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1993 Vuelta a España

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cycling race
1993 Vuelta a España
Race details
Dates26 April – 15 May
Stages21
Distance3,605 km (2,240 mi)
Winning time96h 07' 03"
Results
Winner Tony Rominger (SUI)(CLAS–Cajastur)
 Second Alex Zülle (SUI)(ONCE)
 Third Laudelino Cubino (ESP)(Amaya Seguros)

Points Tony Rominger (SUI)(CLAS–Cajastur)
Mountains Tony Rominger (SUI)(CLAS–Cajastur)
Combination Jesús Montoya (ESP)(Amaya Seguros)
Sprints Hendrik Redant (BEL)(Collstrop)
 TeamAmaya Seguros
← 1992
1994 →

The 48th EditionVuelta a España (Tour of Spain), a long-distancebicyclestage race and one of the threegrand tours, was held from 26 April to 15 May 1993. It consisted of 21 stages covering a total of 3,605 km (2,240 mi), and was won byTony Rominger of theCLAS–Cajasturcycling team.[1]

Race preview and favorites

[edit]

Tony Rominger, winner of the previous edition, started the race as the big favourite for the overall win. Among the other contenders were his rivals of the previous year,Jesús Montoya (supported by hisAmaya Seguros team that included such names asMelcior Mauri,Laudelino Cubino andOliverio Rincón), andPedro Delgado. TheONCE team withErik Breukink as team leader and riders of the calibre ofLaurent Jalabert andJohan Bruyneel were also a strong candidates. Other candidates included ItalianMarco Giovannetti and ScotsmanRobert Millar, although they weren't supported by strong teams.

Route

[edit]
List of stages[2][3]
StageDateCourseDistanceTypeWinner
126 AprilA Coruña – A Coruña10 km (6 mi)Individual time trial Alex Zülle (SUI)
227 AprilA CoruñaVigo251.1 km (156 mi) Alfonso Gutiérrez (ESP)
328 AprilVigoOurense171.4 km (107 mi) Laurent Jalabert (FRA)
429 AprilA GudiñaSalamanca233.4 km (145 mi) Jean-Paul van Poppel (NED)
530 AprilSalamancaÁvila219.8 km (137 mi) Marino Alonso (ESP)
61 MayPalazuelos de Eresma (Destilerías DYC) –Navacerrada24.1 km (15 mi)Individual time trial Alex Zülle (SUI)
72 MayPalazuelos de Eresma (Destilerías DYC) –Madrid184 km (114 mi) Laurent Jalabert (FRA)
83 MayAranjuezAlbacete225.1 km (140 mi) Jean-Paul van Poppel (NED)
94 MayAlbaceteValencia224 km (139 mi) Djamolidine Abdoujaparov (UZB)
105 MayValenciaLa Sénia206 km (128 mi) Juan Carlos González Salvador (ESP)
116 MayLleidaCerler221 km (137 mi) Tony Rominger (SUI)
127 MayBenasqueZaragoza220.7 km (137 mi) Djamolidine Abdoujaparov (UZB)
138 MayZaragoza – Zaragoza37.1 km (23 mi)Individual time trial Melcior Mauri (ESP)
149 MayTudelaAlto de la Cruz de la Demanda (Ezcaray)197.2 km (123 mi) Tony Rominger (SUI)
1510 MaySanto Domingo de la CalzadaSantander226.2 km (141 mi) Dag Otto Lauritzen (NOR)
1611 MaySantanderAlto Campoo160 km (99 mi) Jesús Montoya (ESP)
1712 MaySantanderLakes of Covadonga179.5 km (112 mi) Oliverio Rincón (COL)
1813 MayCangas de OnísGijón170 km (106 mi) Serguei Outschakov (UKR)
1914 MayGijónAlto del Naranco153 km (95 mi) Tony Rominger (SUI)
2015 MaySalasFerrol247 km (153 mi) Djamolidine Abdoujaparov (UZB)
2116 MayPadrónSantiago de Compostela44.6 km (28 mi)Individual time trial Alex Zülle (SUI)
Total3,605 km (2,240 mi)

Race overview

[edit]

A Swiss youngster, Alex Zülle, Breukink's ONCE teammate, who had been the revelation of the previous year's Tour de France, surprised by winning the prologue with a commanding lead of over half a minute over the rest of the contenders. He would keep the leader's jersey for the first week.

It was expected that the Swiss youngster, who had so far not shown climbing abilities, would lose the lead on the stage 5 mountain time trial to the Puerto de Navacerrada. Zülle not only kept his lead, he won the stage. Only Rominger seemed to be close to the rhythm of his young compatriot, as most of the favorites including Pedro Delgado lost over two minutes that day.

The high mountain stages started with the 11th, ending at Cerler. Rominger launched his first attack on the yellow jersey, winning the stage and taking almost a minute out of Zülle. He was now only 18 seconds down on the general classification. The rest of the favorites saw their chances slip away as they were now many minutes down. Only Cubino kept in touch, albeit at a deficit of two minutes.

After a close fought time trial in Zaragoza won by Mauri, the general classification was now solely a two-man fight. Two days later Rominger managed to distance Zülle on the climb to Valdezcaray and took the lead. Throughout most of the mountain stages on the Cordillera Cantabrica mountain range Rominger and Zülle closely marked each other, finishing together; However, on the final of those stages, Rominger hatched a plan to attack on a wet descent, taking advantage of Zülle's weak descending skills. Rominger managed to distance Zülle, which led to the inexperienced Zülle panicking, running wide at a corner and crashing, losing further time. By the end of the stage, Rominger had taken a famous solo win atop the Alto del Naranco and had taken another minute out of Zülle and his chasing ONCE team. This time gain would loom large by the end of the Vuelta.

The Vuelta's final stage was a 44 km individual time trial where Zülle was determined to take back Rominger's general classification lead of little over a minute. Rominger voiced his concern that a stomach illness he had contracted the day after the Naranco stage may cost him the overall win. In the end, Zülle took a dominant stage win but was unable to take back all the time he needed. Rominger thus took his second Vuelta with Zülle second and Cubino third.

Rominger dominated all three classifications and became only the second rider after Eddy Merckx in the 1968 Giro d'Italia and the 1969 Tour de France to achieve this in a Grand Tour.

Results

[edit]

Final General Classification

[edit]
RankRiderTeamTime
1SwitzerlandTony RomingerCLAS–Cajastur96h07'03''
2SwitzerlandAlex ZülleONCE29''
3SpainLaudelino CubinoAmaya Seguros8'54''
4ColombiaOliverio RincónAmaya Seguros9'25''
5SpainJesús MontoyaAmaya Seguros10'27''
6SpainPedro DelgadoBanesto11'17''
7NetherlandsErik BreukinkONCE17'58''
8SpainMelcior MauriAmaya Seguros19'53''
9BelgiumJohan BruyneelONCE20'01''
10SpainFernando EscartínCLAS–Cajastur23'27''
11SpainIgnacio GastonCLAS–Cajastur
12SpainMikel ZarrabeitiaAmaya Seguros
13ColombiaHernán BuenahoraKelme–Xacobeo
14ItalyLuca GelfiBanesto
15United KingdomRobert MillarTVM–Bison
16SpainJavier MurguialdayAmaya Seguros
17SpainJosé Ramon Uriarte ZuberoBanesto–Pinarello
18SpainJon Unzaga BombínCLAS–Cajastur
19DenmarkPeter Meinert NielsenTVM–Bison
20SpainFrancisco Javier MauleónCLAS–Cajastur
21SpainMarino Alonso MonjeBanesto
22SpainEduardo Chozas OlmoArtiach–Filipinos
23SpainArsenio González GutiérrezCLAS–Cajastur
24SpainFederico Echave MusatadiCLAS–Cajastur
25SpainJesús BlancoDeportpublic–Otero

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Vuelta 93"(PDF).El Mundo Deportivo. 16 May 1993. p. 37.Archived(PDF) from the original on 16 November 2020.
  2. ^"1993 » 48th Vuelta a Espana".Procyclingstats. Retrieved25 July 2018.
  3. ^"48ème Vuelta a España 1993".Memoire du cyclisme (in French). Archived fromthe original on 12 January 2005.

External links

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A green jersey
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(jersey verde)

A white jersey with blue polkadots
Mountains classification
(jersey puntos azules)

A white jersey with red numbers
Team classification
(clasificación por equipos)

A white jersey with yellow numbers
Combativity award
(premio de la combatividad)

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