Julian Dean Diary
Well I?ve made it through the first two big mountain stages of this year?s Vuelta. With timed efforts and good judgement they were hard but ?survivable?. What especially made them hard has been the intensity the Spanish teams have been riding at, particularly Liberty Seguros. They are riding hard all day, every day. Even when there?s a breakaway that?s no threat to the overall GC, they don?t let it get more than three minutes up. I?m not sure what their tactics are but they?re certainly making hard work of it. Not only for themselves but for the rest of the peloton as well. Obviously though if they were finding it that hard they wouldn?t be doing it so I guess that I, and the rest of the peloton, mustn?t be going that good compared to them?
One thing that I?ve really noticed with the Vuelta over the years since I?ve been doing it, is the decreasing number of spectators. Especially on stage 10 when we were in
This whole thing was reinforced yesterday when I got back to the hotel, after riding 6 hours with no spectators, and on the TV was a doco about Alonso?s go-cart track in
Today is the first rest day of the Vuelta. It has been a long time coming and I really need it. I?m feeling pretty thrashed after what have been two hard mountain days on top of a hard week?s racing. Well, I reckon that it?s been hard. Not sure about some of the other guys though, the way they step into it everyday while I?m on the rivet from beginning to end. Unfortunately the rest day is not going to be overly relaxing. Normally I like to sit in my bed for the most part of the day after doing 2-3 hours on the bike, checking out around the city - wherever we are, a massage and lots off sleep. So as if the Vuelta hasn?t been hard enough, they made the rest day a 5 hour drive by car to
There?s not much that we can do about that though. I?m sure that the organizers will hear enough complaints from the teams but as is normal in cycling, it won?t change a thing. What the teams, or more importantly, the riders want often means very little and most of the time, squat. Usually it?s all about what works best for publicity and media. After all, we the cyclists are just the entertainers.
Anyway, our team is down to five riders now so the peloton is shrinking by the day. Tomorrow?s stage is a flat one from
Julz
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