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Tour d’Espagne – Vuelta 2023 : Parcours, dates, étapes, engagés, classements
Tour d’Espagne – Le Grand Départ de la Vuelta 2023 (26 août – 17 septembre) a lieu cette année depuis Barcelone à l’occasion d’un contre-la-montre par équipes. Au terme d’un parcours de 21 étapes qui s’achèvera à Madrid, les coureurs engagés auront parcouru quelque 3.153,8 kilomètres, 7 étapes de montagne, 6 étapes accidentées, 2 étapes de plaine avec arrivées au sommet, 4 étapes de plaine, un chrono individuel et bénéficieront de deux journées de repos. Et c’est un profil montagneux qui attend les participants avec au programme notamment le Coll de Ordino, le Pico del Buitre, l’Aubisque, le Col du Tourmalet à 2.115 mètres d’altitude, le Puerto de Larrau , celui de Belagua, sans oublier la célèbre montée de l’Angliru.
L’an passé, c’est Remco Evenepoel (Soudal – Quick Step) qui s’imposait à Madrid et signait ainsi sa toute première victoire sur un Grand Tour. Au terme des 21 étapes de course le Belge l’emportait devant les espagnols Enric Mas (Movistar Team) et Juan Ayuso (UAE Team Emirates) tandis que le premier tricolore au classement général final, Thibaut Pinot (Groupama-FDJ), futur retraité, prenait une honorable 17e place ( + 46 minutes ).
La liste des coureurs engagés participants : cliquer ici Les abandons de la course : cliquer ici Les favoris et outsiders : cliquer ici ( à venir ) Les réactions des coureurs à l’arrivée de chaque étape : cliquer ici Vidéo résumé de chacune des étapes : cliquer ici TV, les horaires de diffusion : cliquer ici
Les dernières actualités de la Vuelta 2023 : cliquer ici Consulter les archives du Tour d’Espagne : cliquer ici
Quelles sont les dates des étapes du Tour d’Espagne 2023 ?
Samedi 26 août 2023 – Etape 1 | Barcelone – Barcelone (14,8 km CLM par équipes) Ordre et horaires des départs des équipes – Classement de l’étape – Classement général et classements distinctifs – VAINQUEUR : Team dsm – firmenich. La première étape du Tour d’Espagne disputée sous forme d’un contre-la-montre par équipes dans les rues de Barcelone a été remportée par la formation de Romain Bardet, l’équipe dsm – firmenich. Et c’est le tout jeune Lorenzo Milesi (21 ans) qui a endossé le premier maillot rouge de leader de cette 78e Vuelta.
Dimanche 27 août 2023 – Etape 2 | Mataro – Barcelone (182 km) Classement de l’étape – Classement général et classements distinctifs – VAINQUEUR : Andreas KRON. C’est une nouvelle étape pluvieuse qu’ont disputée les coureurs avec au final la victoire du coureur de l’équipe Lotto Dstny. Le maillot rouge de leader a changé d’épaules au profit du jeune Andrea Piccolo (EF Education-EasyPost) âgé de 22 ans. De nombreuses chutes ont eu lieu à nouveau comme la veille avec notamment celle de Primoz Roglic (Jumbo-Visma).
Lundi 28 août 2023 – Etape 3 | Suria – Arinsal Andorra (158,5 km) Classement de l’étape – Classement général et classements distinctifs – VAINQUEUR : Remco EVENEPOEL . A l’occasion de la toute première étape de montagne ce sont bien les leaders et favoris qui se sont joués la victoire d’étape et le maillot rouge de leader. Et c’est le Belge de l’équipe Soudal – Quick Step qui a raflé la double mise, bien que ce dernier a chuté une fois la ligne d’arrivée franchie.
Mardi 29 août 2023 – Etape 4 |Andorra La Vella – Tarragona (185 km) Classement de l’étape – Classement général et classements distinctifs – VAINQUEUR : Kaden GROVES . En toute logique, l’étape du jour s’est jouée au sprint et c’est l’Australien Kaden Groves (Alpecin – Deceuninck) qui s’est avéré être le plus rapide à Tarragone. Fort d’une 12e place à l’arrivée Remco Evenepoel (Soudal – Quick Step) a conservé sa tunique de leader.
Mercredi 30 août 2023 – Etape 5 | Morella – Burriana (186,5 km) Classement de l’étape – Classement général et classements distinctifs – VAINQUEUR : Kaden GROVES . Comme la veille, c’est l’Australien qui l’a emporté au sprint. Le coureur de l’équipe Alpecin-Deceuninck signe ainsi un second succès d’étape consécutif.
Jeudi 31 août 2023 – Etape 6 | La Vall d’Uixo – Observatoire de Javalambre (183,5 km) Classement de l’étape – Classement général et classements distinctifs – VAINQUEUR : Sepp KUSS Cette seconde étape en montagne a tenu toutes ses promesses avec un leader qui perd légèrement pied, attaqué par les Jumbo-Visma, tandis que le maillot rouge est désormais porté par un Français, à savoir Lenny Martinez (Groupama – FDJ) âgé de 20 ans.
Vendredi 1er septembre 2023 – Etape 7 | Utiel – Oliva (201 km) Classement de l’étape – Classement général et classements distinctifs – VAINQUEUR : SOUPE Geoffrey Victoire tricolore sur les routes du Tour d’Espagne avec le succès au sprint du coureur de l’équipe TotalEnergies qui a surpris tous les observateurs. Le coureur âgé de 35 ans est récompensé par la plus belle de ses victoires. Une juste récompense pour ces années de sacrifice. Lenny Martinez est toujours le leader de la course.
Samedi 2 septembre 2023 – Etape 8 | Denia – Xorret de Cati. Costa Blanca Interior (165 km) Classement de l’étape – Classement général et classements distinctifs – VAINQUEUR :
Dimanche 3 septembre 2023 – Etape 9 | Cartagena – Collado de la Cruz de Carravaca (184,5 km) Classement de l’étape – Classement général et classements distinctifs – VAINQUEUR :
1ère journée de repos le lundi 4 septembre à Valladolid
Mardi 5 septembre 2023 – Etape 10 | Valladolid – Valladolid (25,8 km CLM ind.) Classement de l’étape – Classement général et classements distinctifs – VAINQUEUR :
Mercredi 6 septembre 2023 – Etape 11 | Lerma – La Laguna Negra. Vinuesa (163,5 km) Classement de l’étape – Classement général et classements distinctifs – VAINQUEUR :
Jeudi 7 septembre 2023 – Etape 12 | Olvega – Zaragova (151 km) Classement de l’étape – Classement général et classements distinctifs – VAINQUEUR :
Vendredi 8 septembre 2023 – Etape 13 | Formigal. Huesca La Magia – Col du Tourmalet (135 km) Classement de l’étape – Classement général et classements distinctifs – VAINQUEUR :
Samedi 9 septembre 2023 – Etape 14 | Sauveterre-de-Béarn – Larra-Belagua (156,5 km) Classement de l’étape – Classement général et classements distinctifs – VAINQUEUR :
Dimanche 10 septembre 2023 – Etape 15 | Pamplona – Lekunberri (158,5 km) Classement de l’étape – Classement général et classements distinctifs – VAINQUEUR :
2e journée de repos le lundi 11 septembre à Santander
Mardi 12 septembre 2023 – Etape 16 | Liencres Playa – Bejes (120,5 km) Classement de l’étape – Classement général et classements distinctifs – VAINQUEUR :
Mercredi 13 septembre 2023 – Etape 17 | Ribadesella / Ribeseya – Altu de l’Angliru (124,5 km) Classement de l’étape – Classement général et classements distinctifs – VAINQUEUR :
Jeudi 14 septembre 2023 – Etape 18 | Pola de Allande – La Cruz de Linares (179 km) Classement de l’étape – Classement général et classements distinctifs – VAINQUEUR :
Vendredi 15 septembre 2023 – Etape 19 | La Baneza – Iscar (177,5 km) Classement de l’étape – Classement général et classements distinctifs – VAINQUEUR :
Samedi 16 septembre 2023 – Etape 20 | Manzanares el Real – Guadarrama (208 km) Classement de l’étape – Classement général et classements distinctifs – VAINQUEUR :
Dimanche 17 septembre 2023 – Etape 21 | Hipodromo de la Zarzuela – Madrid (101,5 km) Classement de l’étape – Classement général final et classements distinctifs – VAINQUEUR :
Quels sont les profils des étapes de la Vuelta 2023 ?
La carte du parcours du Tour d’Espagne 2023
Qui sont les favoris du Tour d’Espagne 2023 ?
*** Jonas Vingegaard , Primoz Roglic , Remco Evenepoel ** Joao Almeida , Enric Mas , Juan Ayuso, Aleksandr Vlasov , Geraint Thomas , Mikel Landa * Santiago Buitrago, Damiano Caruso, Thymen Arensman, Lennard Kämna , Hugh Carthy, Eddie Dunbar, Wilco Kelderman, Romain Bardet
Quelles sont les équipes et les coureurs engagés participants ?
La liste des coureurs et des équipes est mise à jour au fur et à mesure que les formations communiquent les noms de leurs partants présents au départ. 22 équipes de 8 coureurs sont présentes au départ de Barcelone.
Soudal – Quick Step 🟢 1 🇧🇪 EVENEPOEL Remco 2 🇮🇹 BAGIOLI Andrea – AB ET.6 3 🇮🇹 CATTANEO Mattia 4 🇨🇿 HIRT Jan 5 🇬🇧 KNOX James 6 🇩🇰 PEDERSEN Casper 7 🇧🇪 SERRY Pieter 8 🇧🇪 VERVAEKE Louis
UAE Team Emirates 🟢 11 🇪🇸 AYUSO Juan 12 🇵🇹 ALMEIDA Joao 13 🇵🇹 OLIVEIRA Rui 14 🇳🇿 FISHER-BLACK Finn 15 🇨🇴 MOLANO Juan Sebastian 16 🇸🇮 NOVAK Domen 17 🇪🇸 SOLER Marc 18 🇦🇺 VINE Jay – AB ET.6
Jumbo-Visma 🟢 21 🇸🇮 ROGLIC Primoz 22 🇳🇱 GESINK Robert 23 🇳🇱 KELDERMAN Wilco 24 🇺🇸 KUSS Sepp 25 🇸🇮 TRATNIK Jan 26 🇭🇺 VALTER Attila 27 🇳🇱 VAN BAARLE Dylan 28 🇩🇰 VINGEGAARD Jonas
INEOS Grenadiers 🟢 31 🇬🇧 THOMAS Geraint 32 🇳🇱 ARENSMAN Thymen – AB ET.7 33 🇨🇴 BERNAL Egan 34 🇪🇸 CASTROVIEJO Jonathan 35 🇧🇪 DE PLUS Laurens AB ET.1 36 🇮🇹 GANNA Filippo 37 🇪🇸 FRAILE Omar 38 🇩🇪 HEIDUK Kim
Bahrain – Victorious 🟢 41 🇨🇴 BUITRAGO Santiago 42 🇮🇹 CARUSO Damiano 43 🇸🇮 GOVEKAR Matevz 44 🇵🇱 GRADEK Kamil 45 🇪🇸 LANDA Mikel 46 🇳🇱 POELS Wout 47 🇩🇪 SUTTERLIN Jasha 48 🇮🇹 TIBERI Antonio
Lidl – Trek 🟢 51 🇪🇸 LOPEZ Juan Pedro 52 🇫🇷 BERNARD Julien 53 🇫🇷 ELISSONDE Kenny 54 🇪🇷 GHEBREIGZABHIER Amanuel 55 🇳🇱 MOLLEMA Bauke 56 🇮🇹 MOSCA Jacopo 57 🇧🇪 THEUNS Edward 58 🇧🇪 VERGAERDE Otto
Groupama – FDJ 🟢 61 🇫🇷 MOLARD Rudy 62 🇫🇷 MARTINEZ Lenny 63 🇬🇧 ASKEY Lewis 64 🇫🇷 DAVY Clément 65 🇮🇹 GERMANI Lorenzo 66 🇫🇷 GREGOIRE Romain 67 🇦🇺 STORER Michael 68 🇬🇧 WATSON Samuel
BORA – hansgrohe 🟢 71 🇷🇺 VLASOV Aleksandr 72 🇩🇪 DENZ Nico 73 🇩🇪 BUCHMANN Emanuel 74 🇨🇴 HIGUITA Sergio 75 🇩🇪 KAMNA Lennard 76 🇩🇪 KOCH Jonas 77 🇧🇪 UIJTDEBROEKS Cian 78 🇩🇪 ZWIEHOFF Ben
Alpecin-Deceuninck 🟢 81 🇦🇺 GROVES Kaden 82 🇩🇪 BALLERSTEDT Maurice 83 🇦🇹 BAYER Tobias 84 🇳🇿 GAZE Samuel 85 🇧🇪 GHYS Robbe 86 🇧🇪 JANSSENS Jimmy 87 🇩🇪 OSBORNE Jason 88 🇧🇪 PLANCKAERT Edward
Lotto Dstny 🟢 91 🇧🇪 DE GENDT Thomas 92 🇦🇺 DRIZNERS Jarrad 93 🇧🇪 GRIGNARD Sébastien 94 🇩🇰 KRON Andreas 95 🇧🇪 MENTEN Milan 96 🇧🇪 MONIQUET Sylvain 97 🇨🇴 SEPULVEDA Eduardo 98 🇧🇪 VAN EETVELT Lennert
EF Education-EasyPost 🟢 101 🇬🇧 CARTHY Hugh 102 🇨🇭 BISSEGGER Stefan 103 🇪🇨 CAICEDO Jonathan Klever 104 🇨🇴 CAMARGO Diego Andres 105 🇮🇹 PICCOLO Andrea 106 🇺🇸 QUINN Sean 107 🇳🇱 VAN DEN BERG Marijn 108 🇳🇱 VAN DEN BERG Julius
AG2R Citroën Team 🟢 111 🇫🇷 CHEREL Mikael 112 🇫🇷 BOUCHARD Geoffrey 113 🇫🇷 GODON Dorian 114 🇫🇷 LAPEIRA Paul 115 🇫🇷 TOUZE Damien 116 🇮🇹 VENDRAME Andrea 117 🇺🇸 WARBASSE Larry 118 🇫🇷 PRODHOMME Nicolas
Team Jayco AlUla 🟢 121 🇮🇪 DUNBAR Eddie – AB. ET.5 122 🇩🇪 ENGELHARDT Felix 123 🇪🇹 BERHE Welay Hagos 124 🇦🇺 HEPBURN Michael – AB ET.6 125 🇳🇱 MAAS Jan 126 🇦🇺 SCOTSON Callum 127 🇮🇹 SOBRERO Matteo 128 🇮🇹 ZANA Filippo – AB ET.5
Intermarché – Circus – Wanty 🟢 131 🇵🇹 COSTA Rui 132 🇧🇪 GOOSSENS Kobe – NP ET.5 133 🇧🇪 HERREGODTS Rune 134 🇩🇰 JOHANSEN Julius 135 🇫🇷 PAGE Hugo 136 🇪🇪 TAARAMAE Rein 137 🇮🇹 PETILLI Simone 138 🇳🇱 VAN POPPEL Boy
Movistar Team 🟢 141 🇪🇸 MAS Enric 142 🇪🇸 ARCAS Jorge 143 🇵🇹 GUERREIRO Ruben – NP ET.5 144 🇪🇸 ERVITI Imanol 145 🇪🇸 GARCIA CORTINA Ivan 146 🇪🇸 LAZKANO Oier 147 🇵🇹 OLIVEIRA Nelson 148 🇨🇴 RUBIO Einer Augusto
Cofidis 🟢 151 🇪🇸 HERRADA Jesus 152 🇮🇹 CIMOLAI Davide 153 🇫🇷 BIDARD François 154 🇵🇹 CARVALHO Andre 155 🇫🇷 COQUARD Bryan – NP ET.5 156 🇪🇸 FERNANDEZ Ruben 157 🇪🇸 HERRADA José 158 🇫🇷 ROCHAS Rémy
Team dsm – firmenich 🟢 161 🇫🇷 BARDET Romain 162 🇫🇷 COMBAUD Romain 163 🇮🇹 DAINESE Alberto 164 🇬🇧 FLYNN Sean 165 🇦🇺 HAMILTON Chris 166 🇮🇹 MILESI Lorenzo – NP ET.6 167 🇬🇧 ONLEY Oscar – AB ET.2 168 🇬🇧 POOLE Max
Team Arkéa Samsic 🟢 171 🇫🇷 VAUQUELIN Kévin 172 🇫🇷 GESBERT Élie 173 🇫🇷 HOFSTETTER Hugo 174 🇫🇷 LE BERRE Mathis 175 🇫🇷 LEDANOIS Kévin 176 🇵🇱 OWSIAN Lukasz 177 🇱🇺 RIES Michel 178 🇪🇸 RODRIGUEZ Cristian
TotalEnergies 🟢 181 🇧🇪 CRAS Steff 182 🇫🇷 BONNET Thomas 183 🇫🇷 DOUBEY Fabien 184 🇫🇷 JOUSSEAUME Alan 185 🇫🇷 LATOUR Pierre 186 🇫🇷 OURSELIN Paul 187 🇫🇷 SOUPE Geoffrey 188 🇧🇪 VAN GESTEL Dries
Astana Qazaqstan Team 🟢 191 🇮🇹 BATTISTELLA Samuele 192 🇪🇸 DE LA CRUZ David 193 🇪🇸 SANCHEZ Luis Leon 194 🇪🇸 ROMO Javier 195 🇺🇸 DOMBROWSKI Joe 196 🇰🇿 PRONSKIY Vadim 197 🇮🇹 FELLINE Fabio 198 🇰🇿 ZEITS Andrey
Burgos-BH 🟢 201 🇪🇸 DIAZ José Manuel 202 🇫🇷 BARTHE Cyril 203 🇳🇱 BOL Jetse 204 🇪🇸 EZQUERRA Jesus 205 🇺🇾 FAGUNDEZ Eric Antonio 206 🇪🇸 NAVARRO Daniel 207 🇪🇸 OKAMIKA Ander 208 🇪🇸 SANCHEZ Pelayo
Caja Rural – Seguros RGA 🟢 211 🇻🇪 AULAR Orluis 212 🇪🇸 BALDERSTONE Abel 213 🇪🇸 BARCELO Fernando 214 🇪🇸 BARRENETXEA Jon 215 🇪🇨 CEPEDA Jefferson Alveiro 216 🇪🇸 GONZALEZ David 217 🇪🇸 NICOLAU Joel 218 🇨🇿 SCHLEGEL Michal
Légendes : ET : étape / AB : abandon / NP : non partant
Quel est le palmarès des 10 dernières éditions ?
2022 – EVENEPOEL Remco – MAS Enric – AYUSO Juan 2021 – ROGLIC Primoz – MAS Enric – HAIG Jack 2020 – ROGLIC Primoz – CARAPAZ Richard – CARTHY Hugh 2019 – ROGLIC Primoz – VALVERDE Alejandro – POGACAR Tadej 2018 – YATES Simon – MAS Enric – LOPEZ Miguel Angel 2017 – FROOME Chris – NIBALI Vincenzo – ZAKARIN Ilnur 2016 – QUINTANA Nairo – FROOME Chris – CHAVES Esteban 2015 – ARU Fabio – RODRIGUEZ Joaquim – MAJKA Rafal 2014 – CONTADOR Alberto – FROOME Chris – VALVERDE Alejandro 2013 – HORNER Chris – NIBALI Vincenzo – VALVERDE Alejandro
Vidéo du parcours 2023
Toutes les informations de la 78e édition
Le site officiel de l’organisateur de la course : www.lavuelta.es/fr
Suivre la course sur les réseaux sociaux Facebook Twitter Instagram TikTok Youtube Dailymotion Twitch
Tout savoir du Tour d’Espagne (Vuelta)
Le Tour d’Espagne, également connu sous le nom de Vuelta a España, est l’un des trois Grands Tours de la saison cycliste sur route, aux côtés du Tour de France et du Giro d’Italia. Cette épreuve de renommée mondiale se déroule chaque année en Espagne et constitue un défi sportif majeur pour les coureurs professionnels. Le Tour d’Espagne de cette année débute le samedi 26 août et promet des moments de compétition intense sur un parcours varié à travers le pays. Un parcours exigeant : Le parcours du Tour d’Espagne varie chaque année, offrant aux coureurs des défis diversifiés. Il comprend généralement des étapes de montagne redoutables à travers les Pyrénées et les montagnes espagnoles, ainsi que des étapes de plaine et de contre-la-montre. Les célèbres montées comme l’Angliru, le Tourmalet espagnol, et d’autres cols emblématiques mettent à l’épreuve la résistance et les compétences des coureurs. Les vainqueurs et l’historique : Le Tour d’Espagne a une longue histoire, ayant été inauguré en 1935. Depuis lors, de nombreux cyclistes de renom ont remporté cette course prestigieuse. Parmi les vainqueurs notables figurent des légendes du cyclisme telles que Bernard Hinault, Miguel Indurain, Eddy Merckx, Alberto Contador et bien d’autres. Chaque année, des équipes du monde entier et des coureurs de renom s’affrontent pour remporter le maillot rouge, symbole du leader de la Vuelta. L’impact régional et international : Le Tour d’Espagne est un événement majeur qui attire l’attention des fans de cyclisme à travers le monde. Il met en valeur la diversité géographique et culturelle de l’Espagne, avec des étapes traversant des villes historiques, des régions montagneuses et des paysages côtiers. Le Tour d’Espagne (Vuelta a España) est une compétition cycliste prestigieuse qui allie les défis sportifs à la beauté des paysages espagnols. Les coureurs et les spectateurs vivent des moments inoubliables de compétition et de passion à chaque édition de cette grande course cycliste internationale.
Lire aussi : Toute l’actualité du cyclisme sur route 2023
3 Commentaires
bonjour LAURENT c est tu a quelle date il passe en ANDORRE MERCI
Les étapes sont en elles-mêmes fort intéressantes, avec de nombreuses étapes de montagne ou arrivées au sommet qui donneront un intérêt assez permanent, comme souvent avec la vuelta… Mais quel tracé !… Habituel et très malheureux carton rouge pour la multiplication des transferts !… Cette vuelta a perdu sa boussole et file dans tous les sens !… Vagabonds sur le chemin des aventures, en Andorre au 3é jour mais attirés par le sud, les voici qui reviennent en Pyrénées, au Tourmalet, dix jours plus tard !… Et puis, odieux mais magnifiques, ils retrouvent le nord, la route de Saint-Jacques, le coup de pompe de l’Angliru, l’amour des choses éternelles, celui des vieux morts et des anciens dieux, etc… Que la nature leur pardonne encore une fois leur perte de repères et de leurs errances….
Bonjour, Oui la Vuelta est un des trois grands Tours donc à la victoire prestigieuse, mais il y a une erreur, … Miguel Indurain ne l’a jamais gagnée. Je tenais à le signaler, c’est d’autant plus étonnant qu’il s’agit d’un grand champion.
Très cordialement. Frédéric Lesueur
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Sepp Kuss captured the general classification of the 2013 Vuelta a España spearheading a dominant performance for Jumbo-Visma at the last Grand Tour of the men's road cycling season.
With the victory, Kuss became the first American rider to win a Grand Tour event since Chris Horner won the 2013 Vuelta a España.
The race started in Barcelona with a team time trial on 26 August, and the final stage came to an exciting conclusion in the Spanish capital Madrid on 17 September.
Check out the full results after each stage and the general classification standings right here.
Vuelta a España 2023: Preview, full schedule and how to watch live
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Sunday 17 September: Stage 21- Hipódromo de la Zarzuela - Madrid, Paisaje de la Luz, 101.5km
Kaden Groves (Alpecin-Deceuninck) brought the curtain down on the 2023 Vuelta a España in an exciting sprint finish winning the final stage of the Spanish Grand Tour.
The Australian demonstrated his superior pace negating defending champion Remco Evenepoel’s attack in a bunch sprint.
While the day belonged to Groves, Sepp Kuss (Jumbo-Visma) sealed the overall title by finishing in the peloton. In the process, Kuss completed the clean sweep of Gran Tours for his team in one season adding to Primoz Roglic's victory in the Giro d'Italia and Jonas Vingegaard's victory in the Tour de France.
2023 Vuelta a España: Stage 21 Results - Sunday 17 September
Hipódromo de la zarzuela - madrid, paisaje de la luz, 101.5km.
- Kaden Groves (AUS, Alpecin-Deceuninck) 02h24' 13''
- Filippo Ganna (ITA, INEOS Grenadiers) +0"
- Nico Denz (GER, Bora-Hansgrohe) +0"
- Hugo Page (FRA, Intermarche-Circus-Wanty) +0"
- Ivan Garcia Cortina (ESP, Movistar Team) +0"
- Rui Costa (POR, Intermarche-Circus-Wanty) +0"
- Marijn van den Berg (NED, EF Education-EasyPost) +0"
- Remco Evenepoel (BEL, Soudal Quick-Step) +0"
- Dries Van Gestel (BEL, TotalEnergies) +0"
- Lennard Kamna (GER, Bora-Hansgrohe) +0"
2023 Vuelta a España: General Classification standings after Stage 21
- Sepp Kuss (USA, Jumbo-Visma) 76h48'21"
- Jonas Vingegaard (DEN, Jumbo-Visma) +00'17"
- Primož Roglič (SLO, Jumbo-Visma) +01'08"
- Juan Ayuso (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +03’25’’
- Mikel Landa (ESP, Bahrain - Victorious) +03'44"
- Enric Mas (ESP, Movistar Team) +04'14"
- Aleksandr Vlasov (Bora-Hansgrohe) +08'06"
- Cian Uijtdebroeks (BEL, Bora-Hansgrohe) +08'13"
- João Almeida (POR, UAE Team Emirates) +10'08"
- Santiago Buitrago (COL, Bahrain - Victorious) +11'51"
Saturday 16 September: Stage 20 - Manzanares El Real - Guadarrama, 208km
Dutch rider Wout Poels fought off a late challenge from defending champion Remco Evenepoel to claim his maiden stage victory at Vuelta a España in a photo finish.
Poels pulled away from a five-rider lead group with Evenepoel responding late with the Dutchman winning the penultimate stage by the narrowest of margins.
Race leader Sepp Kuss, guaranteed the general classification victory, crossed the line alongside Jumbo-Visma teammates Jonas Vingegaard and Primož Roglič .
It ensured that on Sunday's final stage in Madrid, Kuss will become the first American rider to win a Grand Tour event since Chris Horner won the 2013 Vuelta a España.
2023 Vuelta a España: Stage 20 Results - Saturday 16 September
Manzanares el real - guadarrama, 208km.
- Wout Poels (NED, Bahrain - Victorious) 4h59’29’’
- Pelayo Sánchez (ESP, Burgos-BH) +0"
- Lennert Van Eetvelt (BEL, Lotto Dstny) +0"
- Marc Soler (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +00’04’’
- Rui Costa (POR, Intermarche-Circus-Wanty) +00'26"
- Antonio Tiberi (ITA, Bahrain - Victorious) +00'26"
- Lennard Kämna (GER, Bora-Hansgrohe) +00'26"
- Romain Bardet (FRA, Team Dsm-Firmenich) +00'26"
- Einer Augusto Rubio Reyes (COL, Movistar Team) +00'26"
2023 Vuelta a España: General Classification standings after Stage 20
- Sepp Kuss (USA, Jumbo-Visma) 74h23'42"
- Juan Ayuso (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +03’44
- Mikel Landa (ESP, Bahrain - Victorious) +04'00"
- Aleksandr Vlasov (Bora-Hansgrohe) +08'19"
- Cian Uijtdebroeks (BEL, Bora-Hansgrohe) +08'26"
- Santiago Buitrago (COL, Bahrain - Victorious) +12'04"
Friday 15 September: Stage 19 - La Bañeza - Íscar, 177.1km
After six stages in the mountains, the sprinters finally got a chance to fight for the stage win.
A big crash a kilometer from the finish prevented the points classification leader Kaden Groves from going for the stage win. Intead, Alberto Dainese took advantage of the chaos to take his first individual stage of La Vuelta.
Filippo Ganna finished second, and Marijn van den Berg took third place on the stage.
Sepp Kuss held on to the red leader's jersey, finishing within the peloton. Teammate Jonas Vingegaard sits in second place, 17 seconds behind the American.
2023 Vuelta a España: Stage 19 Results - Friday 15 September
La bañeza - íscar, 177.1km.
- Alberto Dainese (ITA, Team dsm - firmenich) 3h42’09’’
- Filippo Ganna (ITA, INEOS Grenadiers) +0
- Marijn van den Berg (NED, EF Education-EasyPost) +0
- Davide Cimolai (ITA, Cofidis) +0
- Iván García Cortina (ESP, Movistar Team) +0
- Maurice Ballerstedt (GER, Alpecin-Deceuninck) +0
- Lewis Askey (GBR, Groupama - FDJ) +0
- Hugo Hofstetter (FRA, Team Arkéa Samsic) +0
- Fernando Barceló (ESP, Caja Rural - Seguros RGA) +0
- Jonas Koch (GER, BORA - hansgrohe) +0
2023 Vuelta a España: General Classification standings after Stage 19
- Sepp Kuss (USA, Jumbo-Visma) 69h14'04"
- Juan Ayuso (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +04'00"
- Mikel Landa (ESP, Bahrain - Victorious) +04'19"
- Enric Mas (ESP, Movistar Team) +04'30"
- Cian Uijtdebroeks (BEL, BORA - hansgrohe) +07'37"
- Aleksandr Vlasov (Bora-Hansgrohe) +08'35"
- João Almeida (POR, UAE Team Emirates) +10'34"
- Santiago Buitrago (COL, Bahrain - Victorious) +12'34"
Thursday 14 September: Stage 18 - Pola de Allande - La Cruz de Linares, 178.9km
Remco Evenepoel took his third stage win of this year's La Vuelta in dominant fashion, riding solo the last 30 kilometres.
Last year's overall winner took charge on the penultimate climb setting a hard pace, with his breakaway companions getting dropped one by one.
Damiano Caruso took second place on the stage, almost five minutes after the time trial world champion.
Sepp Kuss retained the red leader's jersey finishing in a group with the other GC contenders. Jumbo-Visma teammate Jonas Vingegaard is in second place, 17 seconds behind Kuss with three stages remaining.
2023 Vuelta a España: Stage 18 Results - Thursday 14 September
Pola de allande - la cruz de linares, 178.9km.
- Remco Evenepoel (BEL, Soudal - Quick Step) 4h47’37’’
- Damiano Caruso (ITA, Bahrain - Victorious) +04’44"
- Andreas Kron (DEN, Lotto Dstny) +05’10"
- Max Poole (GBR, Team dsm - firmenich) +05’12"
- Paul Ourselin (FRA, TotalEnergies) +05'17"
- Julien Bernard (FRA, Lidl - Trek) +06'11’’
- Egan Bernal (COL, INEOS Grenadiers) +07'01"
- Juan Ayuso (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +09'29"
- Enric Mas (ESP, Movistar Team) +09'29"
- Sepp Kuss (USA, Jumbo-Visma) +09'29"
2023 Vuelta a España: General Classification standings after Stage 18
- Sepp Kuss (USA, Jumbo-Visma) 60h34'21"
- João Almeida (POR, UAE Team Emirates) +10'20"
- Santiago Buitrago (COL, Bahrain - Victorious) +12'20"
Wednesday 13 September: Stage 17 - Ribadesella/Ribeseya - Altu de L'Angliru, 124.4km
Primoz Roglic claimed a dramatic queen stage to the mythical mountain pass Altu de L'Angliru, where Jumbo-Visma once again emphasised their dominance, finishing first, second, and third.
Three kilomtres from the finish, the 2023 Giro d'Italia winner attacked with only Jonas Vingegaard able to jump up and stay with his teammate.
The duo crossed the finish line together, 19 seconds ahead of red leader's jersey holder Sepp Kuss .
Kuss narrowly held on to the overall lead, having just an eight-second advantage to teammate Vingegaard. Roglic is in third place, 1:08 behind Kuss. But with the Slovenian having almost three minutes to Juan Ayuso in fourth, a Jumbo-Visma podium sweep in Madrid looks more and more likely.
2023 Vuelta a España: Stage 17 Results - Wednesday 13 September
Ribadesella/ribeseya - altu de l'angliru, 124.4km.
- Primož Roglič (SLO, Jumbo-Visma) 3h15’56’’
- Jonas Vingegaard (DEN, Jumbo-Visma) +0
- Sepp Kuss (USA, Jumbo-Visma) +00’19"
- Mikel Landa (ESP, Bahrain - Victorious) +00'19"
- Wout Poels (NED, Bahrain - Victorious) +00'44’’
- João Almeida (POR, UAE Team Emirates) +00'58"
- Cian Uijtdebroeks (BEL, BORA - hansgrohe) +01'20"
- Santiago Buitrago (COL, Bahrain - Victorious) +01'20"
- Juan Ayuso (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +01'42"
- Enric Mas (ESP, Movistar Team) +01'43"
2023 Vuelta a España: General Classification standings after Stage 17
- Jonas Vingegaard (DEN, Jumbo-Visma) +00'08"
- Mikel Landa (ESP, Bahrain - Victorious) +04'16"
- Cian Uijtdebroeks (BEL, BORA - hansgrohe) +06'43"
- Aleksandr Vlasov (Bora-Hansgrohe) +07'38"
- João Almeida (POR, UAE Team Emirates) +09'26"
- Santiago Buitrago (COL, Bahrain - Victorious) +11'26"
Tuesday 12 September: Stage 16 - Liencres Playa - Bejes, 120.1km
Jonas Vingegaard rode solo to his second stage win of this year's La Vuelta and gained more than a minute on his biggest rivals for the overall victory.
The two-time Tour de France winner launched a powerful attack with four kilometres to go on the final steep climb, and none of the other GC contenders were able to follow.
Behind Vingegaard, Finn Fisher-Black finished in second place on the stage, with Wout Poels taking third.
Sepp Kuss held on to the red leader's jersey and goes into Wednesday's gruelling summit finish to Altu de L'Angliru with a 29-second advantage to his teammate Vingegaard.
2023 Vuelta a España: Stage 16 Results - Tuesday 12 September
Liencres playa - bejes, 120.1km.
- Jonas Vingegaard (DEN, Jumbo-Visma) 2h38’23’’
- Finn Fisher-Black (NZL, UAE Team Emirates) +00’43"
- Wout Poels (NED, Bahrain - Victorious) +00'55’’
- Michael Storer (AUS, Groupama - FDJ) +00'55"
- Juan Ayuso (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +01'01"
- Enric Mas (ESP, Movistar Team) +01'01"
- Aleksandr Vlasov (Bora-Hansgrohe) +01'01"
- Primož Roglič (SLO, Jumbo-Visma) +01'01"
- Mikel Landa (ESP, Bahrain - Victorious) +01'05"
- Sepp Kuss (USA, Jumbo-Visma) +1'05"
2023 Vuelta a España: General Classification standings after Stage 16
- Sepp Kuss (USA, Jumbo-Visma) 57h18'10"
- Jonas Vingegaard (DEN, Jumbo-Visma) +00'29"
- Primož Roglič (SLO, Jumbo-Visma) +01'33"
- Juan Ayuso (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +02'33"
- Enric Mas (ESP, Movistar Team) +03'02"
- Marc Soler (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +03'28"
- Mikel Landa (ESP, Bahrain - Victorious) +04'12"
- Aleksandr Vlasov (Bora-Hansgrohe) +04'58"
- Cian Uijtdebroeks (BEL, BORA - hansgrohe) +04'58"
- João Almeida (POR, UAE Team Emirates) +08'43"
Sunday 10 September: Stage 15 - Pamplona - Lekunberri, 158.5km
Portuguese veteran Rui Costa secured his first career stage win at La Vuelta after outsprinting his breakaway companions in Lekumberri.
The 2013 world champion launched an attack on the final climb, accompanied by Lennard Kamna and Santiago Buitrago , leaving stage 14 winner Remco Evenepoel in their wake.
In a closely contested sprint, the Intermarche-Circus-Wanty rider edged out Kamna at the line, with Buitrago rounding off the podium.
The General Classification riders finished in the peloton, and Sepp Kuss retains the leader's red jersey heading into the second rest day.
2023 Vuelta a España: Stage 15 Results - Sunday 10 September
Pamplona - lekunberri, 158.5km.
- Rui Costa (POR, Intermarche-Circus-Wanty) 3h30’56’’
- Lennard Kamna (GER, Bora-Hansgrohe) +00’00"
- Santiago Buitrago (COL, Bahrain-Victorious) +00'00’’
- Remco Evenepoel (BEL, Soudal-Quick Step) +00'02"
- Andreas Kron (DEN, Lotto Dstny) +00'02"
- Einer Augusto Rubio (COL, Movistar Team) +00'02"
- Cristian Rodriguez (ESP, Team Arkea Samsic) +00'02"
- Chris Hamilton (AUS, Team DSM - Firmenich) +00'02"
- Nico Denz (GER, Bora-Hansgrohe) +0'36"
- Jimmy Janssen (BEL, Alpecin-Deceuninck) +1'07"
2023 Vuelta a España: General Classification standings after Stage 15
- Sepp Kuss (USA, Jumbo-Visma) 54h38'42"
- Primož Roglič (SLO, Jumbo-Visma) +01'37"
- Jonas Vingegaard (DEN, Jumbo-Visma) +01'44"
- Juan Ayuso (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +02'37"
- Enric Mas (ESP, Movistar Team) +03'06"
- Marc Soler (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +03'10"
- Aleksandr Vlasov (Bora-Hansgrohe) +05'02"
- Cian Uijtdebroeks (BEL, BORA - hansgrohe) +05'30"
- João Almeida (POR, UAE Team Emirates) +08'39"
Saturday 9 September: Stage 14 - Sauveterre-de-Béarn - Larra-Belagua, 156.5km
Defending champion Remco Evenepoel salvaged some pride winning the stage in style a day after losing any chances of winning the Vuelta a España.
The Belgian launched a few attacks during the stage, before racing home just over a minute ahead of Romain Bardet (DSM-Firmenich) in second place. Evenepoel attacked at the top of Col de la Hourcère with Bardet going with him.
He dropped the Frenchman with four kilometres to go for a dominant solo victory making up for the disappointment from the day before which saw him dropping out of the general classification.
Finishing eight minutes behind him in eighth place, Sepp Kuss held onto the red jersey consolidating his overall lead.
2023 Vuelta a España: Stage 14 Results - Saturday 9 September
Sauveterre-de-béarn - larra-belagua, 156.5km.
- Remco Evenepoel (BEL, Soudal Quick-Step) 4h13’38’’
- Romain Bardet (FRA, DSM-Firmenich) +01’12’’
- Lennert Van Eetvelt (Lotto Dstny) +06’33’’
- Jonathan Castroviejo (ESP, Ineos Grenadiers) +06’35’’
- Michael Storer (AUS, Groupama-FDJ) +07’24’’
- David de la Cruz (ESP, Astana Qazaqstan Team) +08’21’’
- Aleksandr Vlasov (Bora-Hansgrohe) +08’22’’
- Sepp Kuss (USA, Jumbo-Visma) +08’22’’
- Wout Poels (NED, Bahrain Victorious) +08’22’’
- Juan Ayuso (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +08’22’’
2023 Vuelta a España: General Classification standings after Stage 14
- Sepp Kuss (USA, Jumbo-Visma) 51h04'54''
- Primož Roglič (SLO, Jumbo-Visma) +01'37''
- Jonas Vingegaard (DEN, Jumbo-Visma) +01'44''
- Juan Ayuso (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +02' 37''
- Enric Mas (ESP, Movistar Team) +03'06''
- Marc Soler (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +03'10''
Friday 8 September: Stage 13 - Formigal. Huesca la Magia - Col du Tourmalet, 134.7km
Jonas Vingegaard claimed the mountain-packed stage in the Pyreness to Col du Tourmalet on an eventful day in La Vuelta that saw a big shake-up in the general classification.
The two-time Tour de France champion attacked with eight kilometres remaining on the final climb, and nobody could follow.
Vingegaard managed to keep the chasers behind and secured the stage win, with Sepp Kuss finishing in second and Primoz Roglic in third to complete the Jumbo-Visma domination.
Last year's winner Remco Evenepoel was dropped 90 kilometres from the finish on the Col d'Aubisque. The chance of reclaiming the Vuelta crown seems very slim now for the Belgian, who lost several minutes against the other GC contenders.
João Almeida , sixth in the general classification before the stage, also had a nightmarish day, after losing contact to the group of favourites around the same time as Evenepoel.
Kuss held onto the red jersey and increased his overall lead to 1:37. His teammates Roglic and Vingegaard moved up to second and third place on a very successful day for the Dutch Jumbo-Visma team.
2023 Vuelta a España: Stage 13 Results - Friday 8 September
Formigal. huesca la magia - col du tourmalet, 134.7km.
- Jonas Vingegaard (DEN, Jumbo-Visma) 3h51'10"
- Sepp Kuss (USA, Jumbo-Visma) +30"
- Primož Roglič (SLO, Jumbo-Visma) +33"
- Juan Ayuso (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +38"
- Cian Uijtdebroeks (BEL, BORA - hansgrohe) +38"
- Enric Mas (ESP, Movistar Team) +40"
- Mikel Landa (ESP, Bahrain - Victorious) +1'15"
- Aleksandr Vlasov (Bora-Hansgrohe) +2'12"
- Steff Cras (BEL, TotalEnergies) +2'32"
- Marc Soler (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +3'08"
2023 Vuelta a España: General Classification standings after Stage 13
- Sepp Kuss (USA, Jumbo-Visma) 46h 42'54"
Thursday 7 September: Stage 12 - Ólvega - Zaragoza, 150.6km
Juan Sebastián Molano secured his first stage win of this year's La Vuelta, beating the Australian points classification leader Kaden Groves and Boy van Poppel in a sprint. It is the second time the Colombian wins a stage in the race, after he won the last stage to Madrid in 2022.
In the general classification, Sepp Kuss retained the red leader's jersey, as the American crossed the finish within the peloton. His lead is still 26 seconds to Marc Soler in second place.
2023 Vuelta a España: Stage 12 Results - Thursday 7 September
Ólvega - zaragoza, 150.6km.
- Juan Sebastián Molano (COL, UAE Team Emirates) 3h23'35"
- Kaden Groves (AUS, Alpecin-Deceuninck) +0"
- Boy van Poppel (NED, Intermarché - Circus - Wanty) +0"
- Rui Oliveira (POR, UAE Team Emirates) +0"
- Edward Theuns (BEL, Lidl - Trek) +0"
- Alberto Dainese (ITA, Team dsm - firmenich) +0"
- Orluis Aular (VEN, Caja Rural - Seguros RGA) +0"
- Hugo Page (FRA, Intermarché - Circus - Wanty) +0"
- Milan Menten (BEL, Lotto Dstny) +0"
2023 Vuelta a España: General Classification standings after Stage 12
- Sepp Kuss (USA, Jumbo-Visma) 42h 51'20"
- Marc Soler (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +00'26"
- Remco Evenepoel (BEL, Soudal - Quick Step) +01'09"
- Primož Roglič (SLO, Jumbo-Visma) +01'32"
- Lenny Martinez (FRA, Groupama - FDJ) +02'02"
- Joao Almeida (POR, UAE Team Emirates) +02'16"
- Jonas Vingegaard (DEN, Jumbo-Visma) +02'22"
- Juan Ayuso (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +02'25"
- Enric Mas (ESP, Movistar Team) +02'50"
- Aleksandr Vlasov (Bora-Hansgrohe) +03'14"
Wednesday 6 September: Stage 11 - Lerma - La Laguna Negra.Vinuesa, 163.2km
Jesus Herrada took his third career stage win in La Vuelta, as he outsprinted his breakaway companions on the final 200 metres of the climb to La Laguna Negra on stage 11.
The Spaniard was part of a big group that escaped the peloton early on the stage, where the Cofidis rider proved to be the strongest.
Red leader's jersey wearer Sepp Kuss and the general classification riders crossed the finish line in a group together, almost six minutes after the winner. Therefore, the American remains the race leader by 26 seconds to Marc Soler in second place.
2023 Vuelta a España: Stage 11 Results - Wednesday 6 September
Lerma - la laguna negra.vinuesa, 163.2km.
- Jesús Herrada (ESP, Cofidis) 3h27'59"
- Romain Grégoire (FRA, Groupama - FDJ) +3"
- Andreas Kron (DEN, Lotto Dstny) +8"
- Jonathan Klever Caicedo (ECU, EF Education-EasyPost) +12"
- Geraint Thomas (GBR, INEOS Grenadiers) +19"
- Pelayo Sánchez (ESP, Burgos-BH) +24"
- Rudy Molard (FRAk Groupama - FDJ) +24"
- Nicolas Prodhomme (FRA, AG2R Citroën Team) +27"
- Dorian Godon (FRA, AG2R Citroën Team) +54"
- Filippo Ganna (ITA, INEOS Grenadiers) +1'16"
2023 Vuelta a España: General Classification standings after Stage 11
- Sepp Kuss (USA, Jumbo-Visma) 39h 27'45"
- Primož Roglič (SLO, Jumbo-Visma) +01'36"
Tuesday 5 September: Stage 10 - Valladolid - Valladolid, 25.8km (individual time trial)
Filippo Ganna claimed this year’s lone time trial of La Vuelta. The INEOS Grenadiers rider won ahead of the individual time trial world champion Remco Evenepoel by 16 seconds.
The Italian watt-monster then got his revenge for the time trial World Championships, where he finished 12 seconds behind Evenepoel.
Sepp Kuss lost valuable seconds in the battle for the overall win, but the American retained the red leader's jersey. He leads by 26 seconds over Marc Soler before Wednesday's mountain top finish at La Laguna Negra.
2023 Vuelta a España: Stage 10 Results - Tuesday 5 September
Valladolid - valladolid, 25.8km (itt).
- Filippo Ganna (ITA, INEOS Grenadiers) 27'59"
- Remco Evenepoel (BEL, Soudal - Quick Step) +16"
- Primož Roglič (SLO, Jumbo-Visma) +36"
- Joao Almeida (POR, UAE Team Emirates) +50"
- Aleksandr Vlasov (Bora-Hansgrohe) +52"
- Mattia Cattaneo (ITA, Soudal - Quick Step) +1'09"
- Juan Ayuso (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +1'11"
- Marc Soler (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +1'12"
- Nelson Oliveira (POR, Movistar Team) +1'12"
- Jonas Vingegaard (DEN, Jumbo-Visma) 1'18"
2023 Vuelta a España: General Classification standings after Stage 10
- Sepp Kuss (USA, Jumbo-Visma) 35h 52'38"
Sunday 3 September: Stage 9 - Cartagena - Collado de la Cruz de Caravaca, 184.5km
Lennard Kämna of the Bora-Hansgrohe team won Stage 9 of La Vuelta.
Kamna was in an eight-man breakaway as cross-winds made life hazardous for the field, and the German pushed clear on the closing ascent to complete a full sets of stage wins in Grand Tours.
Dangerous conditions on the final climb meant times for the general classification were taken just over 2km from the finish with Primož Roglič mistakenly thinking he had gained some seconds on his red jersey rivals. Sepp Kuss retained the overall race lead.
2023 Vuelta a España: Stage 9 Results - Sunday 3 September
Cartagena - collado de la cruz de caravaca, 184.5km.
- Lennard Kämna (GER, Bora-Hansgrohe) 04h 28' 59"
- Matteo Sobrero (ITA, Team Jayco Alula) +13"
- Christopher Hamilton (AUS, Team DSM-Firmenich) +1'12"
- Amanuel Gehbreigzabhier (ERI, LIDL-Trek) +1'00"
- Jon Barrenetxea Golzarri (ESP, Caja Rural-Seguros RGA) +1'37"
- Ruben Fernandez (ESP, Cofidis) +1'37"
- Jonathan Caicedo (ECU, EF Education-Easypost) +2'11"
- Daniel Navarro Garcia (ESP, Burgos-BH) +2'41"
- Enric Mas (ESP, Movistar Team) +3'16"
- Aleksandr Vlasov (Bora-Hansgrohe) +3'11"
2023 Vuelta a España: General Classification standings after Stage 9
- Sepp Kuss (USA, Jumbo-Visma) 35h 23'30"
- Marc Soler (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +00'43"
- Lenny Martinez (FRA, Groupama - FDJ) +01'02"
- Remco Evenepoel (BEL, Soudal - Quick Step) +02'22"
- Mikel Landa (ESP, Bahrain-Victorious) +02'29"
- Primož Roglič (SLO, Jumbo-Visma) +02'29"
- Jonas Vingegaard (DEN, Jumbo-Visma) +02'33"
- Enric Mas (ESP, Movistar Team) +02'33"
- Juan Ayuso (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +02'43"
- Joao Almeida (POR, UAE Team Emirates) +02'55"
Saturday 2 September: Stage 8 - Dénia - Xorret de Catí, Costa Blanca Interior, 165km
Slovenia’s Primož Roglič outsprinted Remco Evenepoel to win the eighth stage of La Vuelta from Dénia to Xorret de Catí. Although Evenepoel instigated the sprint, Roglic took the win at the line leaving the Belgian in second place ahead of Juan Ayuso .
American Sepp Kuss finished the stage in seventh place and moved to the top of the general classification with a 43-second advantage over Marc Soler .
2023 Vuelta a España: Stage 8 Results - Saturday 2 September
Utiel - oliva, 165km.
- Primož Roglič (SLO, Jumbo-Visma) 04h 13' 52"
- Remco Evenepoel (BEL, Soudal - Quick Step) +00’’
- Juan Ayuso (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +00’’
- Enric Mas (ESP, Movistar Team) +02’’
- Jonas Vingegaard (DEN, Jumbo-Visma) +02’’
- Joao Almeida (POR, UAE Team Emirates) +02’’
- Sepp Kuss (USA, Jumbo-Visma) +02’’
- Marc Soler (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +02’’
- Wout Poels (NED, Bahrain-Victorious) +34"
- Aleksandr Vlasov (Bora-Hansgrohe) +39"
2023 Vuelta a España: General Classification standings after Stage 8
- Sepp Kuss (USA, Jumbo-Visma) 30h 51'06"
- Lenny Martinez (FRA, Groupama - FDJ) +01'00"
- Wout Poels (NED, Bahrain-Victorious) +1'41"
- Remco Evenepoel (BEL, Soudal - Quick Step) +02'31"
- Primož Roglič (SLO, Jumbo-Visma) +02'38"
- Jonas Vingegaard (DEN, Jumbo-Visma) +02'42"
- Enric Mas (ESP, Movistar Team) +02'42"
- Juan Ayuso (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +02'52"
Friday 1 September: Stage 7 - Utiel - Oliva, 201km
Veteran French rider Geoffrey Soupe secured his fourth pro career win after edging out Orluis Aular and Edward Theuns during a hectic bunch sprint in Oliva.
In a stage marred by several crashes, Lenny Martinez crossed the line with the main peloton and remains leader in the general classification, with an 8-second advantage over American Sepp Kuss.
2023 Vuelta a España: Stage 7 Results - Friday 1 September
Utiel - oliva, 201km.
- Geoffrey Soupe (FRA, TotalEnergies) 4h56'29"
- Orluis Aular (VEN, Caja Rural-Seguros RGA) +0"
- Edward Theuns (BEL, UAE Team Emirates) +0"
- Juan Sebastian Molano (COL, UAE Team Emirates) +0"
- Marijn Van den Berg (NED, EF Education-EasyPost) +0"
- David Gonzalez (ESP, Caja Rural-Seguros RGA) +0"
- Matevz Govekar (SLO, Bahrain Victorious) +0"
2023 Vuelta a España: General Classification standings after Stage 7
- Lenny Martinez (FRA, Groupama - FDJ) 26h37'04"
- Sepp Kuss (USA, Jumbo-Visma) +8"
- Marc Soler (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +51"
- Steff Cras (BEL, TotalEnergies) +1'48"
- Mikel Landa (ESP, Bahrain-Victorious) +1'58"
- David De la Cruz (ESP, Astana Qazaqstan Team) +2'23"
- Jefferson Alveiro Cepeda (ECU, Caja Rural-Seguros RGA) +2'30"
- Remco Evenepoel (BEL, Soudal - Quick Step) +2'47"
- Enric Mas (ESP, Movistar Team) +2'50"
Thursday 31 August: Stage 6 - La Vall d'Uixó - Pico del Buitre, Observatorio Astrofísico de Javalambre, 183.5km
An exciting stage 6 witnessed a significant shift in the general classification, as Sepp Kuss claimed a memorable solo victory at the top of the challenging Alto de Jalavambre climb.
France's Lenny Martinez managed to hang on and came home in second place, wresting the leader's red jersey from Remco Evenepoel . The Belgian finished over three minutes behind the stage winner and also lost time to direct GC rivals Primoz Roglic and Jonas Vingegaard.
2023 Vuelta a España: Stage 6 Results - Thursday 31 August
Pico del buitre, observatorio astrofísico de javalambre, 183.5km.
- Sepp Kuss (USA, Jumbo-Visma) 4h27'29"
- Lenny Martinez (FRA, Groupama - FDJ) +26"
- Romain Bardet (FRA, Team DSM - Firmenich) +31"
- Mikel Landa (ESP, Bahrain-Victorious) +46"
- Marc Soler (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +46"
- Wout Poels (NED, Bahrain-Victorious) +1'03"
- Einer Augusto Rubio (COL, Movistar Team) +1'05"
- Cristian Rodriguez (ESP, Team Arkea Samsic) +1'12"
- Steff Cras (BEL, TotalEnergies) +1'12"
- Jefferson Alveiro Cepeda (ECU, Caja Rural-Seguros RGA) +1'26"
2023 Vuelta a España: General Classification standings after Stage 5
- Lenny Martinez (FRA, Groupama - FDJ) 21h40'35"
- Jefferson Alveiro Cepeda (ECU, Caja Rural-Seguros RGA) +2'06"
Wednesday 30 August: Stage 5 - Morella - Burriana, 186.2km
As today's stage concluded with another bunch sprint, Australian Kaden Groves secured back-to-back wins by narrowly edging out Filippo Ganna at the finish line in Burriana.
After the peloton nullified all the attacks of the day, the Alpecin-Quickstep rider moved to the front and resisted the Italian's surge from the fifth wheel in the last 500 metres.
Remco Evenepoel extended his lead in the general classification after earning six bonus seconds at the intermediate sprint and now the Belgian has an 11-second advantage over second-placed Enric Mas .
2023 Vuelta a España: Stage 5 Results - Wednesday 30 August
Morella - burriana, 186.2km.
- Kaden Groves (AUS, Alpecin-Deceuninck) 4h23'43''
- Alberto Dainese (ITA, Team DSM - Firmenich) +0"
- Lewis Askey (GBR, Groupama - FDJ) +0"
- David Gonzalez (SPA, Caja Rural - Seguros RGA) +0"
- Geoffrey Soupe (FRA, TotalEnergies) +0"
- Jesus Ezquerra (SPA, Burgos-BH) +0"
- Jarrad Drizners (AUS, Lotto Dstny) +0"
- Remco Evenepoel (BEL, Soudal - Quick Step) 17h12'29"
- Enric Mas (ESP, Movistar Team) +11"
- Lenny Martinez (FRA, Groupama - FDJ) +17"
- Jonas Vingegaard (DEN, Jumbo-Visma) +37"
- Aleksandr Vlasov (RUS, BORA - hansgrohe) +39"
- Cian Uijtdebroeks (BEL, BORA - hansgrohe) +39"
- Primož Roglič (SLO, Jumbo-Visma) +43"
- Juan Ayuso (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +44"
- Marc Soler (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +48"
- Joao Almeida (POR, UAE Team Emirates) +48"
Tuesday 29 August: Stage 4 - Andorra la Vella - Tarragona, 184.6km
For the first time in La Vuelta 2023 it was time for the sprinters to battle for the stage win. A crash in the final corner of Marijn van den Berg saw Juan Sebastian Molano starting his sprint far out. The Colombian of UAE Team Emirates had Kaden Groves on his wheel, who eventually manged to pass Molano on the last metres to take the first sprint stage of the race.
Groves also won a stage in last year's La Vuelta and in the 2023 Giro d'Italia. The Australian takes over the green jersey as the leader of the points classification.
The red leader's jersey remains on the shoulders of defending champion, Remco Evenepoel . He is five seconds ahead of Movistar's Enric Mas in second place and 11 seconds ahead of Lenny Martinez of Groupama - FDJ in third.
2023 Vuelta a España: Stage 4 Results - Tuesday 29 August
Andorra la vella - tarragona, 184.6km.
- Kaden Groves (AUS, Alpecin-Deceuninck) 4h05'41''
- Juan Sebastián Molano (COL, UAE Team Emirates) +0"
- Sean Flynn (GBR, Team dsm - firmenich) +0"
- Andrea Vendrame (ITA, AG2R Citroën Team) +0"
2023 Vuelta a España: General Classification standings after Stage 4
- Remco Evenepoel (BEL, Soudal - Quick Step) 12h48'52''
- Enric Mas (ESP, Movistar Team) +5''
- Lenny Martinez (FRA, Groupama - FDJ) +11''
- Jonas Vingegaard (DEN, Jumbo-Visma) +31''
- Aleksandr Vlasov (RUS, BORA - hansgrohe) +33''
- Cian Uijtdebroeks (BEL, BORA - hansgrohe) +33''
- Romain Bardet (FRA, Team dsm - firmenich) +35''
- Primož Roglič (SLO, Jumbo-Visma) +37''
- Juan Ayuso (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +38''
- Marc Soler (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +42'
Monday 28 August: Stage 3 - Súria - Arinsal, 158.5km
The first summit finish of La Vuelta 2023 in Andorra was a golden opportunity for the general classification riders to test each other's strength. A breakaway of 11 riders was formed after a hard fight to break loose in the beginning of the stage. All riders from the break were eventually caught, after the UAE Team Emirates set a hard pace in the peloton on the final climb.
Defending Vuelta champion, Remco Evenepoel initiated an early sprint in a reduced group of favourites and took the stage victory ahead of this year's Tour de France winner Jonas Vingegaard and Juan Ayuso .
Evenepoel crashed right after the finish line, but did not seem to sustain any seriuos injuries, as he took over the red leader's jersey. Movistar's Enric Mas is in second place overall, five seconds behind the Belgian, with Lenny Martinez of Groupama - FDJ in third, 11 seconds behind the leader of the race.
2023 Vuelta a España: Stage 3 Results - Monday 28 August
Súria - arinsal, 158.5km.
- Remco Evenepoel (BEL, Soudal - Quick Step) 4h15'39''
- Jonas Vingegaard (DEN, Jumbo-Visma) +1"
- Juan Ayuso (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +1"
- Primož Roglič (SLO, Jumbo-Visma) +1"
- Marc Soler (ESP, UAE Team Emirates) +1"
- Enric Mas (ESP, Movistar Team) +1"
- Lenny Martinez (FRA, Groupama - FDJ) +1"
- Cian Uijtdebroeks (BEL, BORA - hansgrohe) +1"
- João Almeida (PO)R, UAE Team Emirates) +1"
- Aleksandr Vlasov (RUS, BORA - hansgrohe) +1"
2023 Vuelta a España: General Classification standings after Stage 3
- Remco Evenepoel (BEL, Soudal - Quick Step) 8h43'11''
- Lenny Martinez (FRA, Groupama - FDJ) +11''
- Santiago Buitrago (COL, Bahrain - Victorious) +35''
- Wilco Kelderman (NED, Jumbo-Visma) +37''
Sunday 27 August: Stage 2 - Mataró - Barcelona, 182km
The peloton tackled the first road stage of La Vuelta 2023 taking on the 181.3km route from Mataro to Barcelona. The start was pushed nine kilometres further down the road for safety reasons following heavy rains.
Danish rider Andreas Kron (Lotto Dstny) came out on top on a rain-affected day going solo over the final three kilometres winning the stage seven seconds ahead of the chasing pack in a time of 4:22.44.
2023 Vuelta a España: Stage 2 Results - Sunday 27 August
Mataró - barcelona, 182km.
- Andreas Kron (DEN, Lotto Dstny) 4h10'25''
- Andrea Bagioli (ITA, Soudal - Quick Step) +0"
- Fernando Barcelo (ESP, Caja Rural - Seguros RGA) +0"
- Romain Gregoire (FRA, Groupama - FDJ) +0"
- Kobe Goossens (BEL, Intermarché - Circus - Wanty) +0"
2023 Vuelta a España: General Classification standings after Stage 2
- Andrea Piccolo (ITA, EF Education-EasyPost) 4h27'23''
- Javier Romo (ESP, Astana Qazaqstan Team) +11''
- Ivan Garcia Cortina (ESP, Movistar Team) +13''
- Romain Bardet (FRA, Team dsm - firmenich) +13''
- Max Poole (GBR, Team dsm - firmenich) +13''
- Nelson Oliveira (POR, Movistar Team) +13''
- Imanol Erviti (ESP, Movistar Team) +13''
- Enric Mas (ESP, Movistar Team) +13''
- Einer Augusto Rubio (COL, Movistar Team) +13''
- Sean Flynn (GBR, Team dsm - firmenich) +13''
Saturday 26 August: Stage 1 - Barcelona to Barcelona, team time trial, 14.8km
The 2023 Vuelta a España kicked off with a technical team time trial in Barcelona and the first rain to hit Catalonia for weeks made conditions extremely treacherous.
And there was a surprise as victory went to Team DSM-Firmenich in a time of 17:30.15, mere fractions of a second ahead of Movistar.
2023 Vuelta a España: Stage 1 Results - Saturday 26 August
Barcelona - barcelona, 14.8 km.
- Team DSM-Firmenich 17'30"
- Movistar Team +0"
- EF Education-EasyPost +6"
- Soudal Quick-Step +6"
- Groupama-FDJ +6"
- Bahrain Victorious +10"
- Astana Qazaqstan Team +17"
- INEOS Grenadiers +20"
- Cofidis +22"
- BORA-hansgrohe +28"
2023 Vuelta a España: General Classification standings after Stage 1
- Lorenzo Milesi (ITA, Team DSM-Firmenich) 17'30"
- David Max Poole (GBR, Team DSM-Firmenich) +0"
- Romain Bardet (FRA, Team DSM-Firmenich) +0"
- Sean Flynn (GBR, Team DSM-Firmenich) +0"
- Edgar Oscar Onley (GBR, Team DSM-Firmenich) +0"
- Christopher Hamilton (AUS, Team DSM-Firmenich) +0"
- Enric Mas (ESP, Movistar) +0"
- Einer Augusto Rubio Reyes (COL, Movistar) +0"
- Nelson Oliveira (POR, Movistar) +0"
- Ivan Garcia Cortina (ESP, Movistar) +0"
Day-by-day route of the 2023 Vuelta a España
- Saturday 26 August: Stage 1 - Barcelona - Barcelona (14.8km team time trial)
- Sunday 27 August: Stage 2 - Mataró - Barcelona (182km)
- Monday 28 August: Stage 3 - Súria - Arinsal, Andorra (158.5km)
- Tuesday 29 August: Stage 4 - Andorra la Vella, Andorra - Tarragona (185km)
- Wednesday 30 August: Stage 5 - Morella - Burriana (186.5km)
- Thursday 31 August: Stage 6 - La Vall d'Uixó - Pico del Buitre, Observatorio Astrofísico de Javalambre (183.5km)
- Friday 1 September: Stage 7 - Utiel - Oliva (201km)
- Saturday 2 September: Stage 8 - Dénia - Xorret de Catí, Costa Blanca Interior (165km)
- Sunday 3 September: Stage 9 - Cartagena - Collado de la Cruz de Caravaca (184.5km)
- Monday 4 September: Rest Day
- Tuesday 5 September: Stage 10 - Valladolid - Valladolid (25.8km individual time trial)
- Wednesday 6 September: Stage 11 - Lerma - La Laguna Negra, Vinuesa (163.5km)
- Thursday 7 September: Stage 12 - Ólvega - Zaragoza (151km)
- Friday 8 September: Stage 13 - Formigal, Huesca la Magia - Col du Tourmalet (135km)
- Saturday 9 September: Stage 14 - Sauveterre-de-Béarn - Larra-Belagua (156.5km)
- Sunday 10 September: Stage 15 - Pamplona - Lekunberri (158.5km)
- Monday 11 September: Rest Day
- Tuesday 12 September: Stage 16 - Liencres Playa - Bejes (120.5km)
- Wednesday 13 September: Stage 17 - Ribadesella/Ribeseya - Altu de L'Angliru (124.5km)
- Thursday 14 September: Stage 18 - Pola de Allande - La Cruz de Linares (179km)
- Friday 15 September: Stage 19 - La Bañeza - Íscar (177.5km)
- Saturday 16 September: Stage 20 - Manzanares El Real - Guadarrama (208km)
- Sunday 17 September: Stage 21- Hipódromo de la Zarzuela - Madrid, Paisaje de la Luz (101.5km)
How to watch the 2023 Vuelta a España
The Vuelta a España will be shown live around the world. Here is a list of the official broadcast partners across different territories.
Belgium: VRT
Denmark: TV2
Europe-wide: Eurosport
Netherlands: NOS
Norway: TV2 Norway
Spain: RTVE
United Kingdom: ITV
Brazil: ESPN
Canada: FloBikes
Colombia: Caracol
Latin America and the Caribbean: DirecTV
United States: NBC Sports
Asia-Pacific
Australia: SBS
China: Zhibo TV
Japan: J Sports
New Zealand: Sky Sport
South-East Asia: Eurosport
Middle East and Africa
Middle East and North Africa: BeIN Sports
Sub-Saharan Africa: Supersport
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Vuelta a Espana 2023: Six key stages as Jumbo-Visma eye Grand Tour grand slam
Updated 18/08/2023 at 17:31 GMT
No one team has won all three of cycling’s Grand Tours in the same year but that may change with Jumbo-Visma sending the Giro and Tour champions Primoz Roglic and Jonas Vingegaard to the 78th edition of La Vuelta a Espana. We look at the key six stages standing between the Dutch team and a potentially historic clean sweep.
Primoz Roglic | La Vuelta 2021
Image credit: Getty Images
'There was no more teamwork' - Jumbo-Visma SD opens up on Angliru fallout
27/10/2023 at 10:41
- Vuelta a Espana 2023 route: Every stage assessed for tough 78th edition
- Vuelta a Espana 2023: Red jersey guide – Evenepoel's biggest rivals
Stage 3: Suria – Arinsal, Andorra, 158.5km
Stage 10: Valladolid – Valladolid, 25.8km ITT
Stage 13: Formigal – Col du Tourmalet, 135km
Stage 17: Ribadesella – Alto de L’Angliru, 125km
Stage 18: Pola de Allande – La Cruz de Linares, 179km
Stage 20: Manzanares El Real – Guadarrama, 208km
Evenepoel 'ready to attack Tour de France' after Vuelta rollercoaster - Voigt
20/09/2023 at 10:32
Roglic made 'big sacrifice' for Kuss to win Vuelta - Voigt
19/09/2023 at 13:29
‘It is life changing’ - Kuss hailed by Blythe, Lloyd after incredible Vuelta victory
17/09/2023 at 22:34
- Giro d'Italia
Route Analysis | Profiles & Route Vuelta a Espana 2023
Profiles . The 2023 Vuelta a Espana will be taking place from the 26th of August to the 17th of September 2023. The Spanish Grand Tour is the final one of the season, one that consistently delivers a balanced mix of mountainous, hilly and flat stages, always giving opportunity aswell to the time-trialist, and those who are resorting to the Vuelta for their final big chances of the year to take a prestigious win.
In this article the list of stages for the 2023 edition is listed, as revealed on the 10th of January in the race presentation in Barcelona, Spain. It will be a mountainous race as for usual. Several details were already heavily rumoured before the reveal, such as summit finishes at Andorra, Col du Tourmalet and the Alto de l'Angliru.
PREVIEW | Vuelta a Espana 2023 - Evenepoel faces Roglic and Vingegaard; Angliru headlines brutal mountainous route
Final startlist vuelta a espana with evenepoel, roglic, vingegaard, ayuso, almeida, ganna, thomas, landa and mas.
The race will start with a 14.9-kilometer long team time-trial in Barcelona starting at the Olympic port. It will create some small differences and make for a spectacular start to the race in the capital of the Catalunya region.
Play along with our Fantasy Vuelta a España 2023. At least $28,000/€25,000/£21,000 in prizes! Click here to create your own Fantasy Vuelta a España team.
It is a day that will be showing the best out of the city and will be a slightly technical day. There will be 18 corners of 90 degrees or around that, it makes for an unusually technical and explosive team time-trial, not the typical powerhouse-suited but one where riding in the wheels will be harder than usual.
This will make for a difficult run for whoever sets foot on the start line. The opening minutes specially will be technical, riders will need to be wary not to crash, as then in the second half there will be longer straights where the specialists will be able to put their power down better.
PREVIEW | Vuelta a Espana 2023 stage 1 - Jumbo-Visma and INEOS Grenadiers main favourites for opening time-trial
Stage two will be similar to that of the 2012 stage where Philippe Gilbert and Joaquim Rodriguez blasted away from the peloton. It's a hilly day, however not overly hard. The challenges will come as the riders return to Barcelona and will face the short but explosive hilltop of the Alto de Montjuic. The stage will end right after by the Olympic stadium.
There is an uphill start and by all means, the first two thirds of the day are quite hilly and later in the race it would be a day suited to a breakaway. But here it's unlikely, a red jersey will be on the line but plenty teams will seek it, the run-up to Barcelona is flat and allows for big gap cutting from the peloton, and besides the final kilometers, the run-up to Montjuic is certain
The climb is very sharp. Lately the Volta a Catalunya has returned to this vertent, it's 900 meters at 8.7% but it's gradients go as high as the double of that. It's an anaerobic effort, there won't be big splits at the summit but immediately the riders take on, with 3.7 kilometers to go until 1.5Km to go, a very fast and slightly technical descent where the gaps will grow in space (although not necessarily in time).
The race will momentarily solidify but immediately the riders hit the hilltop finale into the Olympic stadium. The gradients average 4/5%, it is not one for the sprinters even if some survive relatively close to the front, several of the climbers/puncheurs will benefit from the gradients. A late attack has quite good chances of surviving too.
PREVIEW | Vuelta a Espana 2023 stage 2 - 15% Alto de Montjuic to explode overall classification in thrilling finale
There is absolutely no time to settle in. Stage three will see the riders head north towards Andorra where they will find the first summit finish of the race. It is a high-mountain stage. After entering the microstate the riders will go up two ascents and finish in Arinsal where the first big selection should be made.
The stage starts in Spain, in Súria. The start is flat but after 20 kilometers the riders find some hilly terrain, there is potential for a breakaway with quality to go up the road. Most of the day is flat, straight, typical transitional. But then the riders cross the border to Andorra and the race changes. An intermediate sprint antecedes the first ascent.
This is the first category Coll d'Ordino, not climbed via it's traditional side. It's 17.5 kilometers at 4.9%, mostly a big ring climb, it will not create differences but will be a warm-up. At the summit there are bonifications, although it's unlikely that riders will be burning matches with the big climb that is still to follow. The summit comes with 21 kilometers to go and the descent is very technical, almost straight into the base of the final climb.
The riders pass the town of Arinsal and then climb towards the summit finish. The climb is 8.3 kilometers long at 7.6%. The first half straightforward, the final kilometers slightly steeper and with several switchbacks. This is a climb where attacks can come towards the end, and riders will enter the ascent relatively fresh, it's not necessarily a day to take it at pace.
PREVIEW | Vuelta a Espana 2023 stage 3 - Arinsal summit finish the first big mountain test for Roglic, Evenepoel, Vingegaard, Thomas and more
On the fourth day of racing however the riders return to the coast. It will be a fast ride back into Tarragona near Barcelona, with the route having a slight downhill tilt, however with a couple of hilltops towards the finish that won't make life easy for the sprinters.
The start is in fact mostly in a slight downhill. The riders depart from 798 meters of altitude and arrive at 66, there is a small hilltop after 60 kilometers of racing but until then the race will be set. The riders then find two categorized ascents. 9Km at 3.7% with 54 kilometers to go, then 4.5Km at 5.6% with 31 kilometers to go. The last one is not an easy one, and taking into consideration the mostly downhill finale afterwards some teams could ally to permanently drop a few sprinters.
Most likely however bullets will be saved for the run-up to the finish. There the finale is relatively simple until the final kilometers. A couple of roundabouts, then with 1.7km to 900 meters to go the road rises slightly. The peloton finds a turn with just under 500 meters to go which will be crucial, from there on the riders have an uphill drag to the line with around 5% average, not one for the pure sprinters, it will be an interesting finale.
PREVIEW | Vuelta a Espana 2023 stage 4 - Kaden Groves man to beat in race's first bunch sprint
Stage five from Morella to Burriana is a tricky one. A day for the sprinters on paper however, as is classic at the Vuelta a Espana, it features the 'rompe-piernas' terrain which will throughout the day benefit attackers and make the pure fast men suffer in the small but repetitive climbs.
If a bunch sprint is to take place a breakaway can only be given a very small leadout throughout the entire day. The start is at 914 meters of altitude and then end at sea level, so there's a lot of descending terrain, but equally there are many small ascents where bringing back gaps is a tough task. The start has uphill ramps and the pan-flat roads only really come with 15 kilometers to go. It's a difficult one to control.
However, assuming it does come back and a bunch sprint happens, it will be a very fast one. A few roundabouts in the town of Burriana, from 2.8km to 800 meters to go there is a flat straight, and then the finishing straight are those final 800 meters, pan-flat and straightforward with no obstacles, but right by the sea where the wind can make a difference.
PREVIEW | Vuelta a Espana 2023 stage 5 - Breakaway a threat on day that is mostly designed for the sprinters
On the sixth day of racing the riders ride into a familiar sight for the second summit finish of the race. It will be at the Observatorio Astrofisico de Javalambre where the finish line will be positioned, with it's 12 kilometers at 7% providing terrain for differences to be made amongst the GC men. It's a day that is seemingly almost flat until the final climb but that's incredibly far from reality.
The riders start off which a 4.4-kilometer climb at 5%, and then they find several similar to that throughout the day. The 183 kilometers see only three categorized climbs, only one meaningful ascent, but it has 4000 meters of climbing. By no means will the riders arrive fresh to the ascent of the Observatorio Astrofísico de Javalambre.
The ascent is 11.1 kilometers at 7.5%. Completely exposed to the sun, and wind if it's present, it's a tough ascent. The gradients are relatively constant in it's final kilometers between 8-11%, the start is relatively calm but with the fight for positioning the pace will be high. This is a stage that has Vuelta written all over, it will also be an important day for the overall classification, and one that forces the GC riders to be at their best early on.
PREVIEW | Vuelta a Espana 2023 stage 6 - Javalambre climb the first test for Remco Evenepoel in red
Stage seven will be a good sight for the peloton who find a flat stage. The first half of the day will largely be downhill which means the peloton can't afford to give the breakaway much of a gap, but the run-in to Oliva will be pan-flat.
However it's another day which finishes at significantly lower altitude than the start, 700 meters, which means fast speeds which favors breakaway. The opening half of the stage will be quite hilly in fact, featuring no categorized climb but plenty small hilltops where some fatigue will be created. However the second half of the day should be gentle enough to keep things under control.
It is most likely a day for a bunch sprint, through roads the peloton will know very well. The riders pass through the outside of Gandia and then finish very close to the area where dozens of teams train throughout the winter. In the town of Olivia is where the finish line will be, not an overly technical finale but a nervous one. The final corner will come with 350 meters to go and there will certainly be a sprint towards that, and then a second sprint towards the line.
PREVIEW | Vuelta a Espana 2023 stage 7 - Will Filippo Ganna win his first World Tour bunch sprint?
In cycling country, the riders set off from Dénia where many had their team training camps early in the year. However what follows is certainly harder, with five categorized climbs and many more en route to Xorret de Catí, where the steep gradients will see further damage done in the GC fight.
Another day without any brutal ascent before the finale but absolutely packed with climbing. Over 3600 meters of climbing with four categorized ascents in the first two thirds of the day, and plenty more uncategorized. The first 20 kilometers of the day are flat however, not ideal for the breakaway opportunists. The longest ascent of the day will have bonus seconds attributed at it's summit, the 11.1-kilometer Puerto de la Carrasqueta summits with 54 kilometers to go and averages 4.6%.
From there on follow rolling roads, several small hilltops where, if it's in the breakaway, the fight for the stage win will certainly explode as riders look to anticipate the final ascent. That one is a well known feature in the Vuelta, that is the incredibly steep Xorret de Catí.
The climb is 3.8 kilometers at 11.4%, but it's a mean climb in every aspect. It slowly steepens until it reaches 15% and then the riders face several minutes of racing at that gradient. There is no moment of restbite and not a single switchback in the ascent, it's a pure W/Kg challenge up the short ascent which can create big differences. The summit is at 3.6 kilometers to go, following is a very fast steep descent and the final 900 meters which slightly rise to the line.
PREVIEW | Vuelta a Espana 2023 stage 8 - Brutal Xorret del Catí the next major challenge for Evenepoel, Roglic, Vingegaard and others
Stage nine, the final day of the first week, doesn't show any mercy for those who dislike climbing. It is a hilly stage, likely one for the breakaway, as the riders tackle an interesting finale in Caravaca de la Cruz. An interesting day, a classic Vuelta stage I would say, the profile is very unusual and the final climb is as inconsistent as they come.
After a flat start the riders find the Puerto de Casas la Marina la Perdiz. It is 12.1 kilometers at 4.9%, however it does feature a small descent close to the summit. It is still very far away from the finish however, afterwards are a bunch of rolling hills and a plateau ride into the town of Caravaca de la Cruz. The finish is in the hills surrounding the town, an ascent that is something special.
The climb is 8.1 kilometers at 5.4% but the average doesn't tell the story. There are five small descent or flat sections spread all throughout the ascent. It is essentially a combination of ramps, on twisty explosive roads. Most riders will eye the final 3.5Km, the gradients will rise as high at 17%, and then the final kilometer averages close to 8%. It's not a climb that the riders will be able to ride at pace, it's a very difficult effort which can prove to be very complicated to manage for some.
PREVIEW | Vuelta a Espana 2023 stage 9 - Explosive Caravaca de la Cruz expected scene for battle between Evenepoel, Jumbo and UAE
The riders head into the second week of racing with the only individual time-trial of the race taking place. This will be in the city of Valladolid where the 25 kilometers against the clock will be a key challenge for those eyeing the red jersey.
This is an interesting time-trial when looking at the map. Profile wise it's virtually pan-flat, it does feature a small 500-meter long ramp early on but it's not what will be changing the outcome of the stage. When looking at the map you realize that the whole time-trial is within the city, all 25 kilometers of it, as the organizers drew a route which in it's first third rides around the same spot virtually but back and forth through some roads.
This won't make a change in the type of rider who can fight for the victory, but is an interesting aspect. The second half is almost completely an out-and-back time-trial, using the same avenue but in different directions. The riders will get the sense that they're racing around the same location throughout the whole time-trial but the distance allows for there to be meaningful gaps at the finish.
PREVIEW | Vuelta a Espana 2023 stage 10 - Filippo Ganna big favourite for flat time-trial; Evenepoel and Jumbo-Visma enter direct clash for red jersey
Very similar to the ninth day of racing, stage 11 is a complicated day due mostly due to it's finale. It's a stage that features little climbing but has a slight summit finish. This time in Burgos at La Laguna Negra, it's an explosive finale where several can contest the win.
163 kilometers on the menu and honestly not really much to mention. Virtually the entire day is flat, with small ascents as is always the case on Spanish roads, but no intermediate sprints, KOM points or anything too special. Then it heats up towards the finale, the organizers have put in yet another summit finish where the climbers will have to go to the limit.
It's not an overly hard climb, 6.6 kilometers at 6.6%. The speeds will be very high, the riders will enter fresh, so I expect a lot of slipstreaming and the lack of aggressive racing. The steepest section of the ascent will exactly be it's end, the final 500 meters have the road go at around 10%, it's most likely a stage to ride in the wheels and then fight for seconds in an anaerobic final kilometer.
PREVIEW | Vuelta a Espana 2023 stage 11 - Fireworks or GC stalemate as Laguna Negra de Vinuesa?
Stage 12 will be one of the brief but valuable opportunities for the pure sprinters. The day sees the riders go through 151 kilometers eastwards towards Zaragoza for a virtually inevitable bunch sprint. A seeming tradition in this year's route, the start line is at 989 meters of altitude and the finish at 210, so overall a downhill profile to the day.
However on this day there is very little to report, there are few obstacles for the fast men. A small hilltop after around 33 kilometers and another after 110. These won't be true climbs however, only the wind can cause difficulties on a day like this for a Grand Tour peloton.
However the riders will find an urban sprint. Entering Zaragoza, they then face a ride through the city, not overly technical but road furniture, section where the road width changes are always present. The main point to take into consideration will be the corner with 1.3 kilometers to go which is the final one, but from there on there is still space to regain position, the finale is flat and without anything unusual.
PREVIEW | Vuelta a Espana 2023 stage 12 - Before the high mountains, a return to the bunch sprint
The queen stage? Some were queen to call it that. Stage 13 was one that had been highly rumoured and turned out to be exactly as expected as the race heads into the Pyrenees, with a mammoth mountain stage. Not by size, as it extends over only 134 kilometers, but they are constantly up and down. The riders will go up the Col d'Aubisque and Col de Spandelles which individually are both very hard ascents, before the summit finish at the Col du Tourmalet above 2000 meters of altitude.
The stage immediately starts off climbing with the Puerto de Portalet, 4.4Km at 5.4%. A long descent follows, and then the serious climbing will begin. Almost immediately in fact, it is the famous Col d'Aubisque, one of the longest and toughest ascents of the Pyrenees, on this day only the first of three very difficult climbs. It is 16.6 kilometers long and a constant ascent averaging 7% which summits with 86 kilometers to go.
A descent follows which leads the riders at the base of the Col de Spandelles. This was a climb that saw plenty action in the final mountain stage of the 2022 Tour de France. Here it's unlikely to see the same type of move, however the potential is there. At it's summit there are still 52 kilometers to the finish, but with over 10 kilometers at 8% and packed with switchbacks, it can see the race break apart.
After it's descent comes the one real flat section of the day, however it is not too long. The riders gradually begin to climb into Luz-Saint-Sauveur, the base of the Tourmalet. 18.7 kilometers at 7.4%, very constant and with it's summit at 2115 meters. This is a day, and a final climb suited to the pure climbers. No getting out of it, it's a day that can see very big differences and the first of two key days in the Pyrenees.
PREVIEW | Vuelta a Espana 2023 stage 13 - Monster mountains in a day where Sepp Kuss faces red jersey challenge
The peloton will leave the Pyrenees, but not before another incredibly hard mountain challenge. Stage 14 from Sauvaterre-de-Béarn and Belagua will feature the Col Hourciére and the Port de Larrau in quick succession, both HC category climbs into the Spanish border. The stage will still see a first category summit finish at Belagua to wrap a very hard day.
If raced aggressively, this could end up being the queen stage. As is usually the case at the Tour de France however, the organizers decided to go with a flat start. This will not be good for the climbers looking to form a breakaway, it can end up limiting the tactical moves from the bigger teams. However after 50 kilometers of riding the mountains arrive.
The first of which is the Col Hourcère, it's 11.6 kilometers at 8.3%, in terms of profile incredibly similar to the Alpe d'Huez, coincidentally it also features plenty switchbacks. It summits with 91 kilometers to go however it's hard enough for any kind of attack that teams may plan.
The descent comes and leads the riders right to the base of the next climb, so there is very little time to reorganize. The Puerto de Larrau will follow quickly after, it's 15 kilometers long at 7.9% but is even harder than the average suggests. It's first 10 kilometers average over 9%, it's another brutal climb, two in a row will make it a very difficult mission.
There is a steep punch to it's summit which comes with 47 kilometers to go. The descent will now not be as long, in fact only a few kilometers long before reaching the third climb of the day, the easy by comparison Portillo de Lazar which summits with 33 kilometers to go, it's 3.2 kilometers at 5.8%.
Then there is a transition phase until the final climb. The riders have entered Spain but will come to the literal border with France once again. The climb to Belagua won't be as hard as the previous ones, however with the fatigue built up it can certainly be as dangerous. It's 9.4 kilometers long at 6.3%, it's final kilometer almost flat, most of the climb hence being a little steeper than the average. It is a climb that features plenty switchbacks, so the constant gradients don't mean that it's a hard place to attack.
PREVIEW | Vuelta a Espana 2023 stage 14 - With Kuss, Roglic and Vingegaard completing the podium, how will Jumbo-Visma race?
Stage 15 will be a hilly and explosive day, fit for the puncheurs and classics riders. The finale will be in Lekunberri after the riders take on the double ascent of the Puerto de Zuarrarrate. The riders will be happy to leave the high mountains however they must be fully focused for a day that features quite a few traps.
A technical and bumpy start is golden territory for a quality breakaway to form. This can see GC riders try out their luck in a day where GC teams want to save their legs most likely, but it's also prone to split which can be equally as dangerous. When it comes to the fight for the stage win - and GC battle, if it takes place - it will come down to the final circuit, in and around Lekunberri.
The riders will on two occasions climb the Puerto de Zuarrarrate which is 6.3 kilometers at 5.1%. Plenty riders can soar up an ascent such as this, it's a very open day. It summits with 38 and 9 kilometers to go, the descent is fast and straightfoward. Up the final ascent, if a rider goes solo over the summit it'll be near impossible to be brought back.
PREVIEW | Vuelta a Espana 2023 stage 15 - Breakaway day the end of an explosive second week
Stage 16 will be a very short day through the rugged Spanish north, with a brutal summit finish. It is a very untraditional stage format, but the day will be decided in the ascent to Bejes where the gradients will reach up often above 10% for almost five kilometers.
A truly remarkable day when it comes to how differently the organizers design stages. This, the first day of the final week, is almost designed to see incredible watts in the final ascent. Close to the sea, the race has 115 kilometers which are rolling but without any meaningful ascent. It's all about the final ascent to Bejes the day.
The finish will be just outside the scenic village. The climb is 4.9 kilometers at 8.7%, starting off very steep, having a bit of a flat section in it's middle, and then rolling along on gradients of mostly 10% all the way into the line. A grueling summit finish, it will make for interesting viewing, tactics won't matter much but instead it'll mostly be about the legs.
PREVIEW | Vuelta a Espana 2023 stage 16 - Sepp Kuss has lead tested in another tough summit finish
Stage 17 will be a brute, and an absolutely mythical day of climbing. The Asturian monster of 2023, the riders will be climbing the Alto de la Colladiella and the Alto der Cordal - both first category climbs - before directly riding up the Alto de l'Angliru for a summit finish. Almost 13 kilometers at 10% with several ramps over 20% will make for very large differences.
It is a very short day in terms of distance, 125 kilometers with a flat start - the Tour de France playbook was used once again. Ultimately it'll mean very little action to start off the day, it'll all be saved for the final half. The Alto de Colladiella will open things up with it's 6.5 kilometers at 8% finishing with 49 kilometers to go.
However the GC riders will begin to gauge their efforts more carefully afterwards. In 2017 Alberto Contador attacked in the Alto del Cordal, it's 5.7 kilometers at 8.5%, steep and with plenty switchbacks, the descent is exactly the same and leads to raiding territory. The only reason why it ends up being unlikely is because what comes next is a climb of breathtaking toughness.
From the base of the descent to the final climb. The mythical Angliru is 12.3 kilometers at 10%. The first half not too difficult, with some tough gradients but never above 10%, and it even includes a kilometer long flat section. What is brutal is what follows. 6.5 kilometers at 13.3%, with several sections where the gradients go above 20% - the steepest being the famous Cueña les Cabres at 23.5%.
It's just gruesome, there's very little that teammates can do here, it'll be down to the individual strength of the riders who try to get to the summit the fastest. Those behind will likely struggle just as much however. The summit of the climb is inside the final kilometer, the organizers place the finish line in a small descent after the peak.
PREVIEW | Vuelta a Espana 2023 stage 17 - Can Sepp Kuss seal the deal at the mythical Angliru?
Stage 18 will be another brutal day in the Asturias, a proper high mountain stage with three first category climbs among others. The finale will be atop La Cruz de Linares which the riders will be riding up on two different occasions with 8.5 kilometers at 8%.
The start is not too difficult, but it does feature some hilltops early enough to see the climbers trying to form a strong group ahead. The race will begin to be really hard at the Puerto de San Lorenzo, it ends with 90 kilometers to go, unlikely a place for attacks because in reality much of the toughness on the day is still to follow, however it's 10 kilometers at 8.5% - which take into account a flat section - are enough to cause havoc.
The Alto de Tenebredo is an ascent I'd say the same about. It is shadowed by the brutal long ascents that sandwich it, but on it's own it's crazy hard, with 3.4 kilometers in length, most at above 10%, the average is close to it but it does feature a small descent. This one ends with 58 kilometers to go. But only then will the riders head into the final circuit where the big attacks are expected.
This will be a double ascent of La Cruz de Linares. The final true big climb of the race, it's 8.2 kilometers at 8.5% average gradient. Not the most constant climb, it features a bit of a plateau near the top, it also sees gradients almost constantly in the 10% in it's first half. A brutal one. The riders will summit it with 25 kilometers to go, and after a fast descent and small flat section, they will have to do it all over again.
PREVIEW | Vuelta a Espana 2023 stage 18 - Sepp Kuss' red jersey closer and closer to fall towards Jonas Vingegaard or Primoz Roglic
A transition stage. The 19th day of racing at the Vuelta a Espana will see the riders race from La Bañeza to Íscar on what is a perfect day for the sprinters. No climbing, no more small ring riding, it will be a well deserved calmer day in the peloton. That is of course, until the final kilometers, where for different reasons some will hit the front to protect their ambitions.
This stage will be all about the sprint - as long as the wind doesn't blow hard on the exposed plains the peloton will ride by. Technical features you won't see them, a very simple and plain finale, one that I can't throw any criticism because it diminishes the chances of there being crashes.
The final kilometers are pan-flat, the final corner will be there with 2.3 kilometers to go. It's a finale where timing will be key. There won't be thinning down or narrowing points, so it's a matter of coming to the front at the right time, a balance between staying in the wheels as late as possible and saving as much as possible within circumstances.
PREVIEW | Vuelta a Espana 2023 stage 19 - Surviving sprinters get a much deserved opportunity following the mountains
The final day of competitive racing. The Vuelta a Espana has once again surpassed itself in what has proven to be a very popular profile amongst fans. The day will not feature a single long ascent, but will be riddled with climbs throughout a whole 208 kilometers. It will be in the Sierra de Guadarrama that the race will be decided as the riders take on 10 categorized climbs and several others where the climbers may be out of their comfort zone and lose it all.
The final day of competitive racing. The Vuelta a Espana has once again surpassed itself in what has proven to be a very popular profile amongst fans. It is a confusing, messy, explosive day if you've ever seen one as a final GC challenge for a Grand Tour. It is in my eyes brilliant, the climbers have spent three weeks battling in the many mountain stages and summit finishes for the GC, but now in the final day they find a long day with 10 medium-sized categorized climbs, and plenty others.
It is a bumpy ride in the Sierra de Madrid. The riders can see the finale but they first have 4400 meters of climbing, without a single long ascent. The day starts off immediately with a 10.8 kilometer climb at 3.4% - which is on profile a combination of two hilltops. Then follows a 7.1Km climb at 5% which is ultimately the longest of the day.
Then two laps of a circuit with La Escondida (8.8Km; 4.2%), Alto de Santa Maria de Alameda (5Km; 5.6%) and the Alto de Robledondo (3.9Km; 6.2%). This can be a key part of the course, in the space of 32 kilometers the riders find four ascents and nothing but descents inbetween, no flat terrain whatsoever (on both laps). On the final passage, they will have 84, 67 and 61 kilometers to the finish. After it's descent comes another uncategorized ascent with 2.6Km at 6.8% which ends at 46 kilometers to the finish in Guadarrama.
Then the race can stabilize a bit, but it does not mean it'll get easier. The peloton tackles the Puerto de la Cruz Verde which is 7.3 kilometers at 3.9%, featuring a steeper finale than the average gradient suggests. The descent is steep and fast into the final climb. The riders enter San Lorenzo de El Escorial, town which has hosted on many occasions the end of the stage when these mountains are tackled.
This time however the riders climb through town, the final ascent of this race is 4.5 kilometers long at 6.6%, not too hard but it features a section as steep at 18%. It's such a harsh finale to the climbing in this race, riders will already have almost 200 kilometers of roller-coaster by this moment and the slightest of weak moments can lead to big losses and a complete change in the GC.
The riders descent back into the plain and then the final 8 kilometers will be flat. This will lead those who survived into Guadarrama for the finale of the stage, gaps aren't expected but there is still a mean ramp to the finish line.
PREVIEW | Vuelta a Espana 2023 stage 20 - Remco Evenepoel's last win opportunity, Sepp Kuss' red jersey final challenge and Jumbo-Visma celebrations
The race finally reaches it's end, into Madrid. A short flat day with no difficulties, it will be a big reward for the fast men who've survived a brutal race to make it into Madrid.
The day will see the peloton ride into the city where they will tackle a 5.8-kilometer circuit a total of nine times. The riders will have an 180 degree turn with 3.5 kilometers to go and a sharp right hander with 2.4 which will be natural selection points, with the bunch stretching out. The final straight will be 1.1 kilometers long after a long roundabout, with the bunch sprint set to be a regular one, hopefully with no crashes in sight.
PREVIEW | Vuelta a Espana 2023 stage 21 - Final opportunity for the sprinters, as Jumbo-Visma complete historic achievement
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Wed 01 May 2024
Stage 21 of La Vuelta live - 09/17/2023
How to Watch the 2023 Vuelta a España
The most mountainous grand tour of the season begins on Saturday in Barcelona, with a list of contenders that reads like a Who’s Who of the sport’s best stage racers.
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As the season’s final grand tour, the Vuelta a España (“Tour of Spain”) is always a bit of a “last-chance saloon” as riders often use the race to try and redeem themselves for missed opportunities earlier in the year, build form for late-season races, and in some cases, earn a new contract.
Beginning this Saturday in the Barcelona, this year’s Vuelta covers 3,153km (1,955mi) over 21 stages, including a team time trial, an individual time trial, 15(!) stages with uphill or summit finishes, and one of the deepest list of contenders in any grand tour in the last 10 years.
Here’s everything you need to know.
Saturday, August 26 to Sunday, September 17
The 2023 Vuelta a España begins on Saturday with a short, technical team time trial through the streets of Barcelona that will determine the first rider to pull on the red jersey as the leader of the Vuelta’s General Classification. But it’s just 14.6km, so time gaps are expected to be small. Stage 2 could end in a field sprint in Barcelona–if the sprinters make it over a climb late in the race–and Stage 3 brings the race’s first summit finish–a Category 1 climb to the Andorran village of Arinsal. Stages 4 and 5 are expected to be days for the sprinters, with flat finishes in Tarragona and Burriana.
The rest of the first brings more climbing, with a summit finish on Stage 6 (atop the Category 1 climb to the Astrophysical Observatory of Javalambre), a near-summit finish on Stage 8 (the finish line comes just 3km after the Category 1 Xorret de Catí), and another summit finish Stage 9 (on the Category 2 Caravaca de la Cruz). The sprinters should enjoy Stage 7, which offers a pancake-flat finish along the Mediterranean coast.
The second week brings the race north–to Valladolid–for Stage 10, the Vuelta’s only individual time trial. With just one small “bump” early in the stage, the 25km race against the clock should suit the Vuelta’s time trial specialists. Stage 11 brings another summit finish (on the Category 1 climb to Laguna Negra), and Stage 12 could see crosswinds blow the race apart, as they often do on days that end in Zaragoza.
Stage 13 is maybe the hardest stage in the entire grand tour with four major climbs, over 4,000 meters of elevation gain crammed into just 134.7km, and a summit atop the most famous climb in the Pyrenees: the “Beyond Category” Col du Tourmalet.
Stage 14 offers no rest for the weary, with four more categorized ascents including two “Beyond Category” climbs midway through the stage and new summit finish on the Punto Belagua at the end. The second week ends on Sunday with Stage 15, a punchy stage through the Basque Country that–depending on how tight the GC standings are–could be the perfect day for an ambush.
The third week begins with Stage 16, a flat stage that starts along the coast, but ends with a summit finish on the Category 2 climb to La Hermida, a 5km climb with ramps of 14%. But Stage 17–a 122.6km stage with three categorized climbs including a summit finish on the “Beyond Category” Altu de l’Angliru, a 12.5km climb with a 10% average gradient and pitches that hit 24%–is the focal point of the third week.
Stage 18 brings the third consecutive summit finish of the third week, at the end of a 178km day with five categorized climbs–including a Category 1 ascent to the finish line atop the La Cruz de Linares. Any sprinters who have survived the last two weeks will appreciate Stage 19: it’s one of the flattest in this year’s Vuelta.
If it hasn’t been decided already, Stage 20 will settle things once and for all with a 208km stage (the longest in this year’s race) with ten categorized climbs (that’s not a typo). None of these climbs are particularly challenging, but they add up to over 4,000meters of elevation gain, which means Stage 20 should bring the fight to win the 2023 Tour of Spain to a dramatic conclusion–just before Stage 21 brings the race itself to a close in Madrid with a flat stage that will give the Vuelta’s remaining sprinters one last chance to shine.
How to Watch the Vuelta a España
If you subscribed to NBC’s Peacock Premium ($4.99/month) before the Tour de France (and didn’t cancel after the Tour de France Femmes), then you can stream all 21 stages of the 2023 Vuelta. The Peacock app is available on Roku, Apple devices, Android and AndroidTV devices, Google platforms, Chromecast, Xbox devices, Playstation 4 and 4 Pro, VIZIO SmartCast TVs, and LG Smart TVs. You can also watch online via the Peacock website.
If you’re in Canada, FloBikes ($12.99/month) is the best way to watch the Tour of Spain, with all 21 stages available live and on-demand on FloBikes.com, the FloSports IOS app, and the FloSports app for Amazon FireTV, Roku, and Apple TV.
What Happened Last Year
Belgium’s Remco Evenepoel (Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl) overcame the pressure of being the country’s “Next Eddy Merckx'' and ended his nation’s 44-year grand tour drought, winning the 2022 Tour of Spain. The 22-year-old took the red jersey on Stage 6 and defended it all the way to Madrid, defeating Spain’s Enric Mas (Movistar) by 2:02 and Juan Ayuso by 4:57. Along the way Evenepoel won Stages 10 and 18 and the white jersey as the Vuelta’s Best Young Rider.
After abandoning the 2022 Tour de France due to injuries sustained in a crash during the Tour’s opening week, Slovenia’s Primož Roglič (Jumbo-Visma) looked ready to try and win the Spanish grand tour for the fourth year in a row. He won a stage and wore the red jersey for a day during the opening week, but crashed at the end of Stage 16. Second overall at the time, he was forced to abandon the race due to his injuries.
Evenepoel and Roglič will both be back in 2023, alongside a list of contenders that reads like a Who’s Who of the best grand tour riders of the past 5 years.
Riders to Watch
Remco Evenepoel (Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl)
Evenepoel wasn’t supposed to be riding the Tour of Spain, but after testing positive for COVID-19 at the Giro d’Italia in May (his biggest race of the season), the team decided to let him try and defend his title. After winning a gold medal in the time trial at the recent world championships in Glasgow he went right back to training at altitude, where he’s been posting some impressive numbers on Zwift. The 23-year-old is clearly up to the challenge of defending his title, but his team? That remains to be seen.
Primož Roglič (Jumbo-Visma)
At May’s Giro d’Italia, Roglič overcame last season’s disappointment to add the Italian grand tour to his resume. Now he heads to Spain hoping to win the Vuelta for a fourth time, giving his team a clean sweep of this year’s grand tours in the process. He won last week’s Vuelta a Burgos, so he’s clearly rested and well-prepared. And he co-leads the deepest team in the race alongside Denmark’s Jonas Vingegaard, who could prove to be one of his biggest challengers.
Jonas Vingegaard (Jumbo-Visma)
After defending his Tour de France title this past July, Vingegaard was quick to announce that he would ride the Vuelta with the hopes of keeping his team’s grand tour winning streak alive. Assuming he’s recovered from his Tour-winning effort he’ll be a top contender–especially in such a mountainous race. If he hasn’t, he’ll ride for Roglič, forming one of the best 1-2 punches the race has ever seen.
Geraint Thomas (INEOS Grenadiers)
Thomas was on the verge of winning May’s Giro d’Italia, but cracked on the penultimate day and turned the pink jersey over to Roglič. Now he leads INEOS at the Vuelta, a strange choice given all the climbing the race has on tap. Then again, he’s their most accomplished and consistent grand tour contender currently, and has had all summer to prepare.
Juan Ayuso (UAE Team Emirates)
Were it not for Evenepoel, Ayuso would have been the revelation of last year’s race after finishing third at just 19-years-old. He co-leads this year’s team alongside Portugal’s João Almeida–who finished third at the Giro–and the team’s ability to juggle their co-captaincy will determine their level of success.
João Almeida (UAE Team Emirates)
Almeida scored a stage win and his grand tour podium finish at the Giro. He comes to the Vuelta hoping to build on those results. Assuming he and Ayuso are able to cooperate, the two of them could be the second UAE tandem to join each other on a grand tour podium this season. (Slovenia’s Tadej Pogačar and Great Britain’s Adam Yates finished second and third at the Tour de France.)
Enric Mas (Movistar)
A three-time runner-up, Mas is one of the Vuelta’s biggest bridesmaids. But given this year’s startlist, a second-place finish would be a big accomplishment.
Other riders to watch include Russia’s Aleksandr Vlasov (BORA-hansgrohe), the runner-up at the recent Vuelta a Burgos; France’s Romain Bardet (Team DSM), who’s hunting for a mountain stage win; and the United States’ Sepp Kuss (jumbo-Visma), who’s hoping to win his third grand tour of the season as Jumbo-Visma’s best mountain domestique.
Since getting hooked on pro cycling while watching Lance Armstrong win the 1993 U.S. Pro Championship in Philadelphia, longtime Bicycling contributor Whit Yost has raced on Belgian cobbles, helped build a European pro team, and piloted that team from Malaysia to Mont Ventoux as an assistant director sportif. These days, he lives with his wife and son in Pennsylvania, spending his days serving as an assistant middle school principal and his nights playing Dungeons & Dragons.
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Dates, étapes, montagne : Découvrez le parcours de la Vuelta 2023
Publié 10/01/2023 à 20:12 GMT+1
TOUR D'ESPAGNE - L'Angliru, le Tourmalet, Arinsal... Le parcours du Tour d'Espagne 2023, qui partira pour la deuxième fois de l'histoire de Barcelone le 26 août pour s'achever à Madrid le 17 septembre, sera rythmé par l'ascension de colosses des Pyrénées et des Asturies, ont révélé les organisateurs mardi soir.
Crédit: Getty Images
- La saison de cyclisme va reprendre : Abonnez-vous à Eurosport pour ne rien rater !
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18/09/2023 à 23:52
Pinot : "Le triplé des Jumbo peut paraitre choquant, mais vu le niveau des trois...."
Fritsch : "pourvu que la jumbo ne domine pas encore une fois les trois tours".
Vuelta a España 2024
Latest news from the race.
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The 2024 Vuelta a España follows yet another mountainous route with a start in Lisbon, Portugal and a final individual time trial through the streets of the capital city, Madrid.
Neither the Angliru nor the Pyrenees are included in the 2024 but there are plenty of other mountain finishes, including the ascents of the steep Cuitu Negru and return to Lagos de Covadonga.
They will ensure that another mountain specialist will follow on from America's Sepp Kuss (Jumbo-Visma) as the overall winner.
Join Cyclingnews' coverage of the 2024 Vuelta A España with daily race reports, results, photo galleries, news and race analysis.
Vuelta A España route
Five key stages of the 2024 Vuelta a España
Vuelta a españa 2024 route revealed - showcasing lagos de covadonga and finale time trial, carlos rodriguez: ‘the 2024 vuelta a espana’s final time trial makes it exciting all the way to madrid', vuelta a españa contenders.
- Vuelta a España 2024 route
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- Stage 1 (TTT)
La Vuelta Ciclista a España
Youth day classification, team day classification, race information.
- Date: 26 August 2023
- Start time: 18:55
- Avg. speed winner: 50.74 km/h
- Race category: ME - Men Elite
- Distance: 14.8 km
- Points scale: GT.B.TTT
- UCI scale: UCI.WR.GT.B.Stage
- Parcours type:
- ProfileScore: 0
- Vert. meters: 60
- Departure: Barcelona
- Arrival: Barcelona
- Race ranking: 17
- Startlist quality score: 846
- Avg. temperature: 24 °C
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Vuelta a Espana
Vuelta a Espana coverage from Cycling Weekly, with up to date race results, rider profiles and news and reports.
The Vuelta a España 2024, the 79th edition of the race, will be the final Grand Tour of the season, with the race following the Giro d'Italia and Tour de France in the WorldTour calendar.
The 2024 race includes just one flat stage, and promises to pack in the climbing, with two short time trials bookending the race, which opens in Lisbon, Portugal on 17 August.
Sepp Kuss, the American cyclist who won the general classification in 2023 , has stated his aim to race again in 2024 , pairing the Spanish stage race with the Tour de France.
Here's all you need to know ahead of the last Grand Tour of the season.
Sepp Kuss: 'I can fight for the Grand Tours. I can be with the best guys'
Vuelta a españa 2024 route: sprinters beware, there is just one flat stage.
Vuelta a España 2024: Overview
Vuelta a españa 2024: the route.
The Vuelta a España 2024 route brings the mountains to centre stage once again. The first stage in Lisbon and the last stage in Madrid will be short individual time trials. Between the two ITTs, there is only one day for the sprinters, which comes early in the race, on day five.
Vuelta a España 2024: Stage-by-stage
Vuelta a españa: the jerseys.
The red jersey of the Vuelta's general classification leader is now well established (it was previously gold, but changed in 2010). The leader of the mountains classification wears a polka-dot jersey, but its large blue spots mean it's very different to the one that riders in the Tour de France wear. The points leader's green jersey is lime green, while the jersey for best young rider (born after 1 January 1998), is white – familiar from the Tour de France.
There are other awards on offer as well, including the teams classification and a daily combativity award. Embellished jersey numbers, rather than jerseys, are on offer for this.
Riders in the general classification in particular will be interested in the bonus seconds that are available throughout the race. There are 10, 6 and 4 seconds for finishing first, second and third on a stage, plus 3, 2 and 1 seconds at nine different intermediate sprints throughout the race and 10 separate bonus uphill sprints.
Vuelta a España 2024: The teams
There will be 22 teams riding the 2024 Vuelta a España, including all 18 WorldTour teams and four second-tier ProTeams. Full details are yet to be confirmed.
Vuelta a España: Past winners
2013: Chris Horner (USA) RadioShack–Leopard 2014: Alberto Contador (Esp) Tinkoff–Saxo 2015: Fabio Aru (Ita) Astana 2016: Nairo Quintana (Col) Movistar Team 2017: Chris Froome (GBr) Team Sky 2018: Simon Yates (GBr) Mitchelton–Scott 2019: Primož Roglič (Slo) Team Jumbo-Visma 2020: Primož Roglič (Slo) Team Jumbo-Visma 2021: Primož Roglič (Slo) Team Jumbo-Visma 2022: Remco Evenepoel (Bel) Quick Step-Alpha Vinyl 2023: Sepp Kuss (USA) Jumbo-Visma
Tour de France stage winner leaves hospital, one month after being hit by car driver
Lennard Kämna to fly home to Germany to begin rehabilitation after incident in Tenerife last month
Rather than seeking leadership opportunities at lesser teams, Kuss embraces being "second card" for Visma-Lease a Bike
By Anne-Marije Rook Published 8 February 24
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It’s been some 15 years since we saw such an exciting contingent of American riders in the WorldTour; there’s hope their ember can spark a fire in the hearts of American sports fans
By Anne-Marije Rook Published 29 December 23
Climbs of Lagos de Covadonga, Cuitu Negru and Picón Blanco star in typically mountainous route
By Tom Davidson Published 20 December 23
There should be no more flying in Grand Tours
In the age of climate crisis, no race organiser should create an event that means air travel will be used
By Adam Becket Published 5 December 23
Michel Hessmann anti doping positive a ‘black day’ for Jumbo-Visma says boss
22-year-old German rider suspended by Dutch team in August after positive test revealed presence of diuretics
By Tom Thewlis Published 22 September 23
How much did Sepp Kuss and Jumbo-Visma win at the Vuelta a España 2023?
Turns out locking out the podium for much of the race gets you quite a few Euros
By Adam Becket Published 18 September 23
Five things we learned from the Vuelta a España 2023: Sepp Kuss is the real deal and Ineos still lacking
Here's what we learned from the final Grand Tour of the 2023 season
By Tom Thewlis Published 18 September 23
Kaden Groves wins final stage of Vuelta a España as Sepp Kuss confirms victory
Sepp Kuss completes his victory in the Vuelta a España around the streets of Madrid
By Chris Marshall-Bell Published 17 September 23
How to watch Vuelta a España 2023: Live stream the 78th Spanish Grand Tour
Want to watch a Vuelta a España live stream in 2023? Here's everything you need to know
By Cycling Weekly Last updated 17 September 23
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Vuelta 2023: Vingegaard wins on steep finish climb, Kuss still leader
Results 16th stage 2023 Vuelta
1. Jonas Vingegaard (den) 2. Finn Fisher-Black (nzl) + 0.43 3. Wout Poels (nld) + 0.49 4. Michael Storer (aus) + 0.55 5. Juan Ayuso (spa) + 1.01 6. Enric Mas (spa) s.t. 7. Aleksandr Vlasov (rus) s.t. 8. Primoz Roglic (slo) s.t. 9. Mikel Landa (spa) + 1.05 10. Sepp Kuss (usa) s.t.
11. João Almeida (por) + 1.09 12. Cian Uijtdebroeks (bel) + 1.13 14. Marc Soler (spa) + 1.23
GC after stage 16 1. Sepp Kuss (usa) 2. Jonas Vingegaard (den) + 0.29 3. Primoz Roglic (slo) + 1.33 4. Juan Ayuso (spa) + 2.33 5. Enric Mas (spa) + 3.02 6. Marc Soler (spa) + 3.28 7. Mikel Landa (spa) + 4.12 8. Aleksandr Vlasov (rus) + 4.58 9. Cian Uijtdebroeks (bel) + 5.38 10. João Almeida (por) + 8.43
Race report Andreas Kron jumps off the front at kilometre 7. Samuele Battistella, Louis Vervaeke, Romain Grégoire, Kaden Groves, Andrea Piccolo, Paul Lapeira, Matteo Sobrero, Romain Bardet and Max Poole bridge across.
INEOS Grenadiers keeps chasing and a regroupment takes place with almost 80 kilometres remaining.
Some 10 kilometres later, Bardet goes again with Cattaneo. The latter goes again when they are caught, this time with Lorenzo Germani. Julius van den Berg, Nicolas Prodhomme, Max Poole and Joel Nicolau track the two down and they open up a maximum lead of 1.20 minutes.
Jumbo-Visma sets the pace to keep the attackers at bay. The catch is made inside the last 11 kilometres.
Jonas Vingegaard strikes almost 4 kilometres before the finish. Finn Fisher-Black and Wout Poels go after him, but the Tour de Champion extends his lead.
A late attack by Primoz Roglic is neutralised, while Vingegaard ploughs on to the stage win. He moves up to second place and Sepp Kuss retains La Roja.
Another interesting read: route 16th stage 2023 Vuelta.
Vuelta a España 2023 stage 16: routes, profiles, more
Click on the images to zoom
- 26 août 2023
- 3 min de lecture
Parcours et profils des étapes de La Vuelta 2023
Retrouvez le parcours et le profil des étapes de la Vuelta 2023, qui partira de Barcelone le 26 août prochain. Avec deux contre-la-montre, le retour de l'Angliru et une arrivée au Tourmalet, l'édition 2023 promet d'être rythmée.
Le parcours du Tour d'Espagne 2023 vient dêtre dévoilé. La Vuelta s'élancera pour la seconde fois de son histoire de Barcelone le 26 août prochain et s'achèvera à Madrid le 17 septembre. Comme à leur habitude, c'est un parcours montagneux que nous ont réservé les organisateurs. Cette 78ème édition comprendra notamment 10 arrivées en altitude et 7 véritables étapes de montagne, avec des arrivées mythiques sur l'Angliru et le col du Tourmalet.
Parcours de la Vuelta 2023
Profil des étapes de la Vuelta 2023
26 août. 1re étape : Barcelone - Barcelone (14,6 km c.l.m par équipes)
2e étape : Mataro - Barcelone (181,3 km)
28 août. 3e étape : Suria - Arinsal-Andorre (158,5 km)
29 août. 4e étape : Andorre la Vieille - Tarragone (183,4 km)
30 août. 5e étape : Morella -Burriana (185,7 km)
31 août. 6e étape : La Vall d'Uixo - Observatoire de Javalambre (181,3 km)
1er septembre. 7e étape : Utiel - Oliva (188,8 km)
2 septembre. 8e étape : Denia - Xorret de Cati (164 km)
3 septembre. 9e étape : Cartagène - Caravaca de la Cruz (180,9 km)
4 septembre. Transfert et repos à Valladolid
5 septembre. 10e étape : Valladolid - Valladolid (25 km c.l.m. ind.)
6 septembre. 11e étape : Lerma - Laguna Negra (163,2 km)
7 septembre. 12e étape : Olvega - Saragosse (165,4 km)
8 septembre. 13e étape : Formigal - Col du Tourmalet (134,7 km)
9 septembre. 14e étape : Sauveterre de Béarn - Larra-Belagua (161,7 km)
10 septembre. 15e étape : Pampelune - Lekunberri (156,5 km)
11 septembre : Repos en Cantabrie
12 septembre : 16e étape : Liencres - Bejes (119,7 km)
13 septembre : 17e étape : Ribadesella - Alto de l'Angliru (122,6 km)
14 septembre : 18e étape : Pola de Allande - La Cruz de Linares (178,9 km)
15 septembre : 19e étape : La Baneza - Iscar (177,4 km)
16 septembre : 20e étape : Manzanares el Real - Guadarrama (208,4 km)
17 septembre : 21e étape : Hippodrome de la Zarzuela - Madrid (101 km)
Analyse du parcours de la Vuelta 2023 :
Si le Tour d'Espagne est un Gt avec peu d'étapes pour les sprinteurs et beaucoup pour les grimpeurs, cette édition 2023 la sera encore plus. Neuf arrivées au sommet ! Neuf ! Et globalement onze opportunités pour les leaders de faire la différence, sans compter les contre-la-montre. Justement, La Vuelta continue de respecter les chrono par équipe, avec un effort collectif dès le départ. Le seul chrono individuel ne fera que 25 km mais sera tout plat. Un bel avantage pour Remco Evenepoel qui devra réussir à reprendre plusieurs dizaines de seconde sur ses concurrents.
La Vuelta est construite selon nous en trois partie :
- La moyenne montagne de l'étape 3 à 12
- La Haute montagne de la 13 à la 17e
- La Moyenne montagne de 18 à 20.
Les grosses différences devraient se faire à partir de l'étape 13, qui se terminera au sommet du Tourmalet . C'est l'étape Reine de la course avec deux cols HC. L'étape du lendemain sera elle aussi très dur avec deux nouveaux HC. A noté que les HC seront situés en France. On terminera cette période clé avec le terrible Angliru.
La dernière partie de course sera elle aussi intense, et notamment la 20e étape, magnifiquement tracé qui a tout pour offrir un final en apothéose. Nul besoin de haute montagne pour faire des écarts, cette étape montagne russe peut permettre de renverser le général et bouleversé la hiérarchie, si tant est que ce soit possible selon les écarts.
Au global, c'est une Vuelta passionnante qu'on devrait vivre grâce à un parcours dynamique. On regrette simplement qu'une ou deux étapes pour sprinteurs en plus ne soit pas incluse. On a noté 4 à 5 opportunités, surtout en 2e partie de Vuelta.
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Du 17 août au 8 septembre 2024, La Vuelta 24 sera composée de 21 étapes et couvrira une distance totale de 3 265 km.
- 1 étape de plaine
- 5 étapes de moyenne montagne
- 8 étapes de montagne
- 2 contre-la-montre en individuel
- 5 étapes accidentées avec 2 arrivées en altitude
- 2 journées de repos
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La Vuelta is one of the leading cycling races in the international calendar. 21 stages, three weeks of competition between August and September, and more than 3,000 km covering the Spanish geography, and from other countries such as Andorra, Belgium, Fran
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Home / Vuelta 2023 Results. Vuelta 2023: Vingegaard wins on steep finish climb, Kuss still leader. foto: Cor VosThe peloton reels in the breakaway just before the steep finish climb. Jonas Vingegaard strikes with 4 kilometres to go and he solos to victory. Sepp Kuss loses more than 1 minute, but retains La Roja.(Slideshow route/profile)
Running from 17 August to 8 September 2024, La Vuelta 24 will be made up of 21 stages and will cover a total distance of 3265 kilometers. 1 flat stage. 5 medium mountain stages. 8 mountain stages. 2 individual time-trial stages. 5 hilly stages (2 with high-altitude finales) 2 rest days. La Vuelta 24 - Official Route. Stage.
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