Bardet Climbs To Victory On Stage 14 Of Vuelta
Bardet Climbs To Victory On Stage 14 Of Vuelta
Romain Bardet won the mountainous 14th stage of the Vuelta a España and also grabbed the lead in the climbing classification on Saturday.
Romain Bardet won the mountainous 14th stage of the Vuelta a España and also grabbed the lead in the climbing
classification on Saturday.
The Frenchman, who rides for DSM, was part of a group of 18 riders that
escaped early on the 165.7km stage and built a huge lead by the start of the
final climb.
He shook off the remnants of the breakaway for his first Vuelta stage win
and only his second career win outside France, following the Tour of Burgos,
also in Spain, earlier this month. It was also his first grand tour stage win in four years.
"It's been a long wait, it's true. I've been second several times since
then," said Bardet at the finish.
In the main pack, Norwegian Odd Christian Eiking responded to attacks from
his main rivals on the final climb to come in 10min 49sec behind Bardet, and
retain the overall lead, although he conceded a few seconds to reigning
champion Primoz Roglič.
Bardet, who twice finished on the podium in the Tour de France early in his
career, was caught in the huge crash in stage five which knocked him out of
contention for the overall victory.
He was part of the group that went 8km into the stage and grabbed the lead
in the King of the Mountains classification when he was first over the first
two peaks of the day.
"After that, I knew that even if I didn't win, I had the polka dot jersey,
so I bet on the stage win, and it worked out well," said Bardet.
The breakaway led by 14 minutes at the foot of the last climb, but was
broken up by crashes, punctures and attacks. Bardet remained cool as compatriot Nicolas Prodhomme and then two pursuers
escaped.
"I had a feeling no one really wanted to commit in this breakaway," Bardet
said. "So I had really a hard time to catch the men in front. We really played it
smart with my team director who told me exactly when I had to attack on the
steepest (part of the climb). I just committed."
Bardet said that he had recovered from his earlier crash.
"The legs were OK," he said. "Everyone is a bit tired."
Bardet was followed home 44 seconds later by Spaniard Jesus Herrera of
Cofidis and Australian Jay Vine of Alpecin-Fenix, his shirt in tatters after a nasty
fall earlier in the stage.
Briton Tom Pidcock of Ineos, the Olympic mountain bike champion, finished
fourth, another 28 seconds back.
Down the mountain, Frenchman Guillaume Martin, who is second overall, and a
Cofidis team-mate tried to shake off Eiking. The Norwegian was able to match
that move.
"Martin tried to attack but I knew it was a lot of headwind so I gambled to
stay on the wheel and it worked out," said the Intermarche-Wanty-Gobert rider.
Eiking could not quite keep up with a late attack from Slovenian Roglic of
Jumbo Visma who pinched 16 seconds at the end. Eiking remained 54 seconds ahead of Martin with Roglic closing to 1min
36sec.
On Sunday, the peloton will have another tough day in the mountains, with
four big climbs.