Vuelta a Espana 2019
Latest News from the Race
-
Road-side spectators give resounding thumbs-up to 2019 Vuelta a España
Major independent survey of race’s social impact finds positive result -
No room for Mathieu van der Poel at 2020 Vuelta a España
Organisers under pressure to award two wildcard places to Spanish ProTeams -
2020 Vuelta a España likely to return to Angliru
First stage on steep Asturian climb since Contador won in 2017
Jakobsen wins final stage as Roglic takes overall Vuelta a España title
Jumbo-Visma's Primoz Roglic sewed up the overall title at the 2019 Vuelta a Espana, taking his – and Slovenia's – first Grand Tour title, with Movistar's Alejandro Valverde taking second place and another rising Slovenian star, Tadej Pogacar (UAE Team Emirates) taking third.
The final sprint stage into Madrid was won by Deceuninck-QuickStep's Fabio Jakobsen, ahead of Ireland's Sam Bennett (Bora-Hansgrohe), giving the Belgian team five victories at this year's Vuelta, but the day belonged to Roglic, who took a well-earned, and hard-fought, overall victory.
The 29-year-old former ski jumper finished the race 2:16 ahead of Valverde and 2:38 ahead of compatriot Pogacar.
"Thank you for the support – to my family and everyone that was involved in this big result," said Roglic after his win. "See you at the next races."
For a full report of the final stage of the 2019 Vuelta a España, click here.
Pos. | Rider Name (Country) Team | Result |
---|---|---|
1 | Fabio Jakobsen (Ned) Deceuninck-QuickStep | 2:48:20 |
2 | Sam Bennett (Irl) Bora-Hansgrohe | |
3 | Szymon Sajnok (Pol) CCC Team | |
4 | Jon Aberasturi Izaga (Spa) Caja Rural-Seguros RGA | |
5 | Edvald Boasson Hagen (Nor) Dimension Data | |
6 | Edward Theuns (Bel) Trek-Segafredo | |
7 | Tosh Van Der Sande (Bel) Lotto Soudal | |
8 | Clement Venturini (Fra) AG2R La Mondiale | |
9 | Marc Sarreau (Fra) Groupama-FDJ | |
10 | Dion Smith (NZl) Mitchelton-Scott |
Pos. | Rider Name (Country) Team | Result |
---|---|---|
1 | Primoz Roglic (Slo) Team Jumbo-Visma | 83:07:31 |
2 | Alejandro Valverde (Spa) Movistar Team | 0:02:16 |
3 | Tadej Pogacar (Slo) UAE Team Emirates | 0:02:38 |
4 | Nairo Quintana (Col) Movistar Team | 0:03:29 |
5 | Miguel Angel Lopez (Col) Astana Pro Team | 0:04:31 |
6 | Rafal Majka (Pol) Bora-Hansgrohe | 0:07:16 |
7 | Wilco Kelderman (Ned) Team Sunweb | 0:09:47 |
8 | Carl Fredrik Hagen (Nor) Lotto Soudal | 0:12:54 |
9 | Marc Soler (Spa) Movistar Team | 0:22:10 |
10 | Mikel Nieve (Spa) Mitchelton-Scott | 0:22:17 |
Overview
The 2019 Vuelta a España begins in Torrevieja on Saturday August 23 and finishes in Madrid on September 15.
The route, unveiled in a ceremony in Alicante in December, sees the number of summit finishes cut back a touch from nine to eight, but it's still a mountainous route that sticks with the Vuelta’s recent traditions.
Some brutally steep climbs have been sought out for the occasion, with the 4km Mas de la Costa and the painfully steep Los Machucos returning to the route. Andorra is also back on the menu and will host a short but punchy stage to bring week one to a close. The 100-kilometre route comprises five climbs and will ensure some gaps in the overall classification.
There will be just over 60 kilometres against the clock, with a 24km team time trial in Torrevieja opening the race and a 36.1km individual chrono in Pau at the start of the second week.
The final week of action gives the sprinters more opportunities to find glory, along with two important mountain stages in the Sierras around Madrid, before the last stage into the Spanish capital.
In the absence of 2018 champion Simon Yates, the 2019 Vuelta looks wide open, with a range of candidates and a sense anything can happen. Nairo Quintana and Alejandro Valverde are two of three former winners on the start line - alongside Fabio Aru (UAE Team Emirates) - and head up a Movistar team without Giro d'Italia champion Richard Carapaz, who was ruled out through injury just 48 hours before the start of the race.
Primoz Roglic, third at the Giro, is very much among the favourites, and his Jumbo-Visma team have a credible alternative in Steven Kruijswijk, who was third at the Tour de France.
Movistar and Jumbo-Visma seem the strongest teams in the race, but elsewhere are a number of interesting challengers, including Colombians Miguel Angel Lopez (Astana), Esteban Chaves (Mitchelton-Scott), and Rigoberto Uran (EF Education First). Team Ineos leadership is shared between Wout Poels and 24-year-old Tao Geoghegan Hart, while two-time top-10 finisher Wilco Kelderman leads Sunweb and Rafal Majka leads Bora-Hansgrohe.
Vuelta a España countdown features
- Race preview: Opportunity knocks at Vuelta a España 2019
- Form ranking: Vuelta a España 2019 favourites
- Vuelta a España 2019: 5 key stages
- 10 riders to watch at the 2019 Vuelta a España
- Jumbo-Visma attempt third Grand Tour opening stage win out of three - Robert Gesink interview
Vuelta a España biggest stories
- Carapaz ruled out of Vuelta a España
- Elissonde replaced by De la Cruz in Team Ineos' line-up
- Vuelta a España teams roll out in Moraira - Gallery
- Chaves on the comeback trail at Vuelta a España
- Roglic: I'm here to win the Vuelta a España
- Valverde set to hunt stage victories at the Vuelta a España
- Gilbert and Jakobsen headline Deceuninck-QuickStep at Vuelta a España
- Geoghegan Hart and Poels lead Ineos at the Vuelta a España
How to watch the Vuelta a España – Live streams from anywhere
If you live outside a broadcast zone or are on holiday outside your country and find that the live streams to be geo-restricted, you can get around this by getting access to them by simulating being back in your home country via a 'virtual private network', or VPN, for your laptop, tablet or mobile.
TechRadar tested hundreds of VPNs and recommends the number one best VPN currently available as Express VPN. With ExpressVPN, you can watch on many devices at once including Smart TVs, Fire TV Stick, PC, Mac, iPhone, Android phone, iPads, tablets etc. Check out ExpressVPN and get 15 months for the price of 12.
2018 Vuelta a España general classification
# | Rider Name (Country) Team | Result |
---|---|---|
1 | Simon Yates | 82:05:58 |
2 | Enric Mas | 0:01:46 |
3 | Miguel Angel Lopez | 0:02:04 |
4 | Steven Kruijswijk | 0:02:54 |
5 | Alejandro Valverde | 0:04:28 |
6 | Thibaut Pinot | 0:05:57 |
7 | Rigoberto Uran | 0:06:07 |
8 | Nairo Quintana | 0:06:51 |
9 | Ion Izagirre | 0:11:09 |
10 | Wilco Kelderman | 0:11:11 |
Races
-
Vuelta a Espana 201924 August 2019 - 15 September 2019 | Spain | WorldTour
-
Stage 2 - Vuelta a Espana: Quintana wins stage 2 | Benidorm - Calpe2019-08-25 199.6km
-
Stage 3 - Vuelta a Espana: Bennett wins stage 3 | Ibi - Alicante2019-08-26 188km
-
Stage 7 - Vuelta a Espana: Valverde wins stage 7 | Onda - Mas de la Costa2019-08-30 183.2km
-
Stage 8 - Vuelta a Espana: Arndt wins stage 8 | Valls - Igualada2019-08-31 166.9km
-
Stage 10 - Vuelta a España: Roglič wins Pau time trial | Jurancon - Pau2019-09-03 36.2km
-
stage 13 - Vuelta a España: Pogacar wins stage 13 | Bilboa - Los Machucos2019-09-06 166.4km
-
Stage 19 - Vuelta a España: Cavagna wins stage 19 | Avila - Toledo2019-09-13 165.2km
Top News on the Race
-
Vuelta a España director downplays 2020 Tour de France route's debt to Spanish race
Guillén to mix innovation and tradition in 75th edition of the Vuelta -
Euskadi-Murias to disband at the end of this season
Team collapse comes despite Vuelta a España stage win -
Jakobsen makes it five for Deceuninck-QuickStep at Vuelta a España
Lefevere: 'If the Jumbo-Visma car hadn't blocked us in the TTT it would have been six'
-
Vuelta a España: Monster Hydro rider of the day
Roglič gives Jumbo-Visma its first Grand Tour victory in Madrid -
Roglic wraps it up for Jumbo-Visma in Vuelta a España
Slovenian gives thanks for support after receiving final leader's jersey -
Valverde 'would never have dreamed' of taking second at Vuelta a España aged 39
Movistar man set to claim sixth Vuelta a España podium on Sunday
-
Knox drops out of top 10 but pays tribute to teammates on day of suffering at Vuelta a España
'I can’t really put into words what it means to have Gilbert and Stybar pushing me on' -
López loses Vuelta a España white jersey in final summit finish
Colombian suffering from effects of stage 19 crash on last mountain stage -
Pogacar adds fresh brilliance to Grand Tour debut with third Vuelta a España stage win
20-year-old Slovenian ousts Quintana from podium
Related Features
-
Vuelta a España: History provides clues for final week
Fight for the final podium places heats up in Spain -
Vuelta a España: All momentum with Roglic ahead of mountainous doubleheader in Asturias
'He's the strongest guy and he has a strong team' -
Race analysis: Vuelta a España is Roglic’s to lose
Slovenian can play a defensive game in eight remaining stages -
Vuelta a España: Los Machucos is 'like riding up a wall'
Spanish Grand Tour returns to Los Machucos summit finish where Froome lost time in 2017 -
No escaping the heat: Roglič scorches into Vuelta a España lead – GC analysis
Déjà vu as Slovenian repeats Giro d'Italia time trial form in Pau