| Tour of Spain | |
|---|---|
| Local name | Vuelta Ciclista a España |
| Region | Spain |
| Date | September (since 1995) |
| Type | Stage Race (Grand Tour) |
| History | |
| First Edition | 1935 |
| Number of Editions | 60 |
| First Winner | Gustaaf Deloor (Belgium) |
| Latest winner | Denis Menchov (Russia) |
| Most Wins | Tony Rominger (Switzerland), Roberto Heras (Spain) 3 times |
The Vuelta a España bicycle race is one of the three "Grand Tours" of Europe and, after the Tour de France and the Giro d'Italia, is the third most important road cycling stage race in the world.
It was formerly held in the spring, but since 1995 the race has been run in September. The course includes two individual time trials. The finish of the Vuelta is traditionally the Spanish capital, Madrid.
In 1999, for the first time, the course crossed the Alto de El Angliru in Asturias, which climbs 1573 meters over 12.9 km with grades as steep as 23.6 percent (at Cueña les Cabres) making it one of the steepest in Europe. Credit for the discovery of this climb and its addition to the Vuelta goes to Miguel Prieto.
The overall leader wears the 'Jersey de Oro' (a Golden Jersey)—the Spanish counterpart to the yellow jersey of the Tour de France. Other jerseys honour the best climber (King of the Mountains) and the best sprinter (points competition) a blue with yellow fish jersey that is sponsored by Spain's fishing and marine industry. Usually there are other jerseys awarded, such as for points leaders in the 'Metas Volantes' (intermediate sprints) and for combination rankings.
The record for most wins is held jointly by Switzerland's Tony Rominger, who won three consecutive Vueltas in 1992, 1993 and 1994; and Roberto Heras of Spain, winner in 2000, 2003 and 2004. Heras also won the 2005 event, but was disqualified for a doping offense. Three Germans have taken first place: Rudi Altig (1962), Rolf Wolfshohl (1965) and Jan Ullrich (1999). The Spaniards, however, have dominated, winning 26 of the 57 runnings of the Vuelta. France, Belgium, Italy, the Netherlands, Colombia, Ireland, and most recently Russia have also had first place finishers.
See also: List of teams and cyclists for the 2004 Tour of Spain
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It uses material from the
"Vuelta a España".
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