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Vuelta Stage 9: Philippe Gilbert gets his first win for BMC, Joaquin Rodriguez stretches overall lead

Fast Phil and Barcelona-born Purito get clear on the slopes of Montjuic

Philippe Gilbert, almost unbeatable in 2011, has clinched his first win since moving to BMC Racing by taking Stage 9 of the Vuelta in Barcelona this afternoon. The Belgian, together with race leader Joaquin Rodriguez, a native of the Catalan capital, got clear of the peloton on the slopes of Montjuic with under 4 kilometres left to ride, shortly after an attack from Alberto Contador had been brought back.

With Rodriguez crossing the line in Gilbert's slipstream around 10 seconds ahead of the group containing his rivals on GC, the Katusha rider also gained 8 bonus seconds on them due to his second place today. Following the 196-kilometre stage that began in Andorra La Vella, Rodriguez leads Team Sky's Chris Froome by 53 seconds, with Contador a further 2 seconds back in third place overall.

It’s been 13 years since a Vuelta stage last finished in Barcelona, notable for a riders’ strike that caused the stage to be shortened due to rain making the road surface treacherous.

Today’s stage, played out under blue skies, commemorated the 20th anniversary of the Olympic Games that proved a landmark in the city’s post-Franco era journey to become the vibrant tourist and business destination it is today.

Rather than the Vuelta, today’s finish on Montjuic, site of the Olympic Stadium, evoked memories of the visit of the Tour de France in 2009, when David Millar’s long solo break was reeled in ahead of the climb to the finish, but today’s finale was a very different affair.

On that rain-soaked day when Thor Hushovd took the victory, just 2.5km remained as the peloton hit the Placa de Espanya at the foot of Montjuic, but today there were another 7km still to ride, with the route heading over the far side of Montjuic with a Category 3 climb thrown in.

Heading onto the climb, Contador attacked, but the Saxo Bank-Tinkoff Bank rider was swiftly brought back, the pace of the ascent causing the peloton to be strung out behind him and making it difficult for any one team to control the race and try and bring it back to a sprint finish.

On the final part of the climb, crested 3.5 kilometres left, it was three men with a solid Classics pedigree who came to the fore, the first being BMC Racing’s Alessandro Ballan. Rodiguez quickly bridged across to the Italian, as did Gilbert.

That pair were soon out in front on their own, staying clear on the descent and subsequent drag up to the finish despite the efforts of riders such as Nicolas Roche of AG2R-La Mondiale to catch them.

Four men got clear at the start of today’s stage in Andorra’s capital, Garmin-Sharp’s Martijn Maaskant, Mickaël Vuffaz of Cofidis, Andalucia rider Javier Chacon and Vacansoleil-DCM’s Bertjan Lindeman.

The peloton kept a tight leash on them, however, conceding a maximum advantage of around five minutes, and Chacon, the last to be swept up, was caught as the race entered its closing 15 kilometres.

This evening, the riders transfer by plane from Spain’s Mediterranean coast to its Atlantic one ahead of tomorrow’s rest day, but it will be a long slog of nearly 1,000 kilometres for team staff travelling by road.

Vuelta Stage 9 Result  

1  GILBERT, Philippe    BMC   4h 45' 28''
2  RODRIGUEZ, Joaquin   KAT   same time
3  TIRALONGO, Paolo     AST         + 7''
4  MARCZYNSKI, Tomasz   VCD         + 9''
5  BENNATI, Daniele     RNT         + 9''
6  VALVERDE, Alejandro  MOV         + 9''
7  BOUHANNI, Nacer      FDJ         + 9''
8  VERDUGO, Gorka       EUS        + 12''
9  MEERSMAN, Gianni     LTB        + 12''
10 ANTON, Igor          EUS        + 12''
11 NOCENTINI, Rinaldo   ALM        + 12''
12 NIEMIEC, Przemyslaw  LAM        + 12''
13 MOLLEMA, Bauke       RAB        + 12''
14 LOSADA, Alberto      KAT        + 12''
15 MONDORY, Lloyd       ALM        + 12''
16 MORENO, Daniel       KAT        + 12''
17 RUIJGH, Rob          VCD        + 12''
18 CAPECCHI, Eros       LIQ        + 12''
19 CARDOSO, Andre       CJR        + 12''
20 BOOM, Lars           RAB        + 12''

Last man home on Stage 9  

194 RATTO, Daniele      LIQ + 12' 20''
   
General Classification after Stage 9  

1  RODRIGUEZ, Joaquin   KAT  34h 44' 55''
2  FROOME, Christopher  SKY        + 53''
3  CONTADOR, Alberto    STB     + 1' 00''
4  VALVERDE, Alejandro  MOV     + 1' 07''
5  GESINK, Robert       RAB     + 2' 01''
6  MORENO, Daniel       KAT     + 2' 08''
7  ROCHE, Nicolas       ALM     + 2' 34''
8  ANTON, Igor          EUS     + 3' 07''
9  TEN DAM, Laurens     RAB     + 3' 18''
10 MOLLEMA, Bauke       RAB     + 3' 27''

Points Classification after Stage 9  

1  RODRIGUEZ, Joaquin   KAT          85
2  DEGENKOLB, John      ARG          76
3  VALVERDE, Alejandro  MOV          76
4  FROOME, Christopher  SKY          51
5  BENNATI, Daniele     RNT          50
  
Mountains Classification after Stage 9  

1  VALVERDE, Alejandro  MOV          21
2  RODRIGUEZ, Joaquin   KAT          17
3  CLARKE, Simon        OGE          16
4  LIGTHART, Pim        VCD          11
5  MATE, Luis Angel     COF          10

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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