El Salvador, 7-stage Road Race, 491.2km
UCI 2.1
Stage 5 finishes near to the El Boquerón crater, clearly seen on the satellite photo |
The El Salvadoran parcours is the absolute opposite of the Qatari route - Qatar is much flatter than the Netherlands and the roads are long and, usually, arrow straight; El Salvador is one of the world's most seismologically active regions, sitting atop two tectonic plates that have created mountains including 22 volcanoes - among them are Izalco, so active until the middle of the 20th Century that it was known as "The Lighthouse of the Pacific," and El Boquerón at San Salvador, which will be climbed in Stage 4.
Stages
1 28.02 LA LIBERTAD - NAHUIZALCO, 95 Km
2 01.03 PASEO DEL CARMEN, SANTA TECLA - CIRCUITO MONSEÑOR ROMERO, SANTA
TECLA, 11 Km (team time trial)
3 01.03 CIRCUITO MONSEÑOR ROMERO, SANTA TECLA - CAFETALON, 77 Km (criterium)
4 02.03 APOPA – QUEZALTEPEQU 50km
5 03.03 SALVADOR DEL MUNDO - REDONDEL MASFERRER - MULTIPLAZA - ESTADIO FLOR
BLANCA- REDONDEL OLIMPICO- SALVADOR DEL MUNDO, 53.2 Km
6 04.03 OLOCUILTA - PUENTE DE ORO RETORNO - OLOCUILTA, 115 Km
7 05.03 NUEVA CONCEPCION - NUEVA CALLE LONGITUD DEL NORTE - METAPAN
SANTA ANA, 90 Km.
Stage Details
Stage 1 95km
Stage 1 - click to enlarge |
Most of the riders will have got a taste of the sort of climbing El Salvador has to offer during the Grand Prix de Orient, which took place the day before this stage, but the masseurs had better not pack away their oils just yet because there's plenty more to come - including in this first stage which, following some 70km with only a few small hills (and five tunnels, something that many cyclists detest), ends with a fearsome Category 2 575m ascent in 17km to the finish. That's an average gradient of only around 3.4%, but the climb comes in two sections. Separated by a plateau in between, both are far steeper than the average and there are climbing points on offer at the top.
Stage 1 - click to enlarge |
Stage 2 11km (TTT)
Stage 2 - click to enlarge |
Taking place the morning after Stage 1 and prior to the afternoon's Stage 3, Stage 2 is a team time trial - the only time trial in this race, as the organisers have elected to include a criterium stage instead of an individual competition against the clock.
Stage 2 - click to enlarge |
Stage 3 77km (criterium)
Stage 3 - click to enlarge |
The Stage 3 parcours is immediately familiar, consisting as it does of the same roads that made up the main section of this morning's team time trial. Cutting out the first section heading north reduces the distance to 10km; riders will complete six full laps and one final lap of 7km.
Stage 3 - click to enlarge |
Stage 4 50km
Stage 4 - click to enlarge |
After yesterday's time trial and criterium, the Vuelta returns to standard stage race format - albeit it with an unusually short parcours of only 50km. However, only a brief glance at the altimetry profile is required to see that by no definition whatsoever is this an easy route: after a relatively flat 36km, the riders face the Category 1 1,113m ascent of the San Salvador volcano which can clearly be seen in the south of the satellite photo. The average gradient is 7.95%, but it gets steeper 4km before the top with a maximum of 21%.
Stage 4 - click to enlarge |
Stage 5 53.2km (criterium)
Stage 5 - click to enlarge |
Another short stage and another criterium, this time following a more typical roughly square format than Stage 3. There are several long, fast, straight sections to allow riders to break away from the peloton, but there are also some tight corners where places can be lost - and where crashes are always possible. Unusually, there's a considerable amount of climbing - with an ascent of around 130m in the first 3km (average gradient approximately 4.3%), riders will climb around 550m over the course of the four 13.3km laps. Extra points will be awarded to the first riders over the start line on the second, third and fourth laps.
Stage 5 - click to enlarge |
Stage 6 115km
Stage 6 - click to enlarge |
The longest stage of the race, Stage 6 begins with a fast descent of more than 400m from Olocuilta, then begins a small climb to 159m from 18-36km - there's an intermediate sprint at the end of this section. Another descent follows, then from 48km the terrain flattens out all the way to 70km where, having turned back the way it came, it follows a similar route taking in the first climb for a second time, now reaching 204m at 86km. A short but steep 2km descent follows, then the parcours heads gradually downhill to 108km, at which point it arrives back at the foot of the Olocuilta climb and riders have an ascent of 408m to the finish line 7km away. With an average gradient of 5.7%, the first half is considerably steeper than the last; earning it Category 2 status.
Stage 6 - click to enlarge |
Stage 7 90km
Stage 7 - click to enlarge |
Nice easy stage to wind down the race? Not a chance - there are no really big mountains today with the highest point along the parcours being 803m, but there are numerous smaller ones and the total amount of climbing over the 90km is in excess of 1,350m.
The first and biggest climb, Category 2, comes in the 14km immediately after the race begins, rising 477m in 12km with an average gradient of 3.9% and a much steeper section between 6 and 8km, which promises to see the climbers take an early lead. A steep 6km descent follows and ought to even things up a little - however, the "climbers can't descend" rule doesn't always hold true and any that is able to keep up a high speed on the way down will find a massive early advantage here - one that, with all those climbs still to come, could even permit a solo break all the way to the finish. If a General Classification contender managed to pull that one off and if the gaps between the top riders are not too great, this could lead to big changes and even win the race.
Stage 7 - click to enlarge |
Jerseys
Red - General Classification leader
Black and gold - Points leader
Dark red and white - Combination leader
Orange with white polka dots - Mountains leader
Light blue and white - Combativity
Grey - leading young rider
Dark blue and white - leading Salvadoran rider
Start List
Brazil
1 FERNANDES Clemilda
2 DA SILVA Fernanda
3 DE OLIVEIRA Flavia
4 FERNANDES Marcia
5 FERNANDES Uenia
6 FERREIRA Luciene
7
8
Pasta Zara-Geas-Manhattan
11 BORGATO Giada
12 CALLOVI Rossella
13 CILVINAITE Inga
14 GARCIA Evelyn
15 JANELIUNAITE Edita
16 NEBEN Amber
17 PIERCE Amber
18 SILINYTE Agne
Be Pink
21 AMIALIUSIK Alena
22 ALGISI Alice
23 CANTELE Noemi
24 FRAPPORTI Simona
25 MUCCOLI Dalia
26 SCHWEIZER Doris
27 VALSECCHI Silvia
28 ZRIMSEK Petra
Lituania-Gatorade
31 JANKAUSKAITE Milda
32 KUBILIUNAITE Jurgita
33 LATOZAITE Silvija
34 NORVAISAITE Kristina
35 POSKAITE Egle
36 TITENYTE Zavinta
37
38
Bogota-Gatorade
41 GULUMA Wendy
42 ESTRADA Nicole
43 MUNOZ Paola
44 RAMOS Yuleidy
45 ROJAS Gabriela
46 SALCEDO Jannie
47 TOVAR Luz
48 VALLEJOS Karla
Venezuela
51 BRICENO Maria
52 CESAR Jennifer
53 CHACON Lilibeth
54 GARCIA Daniely
55 GONZALEZ Angie
56 MORENO Wilmarys
57
58
Vanderkitten
61 CHILCOTT Kate
62 CUTLER Jessica
63 KUHAJEK Jennie
64 RACHETTO Liza
65 REITHER Jennifer
66 TEDDERGREEN Starla
67 WILLIAMSON Sophie
68 WINDER Ruth
Garrobo Texops
71 ALBERSHARDT Addyson
72 DIAZ Iris
73 ESTRADA Xenia
74 FORTIN Veronique
75 MAJANO Natalia
76 RUZICKOVA Martina
77
78
Iscorp-USA
81 GUIDENS Heylen
82 PANIAGUIA Valentina
83 ROJAS Adriana
84 RUBIANO Marcela
85 SANTOS Patricia
86 TELLADO Marisol
87 VARGAS Lorena
88
Rayvita
91 BERTINE Kathryn
92 CAMACHO Susan
93 CASAS Ana-Teresa
94 CORTES Cristina
95 LOZANO Camila
96 RIOS Julissa
97 ROJAS Fiorella
98 VICENCIO Maria Paz
San Luis
101 ARIAS Andrea
102 GUZMAN Florencia
103 MONSALVO Valentina
104 MAZZOCCA Gisela
105 OLIVERA Lucila
106 SAENZ Silvana
107
108
Colombia-Specialized
111 BUITRAGO Claudia
112 FAGUA Ana
113 GULUMA Serika
114 MORENO Liliana
115 MUNOZ Natalia
116 PENUELA Diana
117 SANABRIA Ana
118 SANABRIA Angie
Costa Rica
121 GUILLEN Edith
122 HERRERA Katherine
123 MARTINEZ Daniela
124 MUNOZ Brenda
125 RUBIANO Marcela
126
127
128
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