Vuelta a España rollercoaster for Visma-Lease A Bike as Wout van Aert leads but Dylan van Baarle crashes out
Team GC leader Sepp Kuss upﷺbeat ab♋out opening time trial ride

Visma-Lease a Bike could hardly have had more mixed feelings after stage 2 of the 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Vuelta a España as Wout van Aert 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:secured the overall lead, but the squad simultaneously had to regret Dylan van Baarl🃏e becoming the first rider of the ra⛄ce to abandon.
Van Baarle had barely crosไsed the line on Sat💙urday in Lisbon, finishing just two seconds behind winner Brandon McNulty (UAE Team Emirates), before he declared that there was “everything to play for” in the battle for the overall lead.
The Bel🙈gian duly pushed hard for the bonus seconds both in the intermediate sprint and on the rugged stage 2 finale. While he just missed out on the seconds on offer at Acobaca with 50 kilometres to go, Van Aert finally got the bonus he needed at the finish in Ourém, where he took second place behind Kaden Groves (🐠Deceuninck-Alpecin).
The six seconds Van Aert took there were more than enough to move Van Aert past Brandon McNulty and into red for his second Grand Tour lead after a four day sp♒ell in the Tour de France fꦛirst week in 2021.
“Of course I w🀅anted to win this stage, my team did a really good job to fight for a bunch sprint, so it’s unfortunate that I got second. But today I knew that finishing in the first three meant the 🌟red jersey, so after all it's a good day,” Van Aert said.
Riding his first ever Vuelta, Van Aert was adamant that he would not swap the leader’s jersey for a stage win. “This week was my best chance to take the red, and there are lots of opportunities further on for stages. I’ve already tried twice for a stage here in two days, and I will try again,” he said. “It was a career goal of mine to get the Vuelta lead, and I’m very proud to be wearing it.&rdqu♔o;
The sprint itself was anything but straightforward, with a late crash all but splintering the peloton on the technical, twisting ✱finish. Van Aert came close to success, but Groves proved the quickest. &ldq🅘uo;I knew beforehand that Kaden is really fast,” Van Aert said. “Edoardo Affini gave me a really good lead out, but Kaden came past me at speed and he fully deserves the win.”
The latest race content, interviews, features, reviews and expert buying guides, direct tꦆo your﷽ inbox!
Van Aert did not rule out trying to go for a stage win as soon as Monday in Castelo Branco, almost equally as rugged a finish as on Sunday. But after winning the points classification in the Tour a few years back, he is also pushing for the maillot a puntos in the Vuelta. Although Groves is currently ahead in that⭕ competition by seven points, Van Aert is close behind.
Van Aert said he had few expectations that he would be able to keep the race leader’s💎 red jersey, however, be🎃yond stage 4’s first summit finish of the race, at Pico Villuercas.
Van Baarle
Even as Van♕ Aert and Visma-Lease a Bike were celebrating, though, they were keeping more than half an eye on updates regarding Dylan van Baarle, who crashed mid-way through the stage with what race doctors called ‘multiple traumatism’ and had✃ to abandon with 49 kilometres to go.
Van Baarle’s latest DNF compounds an already very difficult year for the former Dutch national champion. He was unable to race🌸 the Tour de France after he abandoned injured in a bad crash in the Criterium du Dauphiné, and before that he could not take part in Paris-Roubaix, which he won in 2022, because of sickness.
Part of Kuss’ winning⭕ Vuelta team last year, Van Baarle was expected to play a key support role again for the American in 2024, as well as working in 🍬the lead-outs for Van Aert.
“It’s a big blow to start the Vuelta with,&rౠdquo; Affini told reporters at the finish line. “Dylan is an exceptional rider and we will miss him for sur🌱e.”
Affini w🅰as confident that Kuss would be able to perform at his best without Van Baarle’s support. “When it comes to the cli🥃mbs it’s up to Sepp. At that moment it’s his legs that will do the talking. But during the whole race, and tactics-wise, it’s going to be something we have to think about.”
Speaking before the start of the stage, Kuss described his opening time trial as “more or less what he expected,” although he admitted that he had struggled a little against the strongly gusting crosswi🌱nds. Kuss finished 63rd at 53 seconds on stage 1, 37 seconds down on key reference point Primoz Roglic (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) – not a massive gap, but perhaps more than he would like.
“I think it was a little bit less straightforward than I expected, with the wind, it was kind of hard to keep the bike going, but⛄ the feeling was ok for the first day of a Grand Tour and power and everything was good. So it was a decent enough start," Kuss said.
The race inꦿ any case has no clear patron as yet – it is far too soon for that – and, as Kuss pointed out, the level of the field was a very deep one. “Almost every team has 💃two or three options, and that makes it even more open,” he said.
“We’ll see a bit more who ༒is wher🐭e in the next mountain stages, and definitely we'll know more by the end of the first week. Bora, UAE, Trek – there are so many strong teams, it’s the last Grand Tour of the season, too. So everybody put all their eggs in one basket and that makes it even tougher.”
Although Kuss has lost Van B💛aarle as team support, Van Aert made it clear that for all he has his own targets in the Vuelta, one of his top priorities is ensuring the American is in a position to defend the overall title he won in 2023.
🍒“My main goals from now on, in any case, are to collect points for green, win a stage and be as much support as I can for Sepp,” Van Aer🍰t said.
“We’re confident that he can do it [win overall] again, but we’ll have to see. It’s way too early to say much about that. Stage 4 🌊will be where we’ll start seeing the differences between the GC guys.”
Get unlimited access to all of our coverage of the 2024 Vuelta a España - including breaking news and analysis reported by our journalists on the ground from every stage as it happens and more. 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Find out more.
Alasdair Fotheringham has been reporting on cycling since 1991. He has covered every Tour de France since 1992 bar one, as well as numerous other bike races of all shapes and sizes, ranging from the Olympic Games in 2008 to the now sadly defunct Subida a Urkiola hill climb in Spain. As well as working for Cyclingnews, he has also written for The Independent, The Guardian, ProCycling, The Express and Reuters.