For a few minutes, through the dense fog near the top of the iconic Alto de l’Angliru, it looked like that was all she wrote for Sepp Kuss’s red jersey challenge at the Vuelta a España.
By that point, with just under two savage kilometres to go to the finish, Jumbo-Visma’s three robotic race destroyers, Jonas Vingegaard, Primož Roglič, and Kuss, the top three on GC and top three on the road, were once again in the process of systematically, and nonchalantly, dismantling the Vuelta.
Behind those three at the front, thanks to the impetus of a rampant Bahrain-Victorious, teeing up Mikel Landa for much of the climb, their rivals were strewn across the mountain.
Enric Mas? Dropped. Cian Uijtdebroeks? Gone. Juan Ayuso? Completely popped and suffering, a victim of his own UAE Team Emirates squad’s questionable tactics earlier in the day. Landa himself? Dropped.
But with an anti-climactic procession on the cards, the one rider of the robotic leading trio who most resembles a real boy, Kuss, lost the wheel.
The American communicated the gap through the radio to his teammates, but Roglič, it seemed, only responded by accelerating (after the stage, the Slovenian said he just continued to “ride at my own pace”).
At that moment, the red jersey appeared to be slipping off Kuss’s shoulders, thanks to the efforts of two teammates who continued to ride hard, despite only Mikel Landa – a distant, distant threat on GC – being anywhere near the stratosphere of the turbo charged Jumbo trio.
Up ahead, Roglič won a thrilling (note the sarcasm) uncontested sprint against Vingegaard, while a flailing, floundering Kuss battled hard to sprint past Landa, a move which ensured that the American kept hold of the GC lead, just, by eight seconds.
For a team that secured their second 1-2-3 on a crucial mountain stage in a week, and who cemented their grip on the entire podium, today’s stage only underlined the chaos swirling around Jumbo-Visma at this Vuelta.
In the GCN studio, a clearly baffled, and somewhat irate, Sean Kelly railed against the team’s decision – for no apparent reason – to not wait for Kuss when he began to suffer, contrasting it with the years of dedication and loyalty the American has offered Roglič and Vingegaard during his career.
Dan Lloyd, meanwhile, argued – like Tom Danielson earlier today – that a Vuelta win for Kuss would mean so much more to the American than his two more illustrious teammates, while buying a few more years of devoted service in the process.
Kelly and Lloyd’s perplexed reactions were echoed throughout social media, which appears to firmly be in Camp Kuss, when it comes to the great, unnecessary Jumbo-Visma civil war.
Meanwhile, the messaging from inside the Jumbo-Visma camp was just as confused.
“I want my shot, but I’m happy to work for them when called on,” Kuss admitted after the stage, without a single hint that he recognised the contradiction evident in that single sentence.
Roglič and Vingegaard, meanwhile, claimed that they “want” Kuss to win the Vuelta, though the Slovenian appeared to limit his support to simply encouraging his American teammate to “keep fighting and believing that he can make it”.
“I’m here to race and to do my best, and in the end the best will win,” Roglič concluded.
The best may well win on Sunday in Madrid. However, it seems as if Jumbo-Visma – arguably one of the most ominously dominant teams cycling has seen in years, capable of bending races, including this one, to their will – are letting an easy PR victory slip through their grasp.
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Who do you think you are? Boatsy?
Ah Boatsy. Those were more innocent days.
Yeah. Cyclists. And their thousands of deaths, hundred thousands of injured, plus the many many illnesses from their pollution, their noise... oh wait...
What if these "quiet please" signs are placed by Shimano fanboys, dreaming of putting an end on Campy freehubs?
I wouldn't say Campag freehubs are noisy. I rode Zondas for many years, and now have a set of Fulcrum Rapid Red 3 on the commuter/ gravel bike. Both are quieter than the freehubs on the Prime wheels on the No.1 bike and the Hunt wheels previously on my winter bike.
I would accept that Shimano hubs are incredibly (almost dangerously) quiet.
Saw this warning sign the other day, which I think has been placed there out of genuine concern. There's an official red triangle 14% slope traffic sign just after it, so I'm not sure the duplication is really needed?
It's in case folks like me visit - I have no idea what a "14% slope" is!
As a cyclist??? A likely story.
As a fen dweller there a some things we know nothing about, hills being one of them.When I tried to do some semi-serious training a few years ago, the best I could manage for "hill repeats" was riding back and forth on a bridge over the A16.
We are however experts on wind, subsidence and potholes
I remember driving round that way and seeing a sign for Hill Farm. It was essentially raised at about the height of a speed bump.
I think SimoninSpalding lives in Holland though...
EDIT - apologies, they've answered themselves!
Thanks, unfortunately not the cycling utopia that includes and surrounds Amsterdam!
With most of my loops being lumpy to say the least. I had never experienced a block headwind everywhere I turned until I did a big cycle in East Anglia.
I wondered if this really was an accident blackspot and to be fair, it looks like it might be. In a five year period, there were three serious injuries to cyclists at this location, with no other vehicle involved. As you say, probably placed due to genuine concern.
https://bikedata.cyclestreets.net/collisions/#14.62/51.00978/-1.26981
I think you're looking at Hampshire there, where ther's another Exton village. The story was about Exton in Rutland 😉
Lol, just seen the duplication of the HGV warning. Now that is something! But I'm sure they've had HGV's ignoring the official sign, so in desperation put up another one.
I used to holiday at a cottage on a single track road which was 'no motorised traffic' access only and also had massive 'unsuitable for HGVs do not follow sat nav' signs. Didn't stop an HGV knocking the garden wall down or an idiot in a 4x4 trying the steep slope in the snow and getting wedged across the road between two stone walls!
I reckon this pothole should win a prize
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/sep/12/sinkhole-size-of-a-car-appears-on-street-in-south-east-london
It's a mere divot, compared to the Grand Canyons of Yorkshire that we have to deal with. Round here, the climbs out of the potholes have their own strava segments.
We can't compete on the international stage yet though.
I thought we'd be world-beating like with our NHS (not NHS) Covid app.
That was certainly worthy of international note, but maybe not for its primary purpose.
For holes in the ground it's hard to see anyone beating the Central Americans.
Well, it's not like we've got any use for the £37 billion - it was just sat around, not being spent.
We've been swimming in a cenote - it's bizarre how Yucatán Peninsula doesn't have any rivers that aren't underground.
Ah - that explains it then. The water run-off has been scared off the roads by cyclists. That's why there aren't so many of these in the UK...
What's interesting is that this area was an "early civilisation" with massive population and great social developments, yet essentially no surface water (and poor soils, to boot). True - they don't seem to have started the civilisation game in the region.
This stuff is always interesting, like how we may have had "cathedrals" before permanent houses and pots for thousands of years in some places before agriculture (presumably Dashi was popular even then).
The various central american civilisations managed to build roads, but hadn't invented the wheel - the terrain makes wheels not very useful, so they didn't bother. (They did actually invent wheels, but just used them on kids toys)
No wheels? Not useful? Nonsense! I'd have thought you could easily set some decent times on a sacbe with a group of
stravajaguar warriors (and invented "gravel"); and while it might not have suited carts the Andean civilisations clearly failed to realise they were sitting on a climbing goldmine.If they'd only had recumbents they could have put the Conquistador cavalry to flight.
Who needs wheels when you have Llammas!
"Greenwich council are investigating"
Surely "looking into it".
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