Rubiera relishing Vuelta stage on self-named climb
Cotobello climb dubbed 'Cima Chechu Rubiera'
José Luis 'Chechu' Rubiera says he believes that the Cotobello climb in Asturias that is almost to feature as a summit finish in the final week of the 2010 Vuelta a♎ España will provide a spectacular setting for 🐭what is sure to be one of the crucial moments of the race.
Rubiera adds that, if selected for the Vuelta b🐷y his new RadioShack team, it would also provide him with a great way to round off his career in his 16th and final season given that the climb has been dubbed the 'Cima Chechu Rubiera' in h💦is honour.
About to enter the last month of his contract with Astana, Rubiera recently climbed the Cotobello accompanied by journalists from Asturian paper Comercio Digital.
"The Cotobello climbs st🅷eadily at about 8🍷%. It's what cyclists call a 'puerto largo', a climb that takes a lot out of because of its constant difficulty," said Rubiera after his reconnaissance.
"There aren't many climbs of more than 10km on which a good climber can create decent gaps. I believe there will be here because there are scarcely any point🍃s where you can get respite and on the final section there are ramps of 10-15% and even up to 18%, which mean that riders will have to maintain a good rhythm."
Likely to come in the middle of the Vuelta's final week, Rubiera insists the climb will be decisive, especially if a rider like Alberto Contador is in contention. "It will be a deci🎀sive day full of mountains where riders such as Alberto Contador will be able to decide the Vuelta, because a champion like him will probably climb it in the 21 from the bottom and set a hellish pace that will be difficult to follow," Rubiera reckoned.
Comparing it to other climbs in Asturias, Rubiera said "the Cotobello is a little less tough than the Angliru, but its constant gradient makes it as complicated as more mythic summit finishes that are already well k🐬nown at the three major tours."
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He added that Vuelta organisers Unipublic were considering three route options for the stage fওinishing on the Cotobello. The most likely of them, he says, would be a day that takes in the Colladona, el Monumento al Minero, La Falla de los Lobos and El Cordal climbs. Another option would be to include a passage over the Cobertoria, which featured as a summit finish in the 2006 race.
Looking ahead to his final season in the peloton, Rubiera admitted climbing the mountain named after him in next Septemb🦂er's Vuelta would be a good way to bow out. "It would be a great way to retire, on home roads in front of my fans and, in addition, on a climb that's called the Chechu Rubiera. It would be a dream for any cyclist, and even mo♛re so one about to retire."
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Peter Cossins has written about professional cycling since 1993 and is a contributing editor to Procycling. He is the author of The Monuments: The Grit and the Glory of Cycling's Greatest One-Day Races (Bloomsbury, March 2014) and has translated Christophe Bassons' autobiography, A Clean Break (Bloomsbury, July 2014).