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2013 Tour de San Luis


FieldValue
name2013 Tour de San Luis
series2012–2013 UCI America Tour
date21–27 January 2013
stages7
distance1008.8
unitkm
time24h 03' 16"
firstDaniel Díaz
first_natArgentina
first_team
secondTejay van Garderen
second_natUnited States
second_team
thirdAlex Correia Diniz
third_natBrazil
third_team
sprintsLeandro Messineo
sprints_natArgentina
sprints_team
mountainsEmmanuel Guevara
mountains_natArgentina
mountains_team
youthAlejandro Sivori
youth_natArgentina
youth_teamArgentina (national team)
team
previous2012
next2014

The 2013 Tour de San Luis was the 7th edition of the Tour de San Luis stage race. It was part of the 2012–2013 UCI America Tour, and took place between 21 and 27 January 2013. The race was won by Daniel Díaz of the squad, which enjoyed a successful event, as their riders Emmanuel Guevara and Leandro Messineo took the mountains classification and the sprints classification, respectively. The youth classification went to Alejandro Sivori of the Argentina National team and the team classification went to .

Teams

The twenty-seven teams invited to the race were:

  • Argentina (national team)
  • Buenos Aires Provincia
  • Clos de Pirque-Trek
  • Cuba (national team)
  • Mexico (national team)

Stages

Stage 1

;21 January 2013 — San Luis to Villa Mercedes, 164 km

The first stage contained no major difficulties, with the only categorised climb of the 164 km parcours being a Category 3 climb, the Alto Saladillo, situated 55 km from the start. From that point, the course was mostly a descending false flat to the finish in Villa Mercedes.

A breakaway of seven riders racing for non-World Tour teams formed and enjoyed a lead of eight minutes as they crested the Alto Saladillo. Flavio de Luna from a Mexican selective team was the first atop the climb, which earned him the red jersey for the mountains classification leader at the end of the stage. Upon the descent, the sprinters' teams , , and took station at the front of the peloton, bringing the escapees' advantage down to four minutes with 55 km remaining. The remnants of the break were ultimately caught in the closing stages, setting up a bunch sprint finish. Peter Sagan tried to lead-out his teammate Lucas Sebastián Haedo to the line, but a crash occurred in the final 500 m stunting most teams' lead-outs. Mark Cavendish avoided the incident, launching from the train and won clearly, ahead of rivals Sacha Modolo and Alessandro Petacchi, to take a début victory for his new team, .

RiderTeamTime
1Mark Cavendish
2Sacha Modolo
3Alessandro Petacchi
4Leigh Howard
5Peter Sagan
6Rafael Andriato
7Francesco Lasca
8Thor Hushovd
9Kenny Dehaes
10Miguel Ángel Rubiano

|| |General Classification after Stage 1

RiderTeamTime
1Mark Cavendish [[Image:Jersey orange.svg20px]]
2Sacha Modolo
3Alessandro Petacchi
4Leigh Howard
5Peter Sagan
6Rafael Andriato
7Francesco Lasca
8Thor Hushovd
9Kenny Dehaes
10Miguel Ángel Rubiano

|}

Stage 2

;22 January 2013 — Tilisarao to Terrazas del Portezuelo, 171.4 km

The parcours for the second stage was relatively similar to the previous stage, with only one categorised climb – the third-category Alto Paso Grande coming in the first third of the race – during its 171.4 km itinerary. The finish at Terrazas del Portezuelo provided the riders with a twisty uphill finish, but was still expected to provide a sprint finish.

A five-rider move went clear after 8 km of racing, including Emmanuel Guevara of local team , who was first atop the only climb of the day, moving him level on points with the mountains classification leader, Flavio de Luna. Guevara later had to depart from the breakaway due to him feeling unwell. Nevertheless, the break enjoyed a maximum lead of almost five minutes, but was reeled in mostly by the and teams. Sacha Modolo of derailed the big teams' plans as he beat rivals Mark Cavendish and Leigh Howard in the sprint. Modolo confided afterward that he learned the finish was uphill during the race while chatting with other riders, as he first thought it would be flat. Along with the victory, Modolo assumed the leader's jersey from Cavendish, on countback.

RiderTeamTime
1Sacha Modolo
2Mark Cavendish [[Image:Jersey orange.svg20px]]
3Leigh Howard
4Jens Debusschere
5Peter Sagan
6Alessandro Petacchi
7Francesco Chicchi
8Manuel Belletti
9Francesco Lasca
10Scott Thwaites

|| |General Classification after Stage 2

RiderTeamTime
1Sacha Modolo [[Image:Jersey orange.svg20px]]
2Mark Cavendish
3Leigh Howard
4Alessandro Petacchi
5Peter Sagan
6Francesco Lasca
7Manuel Belletti
8Jacob Keough
9Miguel Ángel Rubiano
10Enzo Moyano

|}

Stage 3

;23 January 2013 — La Punta to Mirador del Potrero, 173.1 km

Stage 3 was denoted as the queen stage of the race, and included two categorised climbs in the opening half of the stage; a third-category climb was followed by the first-category Alto de Nogoli climb, at the midway point. The stage continued up to a summit finish, on the first-category Mirador del Potrero, above Lake Potrero de los Funes.

A breakaway of seven riders went clear early on, and included teammates Jorge Giacinti and Leandro Messineo. Giacinti was the first rider to cross each of the first two climbs of the day in front, collecting enough points to take the mountains classification jersey. Messineo would also join Giacinti during the post-stage ceremonies, as he won the two intermediate sprints of the stage, which was sufficient to take the sprint classification jersey from Walter Pérez. The breakaway was eventually caught by a group of forty riders with 30 km to go.

At the foot of the 8 km long Mirador del Potrero ascent, Alex Correia Diniz of attacked and maintained a slight advantage on the chasers throughout the climb itself, as the gradient increased. The chase was led by a small group which dropped pre-race favourites Alberto Contador (), Vincenzo Nibali () and Joaquim Rodríguez () among others. Diniz held on to cross the finish line solo with an advantage of 24 seconds over his closest rival, Mauro Santambrogio of . With that victory, Diniz took the lead in the overall classification from overnight leader Sacha Modolo, stating that his result was "huge" for Brazilian cycling.

RiderTeamTime
1Alex Correia Diniz
2Mauro Santambrogio
3Michał Kwiatkowski
4Bart De Clercq
5Tejay van Garderen
6Jurgen Van den Broeck
7Daniel Díaz
8Diego Ulissi
9Miguel Ángel Rubiano
10André Cardoso

|| |General Classification after Stage 3

RiderTeamTime
1Alex Correia Diniz [[Image:Jersey orange.svg20px]]
2Mauro Santambrogio
3Michał Kwiatkowski
4Jurgen Van den Broeck
5Bart De Clercq
6Tejay van Garderen
7Daniel Díaz
8Miguel Ángel Rubiano
9André Cardoso
10Diego Ulissi

|}

Stage 4

;24 January 2013 — San Luis, 19.2 km, individual time trial (ITT)

The individual time trial stage was mainly flat, with an elevation change of 100 m over the first 10 km, at which point the riders took a 180-degree hairpin turn and rode the course in the opposite direction, back to the starting point.

Canadian Svein Tuft () prevailed with a time of 22' 14", with sprints classification leader Leandro Messineo taking second place, seven seconds behind Tuft. The overall classification leader changed once again as Michał Kwiatkowski () recorded the third-fastest time for the course and claimed the race's lead from Alex Correia Diniz of . At the 10 km point, Kwiatkowski had recorded the fastest time, some eleven seconds quicker than Tuft, however Tuft's second element of the stage allowed him to move up to the stage victory. After his victory, Tuft said that the wind was a major factor on the course.

RiderTeamTime
1Svein Tuft
2Leandro Messineo [[Image:Jersey green.svg20px]]
3Michał Kwiatkowski
4Vincenzo Nibali
5Adriano Malori
6Jorge Giacinti [[Image:Jersey red.svg20px]]
7Tejay van Garderen
8Eloy Teruel
9Sylvain Chavanel
10Jurgen Van den Broeck

|| |General Classification after Stage 4

RiderTeamTime
1Michał Kwiatkowski [[Image:Jersey orange.svg20px]]
2Tejay van Garderen
3Jurgen Van den Broeck
4Alex Correia Diniz
5Bart De Clercq
6Alberto Contador
7Daniel Díaz
8Diego Ulissi
9Sylvain Chavanel
10Jesús Herrada

|}

Stage 5

;25 January 2013 — Juana Koslay to Carolina, 169.8 km

The first 130 km of Stage 5 were mostly flat, before two categorised climbs within the final 40 km. A third-category climb was immediately followed by the first-category Cerro al Amago ascent, a climb of 10.5 km in length with an average gradient of 7.2%. The terrain then became mostly flat until the finish line in Carolina.

Emmanuel Guevara of and Vojtěch Hačecký of broke away early and were given some freedom by the peloton since neither rider was a threat for the overall classification. Enjoying the tailwind, the duo had a maximum gap of seventeen minutes. Guevara dropped Hačecký on the slopes of the Cerro al Amago, and still had an advantage of fifteen minutes with 24 km to go. The bunch tackled with the climb and put the pressure on, working for their leader Tejay van Garderen, who had been in second place in the general classification overnight, 23 seconds behind the leader Michał Kwiatkowski of . Kwiatkowski himself was struggling on the climb, and was soon distanced, and ensured that the leader's jersey would change hands again. Alberto Contador and Daniel Díaz attacked, but Contador could not sustain the tempo set by Díaz, and fell back to the small group containing van Garderen. Díaz almost made the junction with his fading teammate Guevara, finishing fifteen seconds behind. Guevara barely had the strength for a victory salute, as he crossed the line by swerving dangerously. The stage was a double success for their team, since Díaz had gained enough time to move in the first spot of the general classification.

RiderTeamTime
1Emmanuel Guevara
2Daniel Díaz
3Miguel Ángel Rubiano
4Arnold AlcoleaCuba (national team)
5Janier Acevedo
6Tejay van Garderen
7Alberto Contador
8Alex Correia Diniz
9Mauro Santambrogio
10Matteo Montaguti

|| |General Classification after Stage 5

RiderTeamTime
1Daniel Díaz [[Image:Jersey orange.svg20px]]
2Tejay van Garderen
3Alex Correia Diniz
4Alberto Contador
5Jurgen Van den Broeck
6Miguel Ángel Rubiano
7Vincenzo Nibali
8Mauro Santambrogio
9Michał Kwiatkowski
10Janier Acevedo

|}

Stage 6

;26 January 2013 — Quines to Merlo–Mirador del Sol, 156.6 km

Stage 6 was the last mountain stage of the Tour. It contained three categorised climbs, starting with the second-category Alto de Cantana in the first half of the race. The course was then undulating until the uphill finish, commencing with a third-category climb immediately followed by the first-category Mirador del Sol, a 7 km long ascent at an average gradient of 8.75%. It was being used in the race for the second consecutive year as a summit finish, as in 2012, Alberto Contador won ahead of Daniel Díaz, but was later stripped of the result.

A breakaway of four riders formed, consisting of Marc de Maar (), Mauro Finetto (), Adriano Malori () and Pieter Weening (). Diego Rosa () joined them later on, and the group maintained an advantage of three minutes over much of the course, until they were caught at the foot of the Mirador del Sol. Nicki Sørensen of was the first to attack on the climb, but was brought back by the -led field who tried to isolate Díaz for their leader Tejay van Garderen; van Garderen attacked himself, but could not distance Díaz. The group was reduced to about a dozen riders when Contador accelerated in sight of the flamme rouge, creating a sizable gap. Díaz managed to get back to him, before Contador kicked again in the closing stages to win, but Díaz followed him, just two seconds in arrears. rider Alex Correia Diniz caught the duo shortly before the finish line, and also finished two seconds back. Van Garderen, second in the overall classification, lost eighteen seconds to Contador and found himself 33 seconds in arrears of Díaz, with Diniz a close third at 39 seconds.

RiderTeamTime
1Alberto Contador
2Daniel Díaz [[Image:Jersey orange.svg20px]]
3Alex Correia Diniz
4Arnold AlcoleaCuba (national team)
5Mauro Santambrogio
6Tejay van Garderen
7Fabio Aru
8Matteo Montaguti
9João Mendes
10Jurgen Van den Broeck

|| |General Classification after Stage 6

RiderTeamTime
1Daniel Díaz [[Image:Jersey orange.svg20px]]
2Tejay van Garderen
3Alex Correia Diniz
4Alberto Contador
5Jurgen Van den Broeck
6Mauro Santambrogio
7Miguel Ángel Rubiano
8Janier Acevedo
9Bart De Clercq
10Vincenzo Nibali

|}

Stage 7

;27 January 2013 — San Luis to Juana Koslay, 154.7 km

The last stage of the race was held over a slightly undulating course which included only one categorised climb; a third-category ascent situated 17 km from the start.

Going into the stage, the mountains classification was led by Emmanuel Guevara, but he had the same number of points (16) as Alex Correia Diniz, meaning the only categorised climb would determine the winner of that competition. However, neither rider were in a position to score points; thus Guevara won the King of the Mountains competition of the Tour.

The breakaway of the day was composed of eight riders, with Michał Kwiatkowski the best-ranked overall in the general classification, 3' 32" behind race leader Daniel Díaz. Later on, three chasers made the junction, and their lead peaked at 3' 40" with 59 km to go, making Kwiatkowski the virtual leader for a limited amount of time. The teams of the general classification leaders started to work in a concerted effort at the front of the peloton and with 16 km to go, the break was nullified. The finishing mass sprint was won by Mattia Gavazzi (), his first victory since returning from a 30-month doping ban; his last victory came at the Settimana Ciclistica Lombarda in 2010. Díaz finished with the main group, and won the overall classification. His team, , enjoyed other successes; adding to Guevara's mountains victory, Leandro Messineo won the sprints classification.

RiderTeamTime
1Mattia Gavazzi
2Peter Sagan
3Francisco Ventoso
4Maximiliano Richeze
5Bartłomiej Matysiak
6Juan José Haedo
7Sacha Modolo
8Manuel Belletti
9Sebastián TolosaBuenos Aires Provincia
10Jens Debusschere

|| |Final General Classification

RiderTeamTime
1Daniel Díaz [[Image:Jersey orange.svg20px]]
2Tejay van Garderen
3Alex Correia Diniz
4Alberto Contador
5Jurgen Van den Broeck
6Mauro Santambrogio
7Miguel Ángel Rubiano
8Janier Acevedo
9Bart De Clercq
10Vincenzo Nibali

|}

Classification leadership table

StageWinnerGeneral Classification
[[Image:Jersey orange.svg25pxlink=alt=]]Mountains Classification
[[Image:Jersey red.svg25pxlink=alt=]]Sprint Classification
[[Image:Jersey green.svg25pxlink=alt=]]Young Rider Classification
[[Image:Jersey white.svg25pxlink=alt=]]Team ClassificationFinalDaniel DíazEmmanuel GuevaraLeandro MessineoAlejandro Sivori
1Mark CavendishMark CavendishFlavio de LunaWalter PérezLucas Gaday
2Sacha ModoloSacha Modolo
3Alex Correia DinizAlex Correia DinizJorge GiacintiLeandro MessineoAlejandro Sivori
4Svein TuftMichał Kwiatkowski
5Emmanuel GuevaraDaniel DíazEmmanuel Guevara
6Alberto Contador
7Mattia Gavazzi

References

References

  1. (27 January 2013). "General Individual Despues de la Etapa 7ª". AS&A Design.
  2. "Tour De San Luis 2013: Results & News". Future Publishing Limited.
  3. (27 January 2013). "Daniel Diaz completes Tour de San Luis victory as Mattia Gavazzi wins final stage". BSkyB.
  4. (20 January 2013). "2013 Tour de San Luis start list". Future Publishing Limited.
  5. "2013 UCI cycling calendar – 2013 Tour de San Luis". Thomas Vergouwen.
  6. (21 January 2013). "Mark Cavendish wins stage 1 in 2013 Tour de San Luis". Competitor Group, Inc..
  7. Benson, Daniel. (21 January 2013). "Cavendish wins opening stage at Tour de San Luis". Future Publishing Limited.
  8. (22 January 2013). "Modolo wins dash to Terraza del Portezuelo in Tour de San Luis". Future Publishing Limited.
  9. (22 January 2013). "Modolo wins stage 2 of the 2013 Tour de San Luis". Competitor Group, Inc..
  10. (23 January 2013). "Diniz triumphs on stage three of Tour de San Luis". [[TF1 Group]].
  11. (24 January 2013). "Brazil's Alex Diniz stuns big names to win stage three of Tour de San Luis". [[BSkyB]].
  12. (23 January 2013). "2013 Tour de San Luis results, stage 3". Competitor Group, Inc..
  13. Benson, Daniel. (23 January 2013). "Diniz climbs to victory in San Luis". Future Publishing Limited.
  14. (24 January 2013). "Kwiatkowski grabs race lead with solid time trial performance". VeloNation LLC.
  15. Benson, Daniel. (24 January 2013). "Tuft wins Tour de San Luis time trial". Future Publishing Limited.
  16. "5ª Etapa". Tour de San Luis.
  17. Benson, Daniel. (25 January 2013). "Guevara wins stage 5 in San Luis". Future Publishing Limited.
  18. Moore, Kyle. (25 January 2013). "Home team San Luis Somos Todos takes over with Diaz, Guevara". VeloNation LLC.
  19. "6ª Etapa". Tour de San Luis.
  20. Hymas, Peter. (27 January 2012). "Contador wins again on Mirador del Sol". Future Publishing Limited.
  21. (6 February 2012). "CAS sanctions Contador with two year ban in clenbutorol case". Future Publishing Limited.
  22. Moore, Kyle. (26 January 2013). "Contador conquers Mirador del Sol but Diaz keeps lead". VeloNation LLC.
  23. (26 January 2013). "Contador prevails on Mirador del Sol". Future Publishing Limited.
  24. "7ª Etapa". Tour de San Luis.
  25. Benson, Daniel. (27 January 2013). "Diaz wins Tour de San Luis". Future Publishing Limited.
  26. Atkins, Ben. (27 January 2013). "Daniel Diaz confirms overall as Mattia Gavazzi marks return with stage seven victory". VeloNation LLC.
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