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Vuelta Stage 7: Cancellara reigns in Spain

Towering performance in ITT provides clear signal for Worlds

Image © Unipublic

Vuelta 2009 Stage 6: Valencia ITT, 30KM

Swiss time trial king Fabian Cancellara blew apart the rest of the field on a wet, windy day on the Mediterranean, taking the 30km individual time trial in 36 minutes 41 seconds to win from Britain’s David Millar by 32 seconds.

In doing so, the Swiss Saxo Bank rider also took back the race leader’s golden jersey from Columbia-HTC’s André Greipel who finished more than two and a half minutes off the pace in 67th place.

Lars Boom of Rabobank had set the early pace in the rain, but Grabsch, set the benchmark for the later starters with a time of 37 minutes 17 seconds, His lead didn’t last long, however with Garmin-Slipstream's Millar coming through the rain with a four-second advantage over the German, setting a time that only Cancellara could better.

The Swiss rider’s form today is a clear statement of intent ahead of the UCI Road World Championships on home soil in Mendrisio later this month, when he will be looking to win back the rainbow jersey from Columbia-HTC’s Bert Grabsch, who won the title in Varese, Italy, 12 months ago.

Cancellara had won the title in 2006 and 2007 and despite winning gold in the Olympic individual time trial in Beijing, chose not to defend his world title, blaming mental fatigue.

Fittingly, today’s 30-kilometre dead flat course had a Swiss flavour, starting at the America’s Cup Pier where in 2007 the Geneva-registered yacht Alinghi successfully defended the trophy it had won in Auckland four years earlier – Switzerland itself being rather bereft of coastline suitable for offshore racing.

And that wasn’t the only nod to Valencia’s recent efforts to establish itself on the international sporting scene, with the route then taking in parts of the street circuit used in Formula 1’s European Grand Prix, and finishing at the exact point where Brawn GP driver Rubens Barrichello took the chequered flag in that race a fortnight ago.

Tomorrow sees the Vuelta’s first mountain stage, which ends in a summit finish on the Aitana after a 6.5-kilometre climb at a gradient of almost 10 per cent that will give pretenders to a podium place in Madrid in two weeks’ time a chance to show their form, with general classification favourites such as Andy Schleck looking to make back time lost today.

Top 20 Vuelta 2009, Stage 7

1) Fabian Cancellara (Saxo Bank)            00:36:41
2) David Millar (Garmin-Slipstream)         00:00:32
3) Bert Grabsch (Columbia-HTC)              00:00:36
4) David Herrero (Xacobeo Galicia)          00:00:40
5) Vasili Kiryienkai (Caisse D'Epargne)     00:00:46
6) Samuel Sanchez (Euskaltel-Euskadi)       00:00:47
7) Tom Danielson (Garmin-Slipstream)        00:00:50
8) Christophe Riblon (AG2R La Mondiale)     00:00:53
9) Lars Boom (Vacansoleil)                  00:00:59
10) Cadel Evans (Silence-Lotto)             00:01:02
11) Tom Boonen (Quick Step)                 00:01:03
12) Jesús Del Nero (Fuji-Servetto)          00:01:04
13) Alejandro Valverde (Caisse D'Epargne)   00:01:05
14) Gustavo Veloso (Xacobeo Galicia)        00:01:09
15) Alexander Vinokourov (Astana)           00:01:12
16) Daniele Bennati (Liquigas)              00:01:12
17) Haimar Zubeldia (Astana)                00:01:18
18) Jens Mouris (Vacansoleil)               00:01:21
19) Adam Hansen (Columbia-HTC)              00:01:22
20) Linus Gerdemann (Milram)                00:01:24

Top 10 General Classification after Stage 7

1) Fabian Cancellara (Saxo Bank)            24:58:12
2) Tom Boonen (Quick Step)                  00:00:51
3) David Herrero (Xacobeo Galicia)          00:00:59
4) Dabiele Bennati (Liquigas)               00:01:03
5) Vasili Kiryienkai (Caisse D'Epargne)     00:01:08
6) Cadel Evans (Silence-Lotto)              00:01:12
7) Alejandro Valverde (Caisse D'Epargne)    00:01:14
8) Tom Danielson (Garmin-Slipstream)        00:01:19
9) Samuel Sanchez (Euskaltel-Euskadi)       00:01:20
10) David Millar (Garmin-Slipstream)        00:01:20 

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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2 comments

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Simon_MacMichael | 15 years ago
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Well spotted - just keeping the readers on their toes  4

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demoff | 15 years ago
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Is there an echo in here.

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