Vuelta a España: Primož Roglič seizes race lead with victory atop Alto de Moncalvillo on stage 19
Enric Mas, 🌳Richard Carapaz gain time as Ben O'Connor slips out of🌜 race lead



















Primož Roglič (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) made his decisive move in the race for the overall 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Vuelta a España on stage 19 as he took solo victꦓory on the summit finish of Alto de Moncal﷽villo and moved into race lead.
On the early slopes of Altꦑo de Moncalvillo, the three-time champion was ferried ahead of the leading group by teammates Daní Martinez and Aleksandr Vlasov before riding clear of his Red Buဣll train just inside 5km to go.
168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Enric Mas (Movistar) was the only rider able to make any reaction, leaving behind a group of GC favourites to bridge part of the way back to Roglič and gained a 30-second advantage on the red jersey Ben O’Connor (Decathlon–AG2R La Mondiale).
O'Connor could only watch as ♐his 13-day red jersey streak and GC lead disappeared, but he battled to remain within two minutes of the Slovenian rider.
Mas was stung by the steep inclines of the final slopes of Alto de Moncalvillo and was passed by David Gaudu (Groupama–FDJ), who swept in ahead of him for second place. Mattias Skjelmose (Lidl–Trek) also got the better of Mas in the last 100 metres to take third, 46 seconds behind Roglič, while Mas trailed in four seconds later.
O’Connor finished 1:49 behind Roglič, losing his red jersey but holding onto second place - 1:54 behind the new race leader, and 26 seconds ahead of Mas in third place.
Speaking after the stage finish, stage winner Roglič reflected on the day's racing. "I had some really nice memories from this climb. It didn't disappoint me again – beautiful."
While many expected Roglič to take victory today, the new red jersey argued it was never in the plan. "I said I don't need the stage but I will not say their names but some guys decided we don't listen to you anyway, we pull. We have nothing else to do," he said. "I had to make a call and I say, OK, we have to all be on the same side, then we go for it."
Asked if he felt he had sealed his GC victory, Roglič was cautious."Not really. I mean, we say all the time 'the Queen stage to come', it's the last one tomorrow, the big one, it is definitely super hard, and then still we don't do the normal laps in Madrid – it's again a decisive day for the GC, time trial.
"So I'm far from done."
Unsurprisingly O'Connor cut a despondent figure at the race finish. "I was a bit broken at the end there, I actually fe🅘lt pretty good until the halfway," the Australian𓄧 said. "But it's just stage 19 I guess."
Speaking about the startling attack from the three Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe riders, he sa🔯id, "I wasn't surprised, but I didn't expect ♌myself to be so bad at the end. A bit average to be honest but that's the reality."
O'Connor accepted there were two testing days ahead, and that his thoughts were focused on the race finish, "Monday, having beers, sittin🐻g on the terrace and relaxing."
How it unfolded
The peloton set off from Logroño below a bright cloudy sky and against the striking pastoral🌠 landscapes of Bilbao, with the Rioja wine region on the day's itinerary of sights.
The 139 riders remaining in La Vuelta a España peloton were soon leaping into attacks, with Thomas De Gendt (Lotto-Dstny) an endearin🎉g (albeit predictable) prot🧸agonist of the early breakaway attempts.
With 23km passed, a gro𝓡up of 23 attempted to break free, but a roari༺ng 50kph peloton absorbed the attack quickly.
Ar𝕴ound the 30km mark, Edward Planckaert (Alpecin Deceuninck), Fran Miholjevic (Bahrain Vi♎ctorious) and Vito Braet (Intermarché-Wanty) managed to establish a gap, with Isaac Del Toro (UAE Team Emirates) and Simone Petilli (Intermarché-Wanty) successfully bridging across to them.
With 125km left, the five riders hadജ a gap of 1:20 and it seemed that the day's main breakaway w🐼as formed.
The peloton seemed quickly resigned to the five escapees, an꧑d it took only 15 minutes for that gap to swell to four minutes.
Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale and Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe were active at the front of the peloton controlling the pace through the 100km market and toward the category 3 climb of Puerto de Pradilla that sat almost completely centrally on the stage profil♒e.
The break held, but the efforts of Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe on the long a🐎scent chipped into their advantage as the five riders passed the summit of the Puerto de Prad✃illa with a slimmer margin of 2:40 on the peloton.
Aside from a brief split and a tussle of peloton firepower between Movistar, Red Bull-♒Bora-Hanꦬsgrohe and Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale, the main group was largely orderly as it approached the final 40km.
With 35ꦕkm remaining, the break had only 1:30, with the 1,490🥂m summit finish of Alto de Moncalvillo looming on the horizon.
It was a margin that the riders held at the 25km mark, but the aggressive turn of pace t🙈hat foreshadowed the final ascent - beginning with 8.6km to go - saw their gap shrink to 30 seconds with 12km remaining before they were swallowed up only kilometres from t⛄he foothills of the climb.
As the ascent began, so too did the selection with all but the major GC contenders spa🤡t out of the main group as Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe set a blistering pace on the early kilometres of the climb.
With 5.8km left of the ascent, Primož Roglič was catapulted ahead of the favourites group by Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe henchmen Daní Martinez and Aleksandr Vlasov. No one was able to react, as Ben O'Connor was left to watch the Red Bull trio ride into red.
At the 5km mark, Ma🐼rtinez and Vlasov were relieved of their supporting duties as the three-time Vuelta champion rode solo into an open empty road and likely Grand Tour victory.
Results
Results powered by
The latest race content, interviews, features, reviews and expert buying guides, direct to yꦏour inbox!
Peter Stuart has been the editor of Cyclingnews since March 2022, overseeing editorial output across all 🦂of Cyclingnews' digital touchpoints.
Before joining Cycling🐈news, Peter was the digital editor of Rouleur magazine. Starting life as a freelance feature writer, with bylines in The Times and The Telegraph, he first entered cycling journalism in 2012, joining Cyclist magazine as staff writer. Peter has a background as an international rower, representing Great Britain at Under-23 level and at the Junior Rowing World Championships.
Latest on Cyclingnews
-
Tour de France Stage 2 Live: Will a punchy finale on the coast see another GC battle in Northern France?
Peloton tackle longest stage of the 2025 Tour de France at 209.1km in length, with some punchy climbs late on -
Giro d'Italia Women: Marlen Reusser captures opening time trial and first race lead
Lotte Kopecky second, defending champion Elisa Longo Borghini third -
'Yesterday was really tough, I hope today will go better' - Last on opening stage, Lenny Martinez battles on in Tour de France
Bahrain Victorious pin GC hopes on Santiago Buitrago rather than up-and-coming French climber -
'It's a day for Van der Poel, Van Aert and of course Tadej' – Will Pogačar be in yellow by the end of Tour de France stage 2?
Punchy final in Boulogne-sur-Mer brings GC battle with Vingegaard back in play for a second day