Lennert Van Eetvelt may still be young and learning his trade as a professional cyclist – but surely he knows by now that you never count your chickens, or raise your arms too early, when sprinting against Primož Roglič of all people on a mountain-top finish.
The 23-year-old Belgian, however, let youthful exuberance get the better of him within sight of the line on Pico Villuercas when, at the end of a blistering sprint 200m-long sprint, he lifted one hand off the bars to celebrate what would have been the biggest win of his short and impressive career so far – only for the wily old fox Roglič, a master of summit sprinting, to slip by on the outside.
That’s got to sting.
The naivety of Van Eetvelt’s finish-line faux-pas – adding his name to cycling’s illustrious list of premature celebrators – ironically came after the Lotto-Dstny rider produced a remarkably mature, composed ride on the savage 20 per cent slopes of the Pico Villuercas, the first GC rendezvous of this year’s Vuelta.
> Snatching defeat from the jaws of victory — when cycling celebrations go wrong
After Roglič’s Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe team controlled the peloton in the almost 40-degree heat of central Spain for much of the day, the Vuelta as predicted blew apart in the final, concrete-surfaced six kilometres of the Pico Villuercas.
While three-time Vuelta winner Roglič – something of an unknown quantity at this year’s race following another injury-stricken Tour de France – was quick to assert his authority as the bunch veered onto the steep, grippy road, it was Decathlon AG2R’s spindly Austrian climber Felix Gall who exploded the race to bits with a strong, sustained acceleration.
By the time the race turned left and onto much more reasonable, but still pretty steep, tarmac, only Gall, Roglič, and Van Eetvelt remained. A brief period of reflection following the torment saw Enric Mas, Matthew Riccitello (another promising young climber in the midst of a breakthrough season), and João Almeida regain contact, while Mikel Landa would latch on in the final kilometre.
The rest were scattered down the mountain – Antonio Tiberi the best of the rest at 18 seconds, defending champion Sepp Kuss at 28, Adam Yates all the way back at 1.29.
In the final 500m, a touch of Landismo by Soudal Quick-Step’s mercurial climber lit the blue touch paper.
Van Eetvelt – already a summit finish conqueror at the UAE Tour this year – didn’t hesitate, nor did Roglič. On the approach to the finish, curiously located right on a bend, the Belgian smartly took the inside line. He then, not so smartly, couldn’t contain his glee for the last 10m, as the latest example of Roglificiation ensued in the most cruel way yet.
“I don’t know what to say,” Eurosport pundit and Roglič’s former Visma teammate Nathan Van Hooydonck said after the finish about Van Eetvelt’s grand tour stage-denying mistake.
“He’s such a young, talented rider, and he raised his arm and thought, ‘oh no, I still have to throw my bike!’ It’s a rookie mistake – and not so smart. You always have to sprint to the finish line.”
‘Drat!’
Not that Roglič, who moves into the red leader’s jersey, will complain about his young rival’s case of overexuberance.
“The team worked harder than myself. Winning wasn’t the main objective of today, but when you see the guys working hard in this heat, I’m happy to finish it off,” the typically nonchalant Slovenian said after Vuelta stage win No. 13 of his career.
However, when asked if he went into the stage confident in his abilities, following the back injury that scuppered his Tour de France, and therefore ordered his Red Bull-Bora team to the front, a clearly bemused Roglič said: “No, not really – nobody asked me! If they asked me, I wouldn’t say for them to go so hard and control it for the victory, but I had no option.”
For poor Lennert Van Eetvelt, it seems Roglič had no choice but to mug the prematurely celebrating Belgian at the line, too.
Don’t worry Lenny, judging by your ride today, I’m sure your time will come at this Vuelta.
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Me too (there's a little bit of discussion in the forum).
Thanks, hadn't seen that - Well, this sounds positive
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