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2010 Volta a Catalunya


FieldValue
name2010 Volta a Catalunya
series2010 UCI World Ranking
race_no5
season_no26
date22–28 March 2010
stages7
distance1042
unitkm
time25h 16' 03"
firstJoaquim Rodríguez
first_natESP
first_team
first_colorgreen lines volta
secondXavier Tondó
second_natESP
second_team
thirdRein Taaramäe
third_natEST
third_team
sprintsJonathan Castroviejo
sprints_natESP
sprints_team
sprints_colorblue
mountainsDavid Gutiérrez Gutiérrez
mountains_natESP
mountains_team
mountains_colorred
team
previous2009
next2011

The 2010 Volta a Catalunya was the 90th running of the race. It was the second race of the UCI ProTour calendar of 2010, and took place from 22nd to 28th March 2010.

Participating teams

As the Volta a Catalunya was a UCI ProTour event, all 18 ProTour teams were automatically invited and obligated to send a squad. Four Professional Continental teams rounded out the event's peloton. Each team was entitled to eight riders on their squad, but , , and sent only seven, and sent only six, meaning the event had 171 riders at its outset.

The 22 teams in the race were:

Route

StageDateCourseDistanceTypeWinner1234567
22 MarchLloret de Mar3.6 km[[File:Time Trial.svg20pxlink=alt=]]Individual time trialPaul Voss
23 MarchSalt to Banyoles182.6 kmMark Cavendish
24 MarchLa Vall d'en Bas to La Seu d'Urgell185.9 kmXavier Tondo
25 MarchOliana to Ascó209.7 kmJens Voigt
26 MarchAscó to Cabacés181.2 kmDavide Malacarne
27 MarchEl Vendrell to Barcelona161.9 kmSamuel Dumoulin
28 MarchEsportparc to Circuit de Catalunya117.8 kmJuan José Haedo

Stages

Stage 1

;22 March 2010, Lloret de Mar, 3.6 km (individual time trial)

The course for the brief individual time trial, which opened the race was dead flat. This was the same course used in the two years previous in the time trial. Paul Voss of was the unexpected winner of the stage, beating out Levi Leipheimer and Andreas Klöden.

CyclistTeamTime
1Paul Voss
2Levi Leipheimer
3Andreas Klöden
4Dominik Nerz
5Jan Bakelants
6Davide Malacarne
7Mark Cavendish
8Craig Lewis
9Nicolas Roche
10Kristjan Koren

|}

Stage 2

;23 March 2010, Salt to Banyoles, 182.6 km

This course included the race's first climb, the first-category Alt Els Àngels, which crested just before the 60 km mark. The 110 km after the descent to the finish line were mostly flat, leaving a sprint finish.

Peter Stetina and Jonathan Castroviejo formed a two-man escape after 9 km of this stage. They took a maximum advantage of eight and a half minutes, but the teams of the sprinters, namely and , had no trouble catching up to them. In their effort, they had gain the lead in the mountains and sprints competitions after this stage. The finish was contested in a bunched sprint, won by Mark Cavendish. It was Cavendish's first win of 2010 after a difficult early season.

Stage 2 Result

CyclistTeamTime
1Mark Cavendish
2Juan José Haedo
3Aitor Galdós
4Samuel Dumoulin
5Michel Kreder
6Manuel Cardoso
7Kristjan Koren
8Nicolas Roche
9Ryder Hesjedal
10Daniel Moreno

General Classification after Stage 2

CyclistTeamTime
1Paul Voss
2Levi Leipheimer
3Andreas Klöden
4Dominik Nerz
5Jan Bakelants
6Davide Malacarne
7Mark Cavendish
8Craig Lewis
9Nicolas Roche
10Kristjan Koren

Stage 3

;24 March 2010, La Vall d'en Bas to La Seu d'Urgell, 185.9 km

This was a difficult stage, with several categorized climbs. The outside categorization Alt del Pedraforça was the Cima Peris, the race's hardest climb, and crested just before the 120 km mark, after two second-category climbs earlier on. Another category-two climb, the Alt de la Josa del Cadí, followed before a 26 km long descent to the finish line.

A 21-rider break began this stage, but it was pulled back after an hour. A group of 14 was next on the attack, after 60 km had been covered. This group at one point had a three-minute advantage on the main field, but the steady tempo that and were drilling out reduced the gap. Xavier Tondó, Joaquim Rodríguez and Óscar Pereiro attacked out of the main field when the catch seemed imminent. Pereiro quickly dropped back, as they had at this point reached the hardest parts of the Alt de la Josa del Cadí climb, but Tondó and Rodríguez stayed away to the finish. Tondó won the sprint to the finish line, but Rodríguez became the new race leader, since he had had a better time in the stage 1 time trial. Tondó expressed after the stage that the win had great personal significance for him, since he is from Catalonia and grew up 7 km from where the stage ended.

Stage 3 Result

CyclistTeamTime
1Xavier Tondó
2Joaquim Rodríguez
3Luis León Sánchez
4Sandy Casar
5Michel Kreder
6Nicolas Roche
7Pieter Weening
8Aitor Pérez
9Paolo Tiralongo
10Rein Taaramäe

General Classification after Stage 3

CyclistTeamTime
1Joaquim Rodríguez
2Xavier Tondó
3Luis León Sánchez
4Nicolas Roche
5Kristjan Koren
6Ryder Hesjedal
7Rein Taaramäe
8Roman Kreuziger
9Michel Kreder
10Óscar Pereiro

Stage 4

;25 March 2010, Oliana to Ascó, 209.7 km

This course started at an elevation, undulated gently for a while and then descended int preparation for two second-category climbs. The Alt de Paumeres crested at 20.9 km from the finish line, and the finish came on a long descent from that height.

This was a very fast stage, with the first two hours of racing covering more than 100 km. During that time, an eight-rider breakaway group formed. They were later reduced to four – Vladimir Efimkin, Thibaut Pinot, Francesco Bellotti, and Jurgen Van De Walle. During the Alt de Paumeres climb, Jens Voigt, who had earlier been dropped from the peloton, made a solo bridge to the four leaders. Once with the group, he set a pace that eventually cracked all of them, sending them back to the chase groups behind. Voigt was the first over the summit, alone. Rein Taaramäe and Roman Kreuziger caught up with Voigt on the descent. After dropping Kreuziger, Taaramäe and Voigt increased their lead over the -led main field, and finished 34 seconds better than them at the finish line. Taaramäe did most of the pace making in the final flat section, since he started on the seventh day in the overall standings and stood to gain more than Voigt, from having such a big time gap as possible on the peloton. Voigt was therefore able to win the sprint easily.

Stage 4 Result

CyclistTeamTime
1Jens Voigt
2Rein Taaramäe
3Paul Voss
4Michel Kreder
5David Loosli
6Jérémy Roy
7Josep Jufré
8Daniel Moreno
9Robert Kišerlovski
10Igor Antón

General Classification after Stage 4

CyclistTeamTime
1Joaquim Rodríguez
2Xavier Tondó
3Rein Taaramäe
4Luis León Sánchez
5Nicolas Roche
6Kristjan Koren
7Ryder Hesjedal
8Roman Kreuziger
9Michel Kreder
10Janez Brajkovič

Stage 5

;26 March 2010, Ascó to Cabacés, 181.2 km

This was another hilly stage, marked by three categorized climbs, including one 15 km from the finish line. The finish line came on a descent.

Four riders escaped just 2 km into this stage. These were Davide Malacarne, Javier Ramirez, Sergio De Lis, and Gustavo César. Since Malacarne, 29 minutes behind race leader Joaquim Rodríguez, was the best-placed man in the group, the peloton was content to let them go. Their advantage quickly ballooned to ten minutes. The lead fell a little on the day's second climb, the Alt de Porrera, as and started an aggressive chase. Malacarne shod his breakaway companions 20 km from the finish line and held on for the win. It was the first win of Malacarne's pro career, and it came on a stage that he and the team had specifically identified as one where a winning breakaway would likely happen.

Stage 5 Result

CyclistTeamTime
1Davide Malacarne
2Andreas Klöden
3Luis León Sánchez
4Michel Kreder
5Rein Taaramäe
6Paolo Tiralongo
7Joaquim Rodríguez
8Fränk Schleck
9Ryder Hesjedal
10Eros Capecchi

General Classification after Stage 5

CyclistTeamTime
1Joaquim Rodríguez [[Image:Jersey white greenstripes.PNG20pxWhite jersey with green stripes]]
2Xavier Tondó
3Rein Taaramäe
4Luis León Sánchez
5Nicolas Roche
6Ryder Hesjedal
7Michel Kreder
8Roman Kreuziger
9Janez Brajkovič
10Rémy Di Gregorio

Stage 6

;27 March 2010, El Vendrell to Barcelona, 161.9 km

There were a lot of climbing in the first half of this stage, including an uncategorized rise of 600 m. The second half is mostly flat, concluding with a three-lap circuit in Barcelona that includes a visit to a small third-category climb on each lap. Forty-six riders finished the stage in the same group for a depleted bunched sprint. ' Samuel Dumoulin was easily the strongest sprinter in the group and won the stage, giving his team its 12th win of the season. His teammate Rein Taaramäe was second on the stage, the two of them securing their high places on a day when the financial services provider Cofidis decided to continue sponsoring the team for two more seasons. Each of the top ten riders in the overall standings finished with the leading group, so there was no significant change to those standings heading into the final day of racing.

Stage 6 Result

CyclistTeamTime
1Samuel Dumoulin
2Rein Taaramäe
3Joaquim Rodríguez
4David Loosli
5Aitor Galdós
6Andreas Klöden
7Roman Kreuziger
8Luis León Sánchez
9Paolo Tiralongo
10Ryder Hesjedal

General Classification after Stage 6

CyclistTeamTime
1Joaquim Rodríguez
2Xavier Tondó
3Rein Taaramäe
4Luis León Sánchez
5Nicolas Roche
6Ryder Hesjedal
7Michel Kreder
8Roman Kreuziger
9Janez Brajkovič
10Rémy Di Gregorio

Stage 7

;28 March 2010, Sant Cugat del Vallès to Montmeló (Circuit de Catalunya), 117.8 km

This stage was flat, concluding with eight laps on the Circuit de Catalunya in Montmeló.

The field stayed together through most of this stage. All but 20 riders were together for a bunched sprint, won by Juan José Haedo. His brother Sebastian Haedo was his final lead-out man, and took fifth place in the sprint. There was again no change to the overall standings after this stage; Joaquim Rodríguez, Xavier Tondó, and Rein Taaramäe finished on the event's final podium.

Stage 7 Result

CyclistTeamTime
1Juan José Haedo
2Robert Förster
3Nicolas Roche
4Davide Viganò
5Sebastian Haedo
6Aitor Galdós
7Manuel Cardoso
8Paul Voss
9Andreas Stauff
10David Loosli

Final General Classification

CyclistTeamTime
1Joaquim Rodríguez
2Xavier Tondó
3Rein Taaramäe
4Luis León Sánchez
5Nicolas Roche
6Ryder Hesjedal
7Michel Kreder
8Roman Kreuziger
9Janez Brajkovič
10Rémy Di Gregorio

Classification leadership

In the 2010 Volta a Catalunya, three different jerseys were awarded. For the general classification, calculated by adding the finishing times of the stages per cyclist, the leader received a white jersey with green stripes on the sleeves. This classification is considered the most important of the Volta a Catalunya, and the winner of the general classification is considered the winner of the Volta a Catalunya.

Additionally, there was also a sprint classification, indicated with a blue jersey. In the sprint classification, cyclists got points for being one of the first three in intermediate sprints, with six points awarded for first place, four for second, and two for third.

There was also a mountains classification, indicated with a red jersey. In the mountains classifications, points were won by reaching the top of a mountain before other cyclists. All climbs were categorized, with most either first, second, or third-category, with more points available for the higher-categorized climbs.

StageWinnerGeneral Classification
Mountains Classification
[[Image:Jersey red.svg25pxRed jersey]]Sprint Classification
[[Image:Jersey blue.svg25pxBlue jersey]]Team Classification
FinalJoaquim RodríguezDavid Gutiérrez GutiérrezJonathan Castroviejo
1Paul VossPaul Vossno awardno award
2Mark CavendishPeter StetinaJonathan Castroviejo
3Xavier TondóJoaquim RodríguezDavid Gutiérrez Gutiérrez
4Jens Voigt
5Davide Malacarne
6Samuel Dumoulin
7Juan José Haedo

References

References

  1. (25 January 2010). "2010 Volta a Catalunya".
  2. (25 January 2010). "2010 UCI Pro Tour Calendar".
  3. "Volta a Catalunya (Pro Tour), Spain". BikeRaceInfo.
  4. "Volta Ciclista a Catalunya 2010". Cycling News.
  5. News, Cycling. (19 March 2010). "Volta Ciclista a Catalunya 2010: Stage 1 Preview".
  6. News, Cycling. (22 March 2010). "Volta Ciclista a Catalunya 2010: Stage 1 Results".
  7. News, Cycling. (19 March 2010). "Volta Ciclista a Catalunya 2010: Stage 2 Preview".
  8. News, Cycling. (23 March 2010). "Volta Ciclista a Catalunya 2010: Stage 2 Results".
  9. "Cycling news".
  10. (24 March 2010). "Volta Ciclista a Catalunya 2010: Stage 3 Results".
  11. News, Cycling. (19 March 2010). "Volta Ciclista a Catalunya 2010: Stage 4 Preview".
  12. News, Cycling. (25 March 2010). "Volta Ciclista a Catalunya 2010: Stage 4 Results".
  13. News, Cycling. (19 March 2010). "Volta Ciclista a Catalunya 2010: Stage 5 Preview".
  14. News, Cycling. (26 March 2010). "Volta Ciclista a Catalunya 2010: Stage 5 Results".
  15. News, Cycling. (19 March 2010). "Volta Ciclista a Catalunya 2010: Stage 6 Preview".
  16. News, Cycling. (27 March 2010). "Volta Ciclista a Catalunya 2010: Stage 6 Results".
  17. News, Cycling. (19 March 2010). "Volta Ciclista a Catalunya 2010: Stage 7 Preview".
  18. News, Cycling. (28 March 2010). "Volta Ciclista a Catalunya 2010: Stage 7 Results".
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