Contador Conquers Mortirolo - English

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  • Опубліковано 10 вер 2024
  • Alberto Contador's legendary climb of the Mortirolo on Stage 16 of the 2015 Giro d'Italia. English commentary by Rob Hatch and Sean Kelly.
    Soundtrack: "Hellraiser/Action" by Raven.
    Video Footage Courtesy Eurosport. No copyright infringement intended. I make no claim to ownership.
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    Contador fights back on Mortirolo to extend Giro d’Italia lead
    "Cycling isn't mathematics," Alberto Contador said after crossing the line in Aprica, and he wasn't wrong, certainly not after a stage so enthralling that the extension of his overall lead at this Giro d'Italia to more than four minutes felt like something of an afterthought. "These are the kind of stages that people remember."
    Stalled by a puncture shortly after passing through the finish line at Aprica for the first time, Contador was forced into a frantic chase as Katusha and Astana pushed the pace up front, and he had to claw his way back up to the leaders alone on the mighty Mortirolo. Once that remontada was complete, Contador then dropped Fabio Aru (Astana) six kilometres shy of the summit, only to be in turn distanced by the Sardinian's teammate Mikel Landa on the final climb the finish.
    ...
    Contador began the Mortirolo 52 seconds down on the leading group, which was whittled down to just Landa, Aru and Steven Kruijswijk (LottoNL-Jumbo) after the opening kilometres of climbing. As the gradient stiffened, Contador began to dance past dropped rider upon dropped rider with disquieting ease, prompting inevitable comparisons with Marco Pantani's comeback on the climb to Oropa at the 1999 Giro.
    The Spaniard was some way short of matching Pantani's time of 43 minutes up the Mortirolo in 1994 (or, indeed Ivan Gotti's 1996 record of 42:40), but he scaled the climb far quicker than anyone else here, making light work of its 18% slopes to clock 45:07 for the 11.85 kilometres, with only Kruijswijk and Landa within a minute of his mark on the ascent. "I thought about the difficulty ahead of me. I knew that I couldn't afford any more mechanical problems or a hunger knock," Contador said.
    By the time Contador edged back up to the leaders with more than seven kilometres left to climb, Aru was already began to flag, and he was distanced irretrievably when the pink jersey accelerated shortly afterwards. Only Kruijswijk and Landa could follow, with the Dutchman performing the vast majority of the pace-making thereafter.
    At the summit, they led Aru by 1:52, an advantage that grew once more as they climbed again towards the finish at Aprica...
    "As for Landa maybe he abandoned his leader a little bit but everyone does his own race," Contador said pointedly in his press conference afterwards. "For me, Kruijswijk did great work and under normal circumstances, I would have given him the stage win but everybody has his own interests and I respect that."
    Landa now climbs to second place in the overall standings, 4:02 down, while the flagging Aru drops to third, a further 50 seconds back. Contador was sparing when asked to assess the young Basque's prospects. "Landa is going very strongly in this Giro," he said. "We'll have to see how he does in some other races, but he has a good future."
    Asked to revisit Astana's forcing following his wheel change, Contador reached for a diplomatic response, remembering, perhaps, his own attack on Andy Schleck's yellow jersey in similar circumstances at the 2010 Tour de France. "I knew that in that situation, the most likely scenario was exactly what happened. I'm not here to debate whether it was right or wrong," he said.
    But would Contador acted as Aru did had their roles been reversed? "Today I don't think Aru is happy," he said simply. In that instance at least, the arithmetic of the results sheet speaks for itself.

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