Tom Pidcock is not a rider to hide his ambitions and after taking an unexpected ninth place in the Vuelta a España’s opening sprint stage on Saturday, he’s aiming to be back in the fray again on Sunday’s radically different terrain.
Stage 2 of the Vuelta features its first of no less than 11 summit finishes, but on a day with no classified climbs prior to the last Cat.2 ascent to Limone Piemonte, a knack for good positioning and a scorchingly fast uphill turn of speed, not to mention good form, will likely all be necessary for victory. And the Q36.5 leader certainly tickets all three of those boxes.
GC Ambitions
Pre-race, Pidcock’s coach Kurt Bogaerts told Cyclingnews that Pidcock has committed himself to trying for a top GC placing, but the stage win is the primary goal. And Pidcock himself confirmed that. Limone Piemonte, of course, would work for both those goals, as well as most likely putting Pidcock into the overall lead.
“If I can achieve that, it’s a big step, of course,” Pidcock added, “But along the way I want to win, that’d be the biggest success.”
“It’d be nice racing for a high GC, but you don’t feel like you’re winning.”
While adding a sixth success – and second straight WorldTour win for Q36.5 after their stunning victory with Rory Townsend in the Cyclassics Hamburg – is therefore the immediate priority, Pidcock’s GC goals will likely face their biggest challenge prior to Andorra in the 24 kilometre stage 5 team time trial in Figueres
As he agreed, that is likely to be something of a baptism of fire given the presence of WorldTour squads who have made TTT something of an…
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