Ben O’Connor will enter the final week of this year’s Vuelta a España in the red jersey, despite his lead narrowing after stage 15 on Sunday.
Spain’s Pablo Castrillo pushed through the pain barrier to take Sunday’s stage win, as Slovenian Primož Roglič continued to apply the pressure on the Australian race leader.
Castrillo (Kern-Pharma) was part of a leading trio on the gruelling Cuitu Negru climb to the finish and made his move with three kilometres to the end of the 143-km ride from Infiesto to Valgrane-Pajares.
In the final kilometre he glanced over his shoulder to see Aleksandr Vlasov (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) appear through the fog, but Castrillo found another burst of energy to hold off the Russian, with Pavel Sivakov of France coming in third.
“When Vlasov came in, I took a little rest, I took a little breath and once again I decided to speed up and I did it,” Castrillo said.
Three-times former champion Roglič (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) finished fifth, coming in 38 seconds ahead of O’Connor (Decathlon-AG2R La Mondiale), who now holds a slender 43-second lead going into the final week.
A large breakaway group was whittled down to seven riders by the time they began climbing Cuitu Negru, with 19 kilometres to the finish, and a three-minute gap to the peloton, but only three men were able to stay away.
Castrillo, Vlasov and Sivakov (UAE Team Emirates) managed to hold a large enough lead to ensure the battle for the stage win came down to this trio, as behind them the peloton crumbled, leaving only the general classification leaders to the fore.
Roglič managed to drop O’Connor, and while he was never going to catch the leaders, Sunday was a day when the Slovenian was expected to close in on the red jersey, if not take it back, having lost it after stage six.
O’Connor dug deep, limiting the damage as much as possible, and lives to fight another day in the red jersey, and will welcome Monday’s rest day before tackling the final six stages.
Tuesday’s stage 16 will be a 181.5-km ride from Luanco to Lagos de Covadonga.
Reuters