took me to the limit.”

“It is true that I am still very well placed in the general classification but the mountains in Asturias are still to come and that will be another story so that I will keep on going with my plan which is to see what happens day by day,” concluded Valverde.

Antn, eighth in last year’s Vuelta, marked himself as Euskaltel’s captain for the 2008 edition with an impressive tough ride. He finished fourth for the day, five seconds ahead of the group of the new race leader, Leipheimer.

Leipheimer, four days after his stage win in Chided Real, moved back into the race lead as a result of powerful Astana riding. Similar to the Giro d’Italia, he should act as a wild card for the team.

When asked if his team gave the jersey away to Sylvain Chavanal and Alessandro Ballan (Team Lampre) earlier in the race, Leipheimer said, “No, I think that Chavanel and Ballan both earned it. We didn’t contest Chavanel, but realistically I can’t beat him in the sprint. He would get the jersey, no matter what, but to make it easy we collaborated a little bit with him. It was good for us to save the team. Ballan on the other hand was really very strong yesterday. They both earned their jersey.”

Leipheimer affirmed that he is still working for his team-mate Contador. "I just have to follow everyone right now as I am ahead in the classification, but in the end, Alberto will be the captain. The final climb yesterday and the final climb today were not so hard. They are not steep and that big time differences can’t be made. Although I’ve never seen the Angliru, I am convinced that the mountains in Asturias are another story…

“It’s a long way to go,” said Leipheimer. “Now we have the leader’s jersey and everybody will look to us to control. There’s a lot of work to do.”

He took the overall lead from Ballan, who may have found the weather better in stage eight, despite the added pressure in the race overall. After a yesterday’s stage of longevity and inclement temperatures, riders were ready for a different stage today. The day took in four mountain passes, with the finish on the Pla de Beret, but it was shorter than yesterday – at 151 kilometres.

Lampre kept control for Ballan of a wily start out of Andorra. Riders were edging for freedom to form part of what could be the escape of the day. None other than former race leader, France’s Sylvain Chavanel (Cofidis), even made a move. A solid escape did not materialise until Kern, Eskov, Joly, Grate and Moncouti moved clear at kilometre 38.

The five held 2’23" over the 25-kilometre Coll del Cant. The gap stayed more or less the same over the top of Alto de Enviny – 27.7 kilometres later. The five had 2’52". The gap nearly doubled – 5’22" – which forced Contador’s Astana team to take responsibility of the pace-making with Lampre.

The five leaders kept working, but behind the peloton was falling apart before the climb of Puerto de La Bonaigua. Valerio Agnoli (Liquigas), Bingen Fernndez (Cofidis), Matti Breschel (CSC-Saxo Bank) and Matthew Lloyd (Silence-Lotto) all crashed at kilometre 113. Agnoli crashed again as he chased back.

Ballan’s gold faded fast on the 19.7-kilometre climb. He drifted back and so did his Lampre’s team-mates. Sastre’s CSC and Contador’s Astana team took over the muscle work.

Moncouti hit out on his own at kilometre 129.Joly gave chase and Grate faded. Over the top of the Puerto de La Bonaigua, Moncouti held around 20 seconds on Joly, Eskov, 55 seconds to Garate and Kern and 1’45" on the main chase group. Ballan’s golden days were over; he trailed two minutes back in the gruppetto.

Valverde’s form is just bizarre. Impossible to tell how he’s going to do on any day. The cynical would have to have their suspicions.

Anyway smashing ride from Nicholas Roche yesterday. Came 18th on a very tough stage ahead of the likes of Mayo, Kloeden, Chavanel etc and only a minute down on the likes of Leipheimer and Sastre. And he’s 18th overall now, leading rider for Credit Agricole, and that has him ahead of Rebellin, Kloeden, Moncoutie etc. Super performance.

[quote=“therock67”]Valverde’s form is just bizarre. Impossible to tell how he’s going to do on any day. The cynical would have to have their suspicions.

Anyway smashing ride from Nicholas Roche yesterday. Came 18th on a very tough stage ahead of the likes of Mayo, Kloeden, Chavanel etc and only a minute down on the likes of Leipheimer and Sastre. And he’s 18th overall now, leading rider for Credit Agricole, and that has him ahead of Rebellin, Kloeden, Moncoutie etc. Super performance.[/quote]

Never saw that. Great performance all right. Seems to have improved a lot this year.
That isn’t Iban Mayo ex Euskatel and Saunier Duval rock.

So it isn’t. Just saw that now. Iban Mayoz is it?

Anyway very impressive nonetheless.