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Vuelta Stage 8: Cunego takes stage win, Evans takes gold

Andy Schleck abandons, Vino dropped, as GC race hots up

Image © Unipublic

Vuelta 2009 Stage 8: Alzira - Alto de Aitana, 203KM

Lampre NGC’s Damiano Cunego took the eighth stage of the Vuelta from David Moncoutié of Cofidis with an attack on the closing two kilometres of the Aitana climb after a long day in the saddle.

But Cadel Evans will also be celebrating after the Australian Silence-Lotto rider, who had a hugely disappointing Tour de France, finished fourth to clinch the race leader’s golden jersey on this year’s first mountain stage.

Cunego, winner of the 2004 Giro d’Italia, went off the front of a group that contained several of the general classification contenders before overhauling the two riders ahead of him on the stage, the visibly tiring Johnny Hoogerland of Vacansoleil, who finished the stage in 13th place, then Moncoutié, on the mist-shrouded roads leading to the finish.

Robert Gesink of Rabobank took third place on the stage, but in terms of the general classification, the real action was taking place behind him as Evans outsprinted Alejandro Valverde of Caisse d’Epargne and Euskaltel-Euskadi’s Samuel Sanchez to the line to seal a vital time bonus that puts him two and eight seconds respectively ahead of the Spaniards in terms of the overall race lead.

After a first week’s racing that favoured the sprinters, bookended by individual time trial wins for Fabien Cancellara in Assen and Valencia that resulted in the Swiss Saxo Bank rider wearing the golden jersey at today’s start in Alzira, the Vuelta’s first mountain stage secured some notable scalps among the pre-race favourites.

Andy Schleck, runner-up on the Tour de France podium in Paris, who had a disappointing time trial yesterday, abandoned 88 kilometres into today’s stage due to stomach cramps. Brother Franck, meanwhile, lost almost 11 minutes to Evans.
With Cancellara losing the race lead, it was a bad day all round for Saxo Bank.

The Swiss rider now lies in 95th position overall, some 24 minutes behind Evans, and his thoughts, like those of many of today’s strugglers, will be likely to turn to the forthcoming World Championships in Mendrisio, Switzerland later this month.

As for Alexandre Vinokourov, back in his first race since his return from a two-year suspension for doping, the Astana rider blew up on the last climb of the stage, the 6.5 kilometre Aitana ,which tested the field with a gradient of almost one in ten leading to the summit finish, and he now lies nearly nine minutes off the top of the general classification.

Tomorrow sees another tough day in the mountains, with a 189-kilometre stage from Alcoy to Xorret del Catí ending in a three-kilometre final climb that sees the gradient hit a soul-destroying 20 per cent in places before a one-kilometre descent to the finish.

Top 10 General Classification after Stage 8

1) Damiano Cunego (Lampre-NGC)           06:04:54
2) David Moncoutié (Cofidis)             00:00:33
3) Robert Gesink (Rabobank)              00:00:36
4) Cadel Evans (Silence-Lotto)           00:00:44
5) Alejandro Valverde (Caisse d'Epargne) 00:00:44
6) Samuel Sánchez (Euskaltel-Euskadi)    00:00:44
7) Tadej Valjavec (AG2R La Mondiale)     00:00:50
8) Ivan Basso (Liquigas)                 00:00:50
9) Ezequiel Mosquera (Xacobeo Galicia)   00:00:50
10) Joaquin Rodriguez (Caisse d'Epargne) 00:00:50
11) Thomas Danielson (Garmin-Slipstream) 00:00:50
12) Paolo Tiralongo (Lampre-NGC)         00:00:50
13) Johnny Hoogerland (Vacansoleil)      00:01:10
14) Daniel Martin (Garmin-Slipstream)    00:01:29
15) Daniel Navarro (Astana)              00:01:32
16) Juan José Cobo (Fuji-Servetto)       00:01:33
17) Sylvester Szmyd (Liquigas)           00:01:50
18) Haimar Zubeldia (Astana)             00:01:50
19) Matteo Carrara (Vacansoleil)         00:01:50
20) Amaël Moinard (Cofidis)              00:01:50

Top 10 General Classification after Stage 8

1) Cadel Evans (Silence-Lotto)           31:05:02
2) Alejandro Valverde (Caisse d'Epargne) 00:00:02
3) Samuel Sánchez (Euskaltel-Euskadi)    00:00:08
4) Thomas Danielson (Garmin-Slipstream)  00:00:13
5) Robert Gesink (Rabobank)              00:00:29
6) Ivan Basso (Liquigas)                 00:00:46
7) Damiano Cunego (Lampre-NGC)           00:01:26
8) Haimar Zubeldia (Astana)              00:01:37
9) Ezequiel Mosquera (Xacobeo Galicia)   00:01:46
10) Juan José Cobo (Fuji-Servetto)       00:02:03

 

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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3 comments

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James Warrener | 15 years ago
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Vino had the worst beard I have ever seen in sport.

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Simon_MacMichael | 15 years ago
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I think Cadel has something to prove to himself as much as anyone else after TDF.

Nothing in it at top end of GC - and stages 12,13, 14 give three consecutive summit finishes, any of those could see field blown apart or someone who has saved something in the tank come through.

Can't see there being too many sprinters left in the race by the time the terrain flattens out!

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Jon Burrage | 15 years ago
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Good to see Vino struggling and nice after all this time to see Cadel pushing for a title...albeit with a fair way to go.

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