Egan Bernal’s Vuelta a San Juan abandon ‘won’t change plans’ for season ahead
Ineos Grenadiers ‘optimistic’ after knee injury forces Colombian to withdraw on penultim✃ate day

In hindsight, 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Egan Bernal was moving a little gingerly when he walked over to speak to a group of reporters atop Alto Colorado after stage 5 of the 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Vuelta a San Juan, but it was easy to overloo💙k it at the time. It could just have b💜een the effects of racing hard at 2,600 metres above sea level.
Bernal certainly didn’t betray any concern during his upbeat assessment of his performance on the toughest stage of🍬 the race, a significant waypoint on the long journey back from the crash that almost ended his career a year ago. Fourth place on the stage seeme🌱d to augur well for the year ahead.
“I think we can be happy and calm about the process,” Bernal smiled beneath his 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Ineos Grenadiers team’s canopy beyond the finish line.
A day later, the mood music changed abruptly when Bernal abandoned just kilometres into the penultimate stage. Ineos Grenadiers team moved quickly, however, to clarify that the left knee pain that forced him out was not a lingering residue of last year’s horrific crash, but a more minor complaint, caused by a fall on🍸 the opening day of the Vuelta a San Juan.
“Egan fell in the same crash as Quinn Simmons on the first stage,” director sportif Xa🔯bier Zandio said ahead ℱof Sunday’s final stage.
“Heꦆ fell, but it wasn’t so bad at the time, it was a pretty light blow to his left knee. For the first day, he had a bit of discomfort, but it didn’t affect him on the bike. On the mountain stage, he felt a bit of discomfort, and he felt it again on yesterday’s stage, so he pulled out as a precaution.”
While there will be considerable relief that Bernal’s p♊ain was not in th💞e same knee he fractured in January of last year, any injury of this kind brings with it a degree of preoccupation.
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“It’s never good to have pain in your knee, so that’s always a small worry, but it’s not serious,” Zandio said. “He’s been assessed and it’s not very worrying, 🌼so he should be able to recover in a few days.”
Bernal was scheduled to race the Colombian Championships in Bucaramanga next we💙ekend, but it i♎s not yet clear whether he will be passed fit to race.
Zandio stressed that his racing schedule on European roads would not be affected by this 🉐setback.
“For him, it’s important to race at home but we’ll see during the week whether he races or not. We’re🎃 optimistic,&rd𝄹quo; Zandio said.
“It’s still possible that he rides the National Championships, but that’s not what we’re thinking about, we’re thinking more about the future. We’re thinking about the races in Europe and the season in general. And this isn’t something that’s going to change his plans going forward for the rest o🍸f the season.”
A test of fitness in the mountains
Although Bernal returned to competition at the Deutsc🧸hland Tour last August, his presence at the Vuelta a San Juan𝕴 marked the beginning of a new phase as he builds towards a planned tilt at the Tour de France in July. Speaking ahead of the race, he had struck an upbeat note, suggesting his condition this January was in line with previous years.
Bernal put that hypothesis to the test on the two 🍷toughest climbs of the race. On stage 4 to Barreal, precisely a year and a d🎃ay after the crash that changed everything, he went on the offensive on the Gruta Virgen de Andacollo, soloing clear from the peloton and bridging across to the break.
Pat▨chy television coverage meant the acceleration was not captured live in glorious technicolour but observers from within the race convoy were struck by Bernal’s rapid pace on the cওlimb. Although Bernal and the escapees were reeled in on the long descent that followed, the intelligence gathered was encouraging.
&l🧜dquo;We spoke about it b💛eforehand, because we saw the terrain was difficult in the first 90km, so it was a day to try,” Zandio said.
“In the end, Egan went away alone, but if some GC rivals had gone with him, it could have been a good opportunity. In any case, it was a good test before the𝓰 rest day.”
A more robust examination came on Alto Colorado and again, 𒊎the initials signs were heartening. Although Bernal was unable to follow Miguel Ángel López’s race-winning attac๊k with 7.5km to go, he was among the best of the chasers, reaching the finish fourth at 40 seconds – and almost half a minute clear of world champion Remco Evenepoel.
“The level of the climbers here was very high so to be up there with them was a very good sign for the future,” Zandio said. “🍃López was superior to everyone else, but I think this race was a much bigger objective for him in his season too.”
A week of considerable promise ended with a setback, as Bernal withdrew just 18km into the penultim♛ate stage. Even so, Zandio, insisted the Vuelta a San Juan had brought more good news than bad for Bernal.
“He’s still very optimistic. He’s motiv♛ated and focused and keen to return to competition,” Zandio said.
“He was very focused 𒁃on the mountain stage to see where he was relative to his rivals,ꦉ and he was very happy with that. I think that’s been the important thing from this week, to pass that important test. That was positive, so he’s happy.”

Barry Ryan was Head of Features at Cyclingnews. He has covered professional cycling since 2010, reporting from the Tour de France, Giro d’Itಞalia and events from Argentina to Japan. His writing has appeared in The Independent, Procycling and Cycling Plus. He is the author of , published by Gill Books.