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Tim Bonville-Ginn

As it happened: Torrential rain, chaos and crashes on Vuelta a España stage 2

(Image credit: ASO/Unipublic)

Vuelta a Espana 2023 - Everything you need to know

Vuelta a Espana 2023 route

Vuelta a Espana favourites

Vuelta stage 1 results

Race situation

Andreas Kron attacked on the Castell de Montjuic climb and soloed to victory with the GC riders riding in after race was neutralised.

Hello and welcome to our live coverage of stage 2 of the 2023 Vuelta a España.

La Vuelta a España 2023 started on the streets of Barcelona yesterday evening in the pouring rain with Team dsm-firmenich taking the stage. This put young Italian rider, Lorenzo Milesi, into the red leader's jersey.

Read the full race report from last night's stage by clicking HERE 

As we build towards what looks to be another wet day on the roads of Catalonia, here are a few links to stories from yesterday's opening stage. Including a very cross Remco Evenepoel.

Vuelta opening TTT stage marred by multiple crashes in treacherous racing conditions

Furious Remco Evenepoel slams ‘super-dangerous’ TTT to open Vuelta a España

Roglič looks ahead as Jumbo-Visma come through challenging Vuelta TTT unscathed

Due to the rain continuing, the race organisers have decided to take the GC times with 3.6km to go. The bonuses on the Montjuic climb still apply. 

Unfortunately, we have had the first DNS of the race. Laurens De Plus heads home to recover after his heavy crash in yesterday's TTT. 

The outrage from riders yesterday weren't just about the race itself, but what the riders had to do to get to their hotels. 

Have a read of what CPA president, Adam Hanson, as well as Thomas De Gendt had to say about what happened below.

Riders forced to ride 6km ‘through heavy traffic and in the dark without lights’ after Vuelta TTT 

Here are where all of the GC riders are after stage one:

Lorenzo Milesi (DSM) 17'30" (Red jersey)
Romain Bardet (DSM) S.T.
Enric Mas (MOV) S.T.
Hugh Carthy (EFE) +6"
Remco Evenepoel (SOQ) S.T.
Lenny Martinez (GFC) S.T.
Damiano Caruso (TBV) +10"
Mikel Landa (TBV) S.T.
Geraint Thomas (IGD) +20"
Thymen Arensman (IGD) S.T.
Aleksandr Vlasov (BOH) +28"
Lennard Kämna (BOH) +28"
Cian Uijtdebroeks (BOH)
Sergio Higuita (BOH) all S.T.
Jonas Vingegaard (TJV) +32"
Primož Roglič (TJV) S.T.
Juan Ayuso (UAD) +37"
Jay Vine (UAD)
João Almeida (UAD) all S.T.
Eddie Dunbar (JAY) +51"
Kévin Vauquelin (ARK) +1'18"

The riders have gone to the unofficial start where they will begin the neutral zone in Mataró. 

The race has started the neutral zone and are on their way to KM0 with 175 riders starting.

The jerseys today:

Red - Lorenzo Milesi (DSM) ITA
KoM - Sean Flynn (DSM) GBR
Young rider - Max Poole (DSM) GBR

The green points jersey will be given at the end of the stage. 

New update! The GC timings will now be taken with 9km to go due to the weather making the loop around Montjuic too dangerous.

Also, the official start has been pushed back by 2km as the race needs to pass through a road that is partially flooded.

This new start means the race will start at the base of the first climb of this year's Vuelta. The Coll de Sant Bartomeu. 6.6km long and an average of 4% gradient. 

Race start with 181.8km to go

We are racing! The fight for the breakaway begins here on the Coll de Sant Bartomeu.

The first attacks come with three riders getting an early gap of just 10".

Matteo Sobrero (JAY) ITA
Élie Gesbert (ARK) FRA
William Bonet (TAL) FRA

The first break is caught and immediately a new one is formed.

Javier Romo (AST) ESP
Andrea Piccolo (EFE) ITA)
Matteo Sobrero (JAY) ITA
Joel Nicolau (CJR) ESP

They have a gap of 30" over the peloton. Very solid quad of riders, there.

Piccolo is distanced from the leading break as more counter attacks come from behind.

Jetse Bol (BBH) NED

The Dutch rider has 35" to make up.

170km to go

The riders have gone over the first climb of the day. The KoM sprint results have not been shared yet.

Race situation:

Break 

Javier Romo (AST) ESP
Andrea Piccolo (EFE) ITA
Matteo Sobrero (JAY) ITA
Joel Nicolau (CJR) ESP 

Chase +23"

Jetse Bol (BBH) NED 

Peloton +1'22"

KoM sprint results (Coll de Sant Bartomeu)

Javier Romo (AST) 3pts
Joel Nicolau (CJR) 2pts
Matteo Sobrero (JAY) 1pt

Bol has finally made it to the lead making it a five man breakaway.

Javier Romo (AST) ESP
Andrea Piccolo (EFE) ITA
Matteo Sobrero (JAY) ITA
Joel Nicolau (CJR) ESP 
Jetse Bol (BBH) NED

Peloton are +2'25" behind the leaders.

150km to go, gap at 3'24"

The race have just taken on the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya. The race track used for the Spanish GP in F1.

They are now heading to Parets del Valles. The hometown of retired star, Joaquim Rodriguez.

Finally, La Vuelta themselves confirm the GC times being taken with 9km to go. However, the bonus sprint on the Montjuic climb are kept, which may cause carnage.

Team dsm-firmenich are controlling the break and have brought the gap back down to 3'00"

The riders are not far away from starting the second climb of the day, the Coll d'Estenalles. 12.1km long at an average gradient of 3.9%.

130km to go, gap at 2'47"

The race is now well beyond the hour mark. The rain is apparently still falling with videos of the finish showing large pools of standing water on the course. 

Here is one of the videos with the caption saying "The last kilometre of the stage: fences fallen by the wind, floods and logs and branches on the road. Lots of work ahead."

The race has started the Coll d'Estenalles.

120km to go, 2'27" between the break and the peloton

The gap starts to rise a bit again after dipping under two minutes at the base of the Coll d'Estenalles.

Live pictures begin and we see that the rain has thankfully stopped. Team dsm-firmenich are setting what looks like a fairly quick tempo. The gap up to the break is now 2'02". 

KoM Sprint Result (Coll d'Estenalles)

Matteo Sobrero (JAY) 5pts
Javier Romo (AST) 3pts
Joel Nicolau (CJR) 1pt

100km to go

Much like on the climb, the descent it being led in the peloton by Team dsm-firmenich but both Soudal-QuickStep and Jumbo-Visma came up to the front to keep all their leaders safe. 

Evenepoel over a minute out of the back of the peloton

Not sure what has happened here, but Remco Evenepoel is over a minute out of the back of the peloton. It must have been a mechanical as he does not look like he's crashed. 

Evenepoel is still not on the back of the bunch yet. He's taken his jacket off now, showing his Belgian national champions jersey. Understandably taking his time as the race is not on yet. He looks to be okay. 

Evenepoel is finally back in the bunch. Apparently there were 15 punctures on the Coll d'Estenalles descent, including the defending champion as well as Geraint Thomas. 

80km to go, 2'03" gap

The gap drifts out again to over two minutes with Ineos Grenadiers taking their feed bags. 

Team dsm-firmenich are really upping the pace now and there are some splits starting to form in the peloton. This isn't because of wind as the wind speed is only 11kph, although it is a cross-tail coming from their right at the moment. 

60km to go, 1'34" gap

Chris Hamilton has led the peloton for Team dsm-firmenich for what seems like the entire race. Every time the camera shows the front we get a shot of the Australian on the front. 

The rain is starting to fall once again. Team dsm-firmenich are now being challenged on the front by Ineos Grenadiers, Soudal-QuickStep, Jumbo-Visma and Movistar.

Crash

Two riders down near the back of the peloton. Callum Scotson was the 2nd to go down as well as Pelayo Sanchez. Both back riding. 

The breakaway has split with Romo, Piccolo and Sobrero distancing Nicolau and Bol. They have 1'52" on the chasing bunch. 

40km to go, 1'57" gap

Leaders:

Javier Romo (AST)
Andrea Piccolo (EFE)
Matteo Sobrero (JAY)

Chase +15"

Jetse Bol (BBH)
Joel Nicolau (CJR)

Peloton +1'57"

Multiple GC teams coming back towards to the front once again and that is seeing the gap start to drop a bit more between the bunch and the three riders left up at the front. 

Abandon

According to sources, we have had our second abandon.

Oscar Onley (DSM) GBR

A huge shame for the young Brit from Kelso in Scotland. 

There is a group of around 30 riders off the back of the peloton as UAE Team Emirates, Ineos Grenadiers, Soudal-QuickStep and Jumbo-Visma join Team dsm-firmenich on the front once again.

More crashes being reported with Rui Oliveira of UAE Team Emirates said to have gone down. 

Crashes

Primož Roglič and Geraint Thomas both hit the deck!

Andrea Piccolo has also gone down in the break. 

Piccolo makes it back to the leaders with help from the Jayco-AlUla car as both Sobrero and Romo will always appreciate the extra help.

Both Jetse Bol and Joel Nicolau are caught by the peloton. 

Primož Roglič and Geraint Thomas make it back into the peloton. 

Jumbo-Visma and Soudal-QuickStep demanding that the pace is dropped by the other teams in the bunch but Team dsm-firmenich, Alpecin-Deceuninck and Ineos Grenadiers are refusing. 

Matteo Sobrero can give no more in the breakaway and is distanced by Andrea Piccolo and Javier Romo. 

Another crash

Multiple riders go down on a very tight bend including Santiago Buitrago. 

20km to go, 54" gap

The rain is now extremely heavy and every time we go near a bend it seems like someone will crash. 

Crash for red jersey

Lorenzo Milesi does not have a dream day in red as the U23 World ITT Champion has been dropped and will not get back in. 

Alpecin-Deceuninck lead the peloton as they apparently believe in Kaden Groves despite the Montjuic climb near the end. 

Intermediate sprint result (Cornella de Llobregat)

Andre Piccolo (EFE) 20pts
Javier Romo (AST) 17pts
Matteo Sobrero (JAY) 15pts
Bryan Couquard (COF) 13pts
Maurice Ballerstedt (ADC) 10pts

10km to go, 39" gap

Piccolo and Romo still hold a lead. If they have over six seconds on the peloton with 9km to go we will see Piccolo go into the red jersey.

Andrea Piccolo is the new red jersey. The gap is supposedly around 20" in the lead with Romo ahead of the peloton. That means he has 14" on the Team dsm-firmenich and Movistar riders. 

Break immediately caught as the race goes into the lap heading to the Castell de Montjuic climb. Groupama-FDJ lead the way with Team dsm-firmenich.  

Peloton sits up and allows a group of about 25 go up the road for the stage win. 

4km to go.

EF Education-EasyPost leading the group that are still racing with Marijn van den Berg and Alpecin-Deceuninck for Kaden Groves leading the way. 

Andreas Kron of Lotto-Dstny goes solo but he is being gained on by a chasing group of four riders including Remy Rochas of Cofidis. 

Kron still leads as he goes under the Flamme Rouge and he has a teammate disrupting the chase. 

Andreas Kron wins stage two of La Vuelta a España 2023! 

Kaden Groves leads in the chasing group over the line to take second place. 

Kron pointed to the sky in his celebration as he dedicated the win to the late Tilj de Decker, who passed away this week at the age of 22. 

Stage two top 10 (Mataró to Barcelona)

1. Andreas Kron (LTD) DEN 4:22'44"
2. Kaden Groves (ADC) AUS +7"
3. Andrea Vendrame (ACT) ITA
4. Andrea Bagioli (SOQ) ITA
5. Fernando Barcelo (CJR) ESP
6. Ivan Garcia (MOV) ESP
7. Romain Gregoire (GFC) FRA
8. Lennert Van Eetvelt (LTD) BEL
9. Marijn van den Berg (EFE) NED
10. Kobe Goossens (ICW) BEL, all S.T.

Read the post race report by clicking the link below.

Vuelta a Espana: Andreas Kron takes solo win on torrential stage 2

(Image credit: Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images)

We now have what is likely to be a long wait as the organisers work out what the GC is with all the bonus seconds but also the times taken at 9km to go. 

Andreas Kron on the podium after he took the stage. Just his fourth career win. 

(Image credit: Getty Images/Pau Barrena)

The new red jersey is EF Education-EasyPost's Andrea Piccolo.

(Image credit: Getty Images/Pau Barrena)

The first rider to pull on the new-look green jersey at La Vuelta is Andreas Kron thanks to his stage win.

(Image credit: Getty Images/Tim de Waele)

Matteo Sobrero won the Category Two climb so goes into the polka dot jersey despite being level on points with Javier Romo.

(Image credit: Getty Images/Alexander Hassenstein)

Andrea Piccolo takes white as well as red in a perfect day for the Italian.

(Image credit: Getty Images/Alexander Hassenstein)

With no sign of a top 10 general classification, that will be that from Cyclingnews. Join us again tomorrow for stage three of the Spanish Grand Tour as the riders head the Pyrenees and Andorra. Goodbye. 

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