1970 Vuelta a España

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1970 Vuelta a España
Race details
Dates23 April – 12 May
Stages19
Distance3,568 km (2,217 mi)
Winning time89h 57' 12"
Results
Winner  Luis Ocaña (ESP) (Bic)
  Second  Augustín Tamames (ESP) (Werner)
  Third  Herman Van Springel (BEL) (Mann-Grundig)

Points  Guido Reybroeck (BEL) (Germanwox - Wega)
  Mountains  Augustín Tamames (ESP) (Werner)
  Combination  Guido Reybroeck (BEL) (Germanwox - Wega)
  Sprints  Miguel María Lasa (ESP) (La Casera)
← 1969
1971 →

The 1970 Vuelta a España was the 25th Edition Vuelta a España, taking place from 23 April to 12 May 1970. It consisted of 19 stages over 3,568 km (2,217 mi), ridden at an average speed of 39.85 km/h (24.76 mph). The race revealed Augustín Tamames as a contender for the future at the Vuelta as Tamames riding in his first Vuelta held in the final week the race lead until the final individual time trial when Luis Ocaña time trialled himself into the lead. Ocaña had finished runner up in the previous edition of the race and won the two time trials in the 1970 Vuelta. It would be Ocaña’s only win in the Spanish race.[1]

Teams and riders[]

Route[]

List of stages[2][3]
Stage Date Course Distance Type Winner
P 23 April Cádiz – Cádiz 6 km (4 mi) Time Trial.svg Individual time trial  Luis Ocaña (ESP)
1 24 April CádizJerez de la Frontera 170 km (106 mi)  Eddy Peelman (BEL)
2 25 April Jerez de la FronteraFuengirola 217 km (135 mi)   [fr] (ESP)
3 26 April FuengirolaAlmería 249 km (155 mi)  Guido Reybrouck (BEL)
4 27 April AlmeríaLorca 161 km (100 mi)   [fr] (BEL)
5 28 April LorcaCalp 209 km (130 mi)  Luis Santamarina (ESP)
6 29 April CalpBorriana 198 km (123 mi)  Eddy Peelman (BEL)
7 30 April BorrianaTarragona 201 km (125 mi)  Guido Reybrouck (BEL)
8a 1 May TarragonaBarcelona 100 km (62 mi)  Ramón Saez (ESP)
8b 1 May Barcelona – Barcelona 48 km (30 mi)  Guido Reybrouck (BEL)
9 2 May BarcelonaIgualada 189 km (117 mi)  Agustín Tamames (ESP)
10 3 May IgualadaZaragoza 237 km (147 mi)  Anatole Novak (FRA)
11 4 May ZaragozaCalatayud 118 km (73 mi)  Rini Wagtmans (NED)
12 5 May CalatayudMadrid 204 km (127 mi)  Johny Schleck (LUX)
13 6 May MadridSoria 221 km (137 mi)  Marinus Wagtmans (NED)
14 7 May SoriaValladolid 238 km (148 mi)  Jan Serpenti (NED)
15 8 May ValladolidBurgos 134 km (83 mi)  Ramón Saez (ESP)
16 9 May BurgosSantander 179 km (111 mi)  Roger Rosiers (BEL)
17 10 May SantanderVitoria 191 km (119 mi)  Willy In 't Ven (BEL)
18 11 May VitoriaSan Sebastián 157 km (98 mi)  José María Errandonea (ESP)
19a 12 May San SebastiánLlodio 104 km (65 mi)  Jos van der Vleuten (NED)
19b 12 May LlodioBilbao 29 km (18 mi) Time Trial.svg Individual time trial  Luis Ocaña (ESP)
Total 3,568 km (2,217 mi)

Results[]

Final General Classification[]

Rank Rider Team Time
1 Spain Luis Ocaña Bic 89h 57' 12"
2 Spain Agustín Tamames Werner + 1' 18"
3 Belgium Herman Van Springel Mann-Grundig + 1' 27"
4 Spain Jesus Manzaneque Sanchez Werner + 1' 27"
5 Belgium Willy In 't Ven Mann-Grundig + 2' 00"
6 Spain Francisco Galdos Gauna Kas-Kaskol + 3' 07"
7 Spain Miguel María Lasa La Casera-Pena Bahamontes + 3' 09"
8 Spain Joaquim Galera La Casera-Pena Bahamontes + 3' 15"
9 Spain Luis Pedro Santamarina Werner + 3' 50"
10 Spain Juan-Manuel Santisteban Karpy + 4' 15"
11 Spain Aurelio Gonzalez Puente Kas-Kaskol
12 Spain Ventura Diaz Arrey Werner
13 Spain Eduardo Castello Villanova Karpy
14 Spain Jose Manuel Lasa Orguia La Casera-Pena Bahamontes
15 Spain Andres Gandarias Albizu Kas-Kaskol
16 Spain José Manuel Fuente Karpy
17 Spain Vicente Lopez-Carril Kas-Kaskol
18 Spain Luis Balague Carreno Werner
19 Belgium Andre Poppe Mann-Grundig
20 Netherlands René Pijnen Willem II - Gazelle
21 Spain Karpy
22 Spain Francisco Gabica Billa Kas-Kaskol
23 Spain Antonio Gomez Del Moral Kas-Kaskol
24 Spain Carlos Echevarria Zudaire Kas-Kaskol
25 Spain Karpy

References[]

  1. ^ http://hemeroteca-paginas.mundodeportivo.com/EMD01/HEM/1970/05/13/MD19700513-021.pdf
  2. ^ "1970 » 25th Vuelta a España". Procyclingstats. Retrieved 1 August 2018.
  3. ^ "25ème Vuelta a España 1970". Memoire du cyclisme (in French). Archived from the original on 25 October 2004.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""