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Maybe it’s the nine summit finishes in 21 days. Maybe it’s tackling Spain’s toughest single ascent, the Angliru, with its 28% slopes and the Tourmalet, the hardest climb in the Pyrenees. Maybe it’s the natural consequence of flinging the defending Tour de France, Giro d’Italia and Vuelta a Espana champions into the same melting pot and seeing who comes out strongest. But however you look at it, the 2023 Vuelta a Espana is set to be a Grand Tour for the ages.

A showdown between stars of the calibre of double Tour de France winner Jonas Vingegaard, teammate and – perhaps – rival contender Primoz Roglic and the phenomenally successful young Belgian racer Remco Evenepoel would be attractive enough in any event. But after Evenepoel’s COVID-induced debacle at the Giro d’Italia and Vingegaard’s stirring triumph over arch-rival Tadej Pogacar at the Tour de France, not to mention Roglic’s chance to take a record-equaling fourth Vuelta title, the stakes are even higher than usual.

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