The
3rd stage of the Vuelta left Cangas de Onis this afternoon at
1:30 in bad weather (rain and intermittent sunny spells) With
154 km to cover, including 2 category 3 climb.
The stage is taylor made for a sprinters' finale, despite the
mountains.
The
question of the day was always which of the major sprinters
would prevail--and the money was on Alessandro Petacchi (Fassa
Bortolo). Just between the Giro D'Italia and the Tour De France
this year he's taken 10 victories, putting him in the same league
as legends Eddie Merckx, Freddy Maertens, and Mario Cipollini
Action
came early in the race at the Alto de Rebollala, where the first
mountain points were disputed, with Perez (Cofidis), Cardena
(Labarca), Millar (Cofidis) and Piepoli (Ibanesto) marking the
points.
Four
riders--Angel Vicioso (Once), Unai Etxebarria (Euskaltel), Constantino
Zaballa (Lemùe) and Beat Zberg (Rabobank) attacked to
mark the first sprint points. The group continued to distance
itself from the peloton. With 100 km remaining the group held
a 3 minute lead; to assure a victory they neede a 5 minute advance
on the peloton. With 90 km to go they had increased the lead
to 3'07", and to 3'20" at the 80km mark.
The
writing was on the wall by the time they reached the village
of Treceno, though, as the breakaway group's distance shrunk
to just over 3 minutes. Vicioso & Co. still looked fresh,
but their lead was shrinking inexorably as they wound their
way toward the 2nd category climb of the day, the Alto de Montana.
The
escape group continued to score in all points categories, but
were caught just after the mountains, with a little over 20
km to remaining.
The
peloton had been maintaining speeds of over 65 km/h, but were
constrained to ride more cautiously as the rain set in again.
There were several crashes, one involving 7 riders, but none
were serious. And there were some brief escapes in the last
20 km, notably Julich (Team Telocom), Navas (Relax-Fuenlabra),
Montgomery (Fassa Bortolo) and De La Fuente (Saecp), but all
were reigned back in by the peloton.
Serious
jockeying for team position ensued. Despite massive efforts
by Fassa Bortolo, Petacchi could not get in a great posotion;
through it all Zabel stayed right on his wheel. Euskaltel were
in front. Then at the "Flame Rouge" Lombardi attacked
strongly and held briefly before a massive sprint unfolded.
When it counted most, with about 50 meters remaining, Petacchi
shot out with sureness and apparent ease, leaving Zabel behind
by a good 2 bike lengths. Boonin, Dean and Lombardi followed
close behind to round out the top 5.
In
his present form, which has stayed with him all season, Petacchi
seems invincible...and in the Vuelta 2003 there remain at least
a half a dozen sprint finishes wherein he can shine. It seems
to be less a question of "Will he win again?" than
"Which records will he break this year?"...
INFOS:
Abandon of David Plazza BIANCHI,
third rider to abandon so far (due to a toothache).