Sagan, Cavendish and Gaviria to clash in Vuelta a San Juan sprints - Preview
Quintana, Evenepoel and🧔 Alaphilippe will also make their seas🉐on debuts in Argentina





Organisers of the 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Vuelta a San Juan describe the Argentinean region as 'capital mundial de la passion por el ciclismo' during the race, and the presence of 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Peter Sagan (Bora-Hansgrohe), 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Mark Cavendish (Dimension Data), 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Fernando Gaviria (UAE Team Emirates), 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Nairo Quintana (Movistar) and 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Julian Alaphilippe (Deceuninck-QuickStep) should entertain the many local fans and ensure global attention for the early season weeklong ⛎stage race.
Mark Cavendish anꦚd Peter Sagan to ride Vuelta a San Juan
2ꦑ018 Vuelta a San Juan winner banned for four years after CERA positive
168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Peter 🔯Sagan to test his le🌃gs at Vuelta a San Juan
Alaphilippe to make 𝕴2019 season debut at the Vuelta a🧜 San Juan
168澳洲5最新开奖ඣ💞结果:Gaviria: I return to San Juan with gusto
Vakoc to make earlier than expe🀅cted return at Vuelta a Sa🐟n Juan
The 37th edition of the race, the third after regaining UCI status and replacing the Tour de San Luis, will be held a week later th🀅an in 2018, helping Sagan to head to South America after the Tour Down Under as part of an early season global tour.
The racing begins on Sunday, January 27, and ends a week later on Sunday♓, February 3.
The 12km individual time trial on stage 3 will be imp🦄ortant in the race for general classification, but the 2,565-metre higౠh stage 5 finish at Alto Colorado will surely crown the overall winner.
Five of the stages are scheduled to finish at 7:30pm local time, which will he🐼lp with the expected 35C temperatures, while a rest day after stage 4 splits the racing into two blocks and helps riders rec𒐪over during their early season efforts.
Last year's race was stained by the subsequent suspension of local rider Gonzalo Najar, who won on Alto Colorado but then tested posit🐬ive for the blood booster CERA. Oscar Sevilla replaced Najar in the record books and will be back this🌊 year to defend his belated title.
Fans fly Argentina's flag at the 2018 Vuelta a San Juan (Getty Images)
The contenders
Peter Sagan takes centre stage on the official race posters, with Cavendish, Gaviria, Qu🎐intana and Argentina's﷽ Maximiliano Richeze (Deceuninck-QuickStep) the other headliners of the race.
Race organisers do nಞot seem interested in WorldTour status but are happy to secure the services of several big names and big teams in the peloton. The second half of the start list is filled with local Continental teams and national teams from South America. Five Professional Continental teams join the six WorldTour squads, with Androni Giocattoli, Caja Rural, Israel Cycling Academy, Neri-Selle Italia-KTM, and Nippo-Vini Fantini-Faizan🥃e, on the six-rider 27-team start list.
Sagan showed his early season form with a stage victory and two podium spots at the Tour Down Under, and he will surely be hoping for another morale-boosting win next week before he returns to Europe and trains at altitude in February. Sam Bennett makes his season debut wi𓆏th Bora-Hansgrohe in San Juan, and it will be interesting to see if the two sprinters work together, take turns to go for the sprints or struggle to get along. The Irish sprinter was left frustrated when Bora-Hansgrohe signed German national champion Pascal Ackermann and told him he was unlikely to ride either the Giro d'Italia or the Tour de France. He will surely be motivated to prove a point in every sprint he contests.
Fernando Gaviria will also be looking for early success in 2019 after his somewhat surprise transfer from QuickStep to UAE Team Emirates. H✤e took his first professional victory at the 2015 Tour de San Luis and will su🍰rely want to beat former lead-out man and local heroes Max Richeze and Colombian Alvaro Hodeg, who is considered his younger and more cost-effective replacement at Deceuninck-QuickStep.
UAE Team Emirates have shaken up their management, medical and coaching staff in recent months and the Vuelta a San Juan will als⛄o be the first test for Gaviria's new lead-out train. He will have to depend on Simone Consonni and espe𒀰cially Roberto Ferrari in the sprints, with Switzerland's Tom Bohli the rouleur likely to set up UAE Team Emirates in the final kilometres.
Cavendish has a more settled lead-out with Bernard Eisel as Dimension Data's road captain. The Manxman has less of a qualified lead-out but can count on the hard🌄 work of Julian Vermote, US rider Ben King and Danilo Wyss.
Cavendish has not raced since late July but has been training in California in recent weeks and seems to be in a good place after months of forced rest and contract negotiations. He turns 34 in May, and while some have written off his chances of ever returning to his best, that only serves as extra motivation for the Manxman. He may not imm🌳ediately have the speed to win after so long away, but age or illness will not have blunted his sprinting finesse.
Deceuninck-QuickStep usually make the headlines with their constant stream of success, but the presence of Evenepoel, young sprinter Hodeg, veteran Richeze and Al🐭aphilippe mean their opening week in South America wi🐓ll have a multitude of storylines.
Expectations in Belgium for what Evenepoel can achieve are as high as the hype around Frank Van🏅denbr⛦oucke or even Eddy Merckx in their days, while Alaphilippe will be looking to start anew after the disappointment of cracking on the final climb of the Innsbruck world championships.
Other names to watch for include Quintana, Lotto Soudal duo Tiesj Benoot and Jens Keukeleire, Conor Dunne and Riccardo Minali at the Israel Cycling Academy, Giovanni Visconti and Dayer Quintana at Neri Sottoli-Selle Italia and Gianni Savio's Androni Giocattoli squad. Someone from one of the local teams is sure to make an impact, but hopefully it i♓s less demoralizing than the obviously unbelievable performance of Gonzalo Najar l𒈔ast year.
The peloton rides into the horizon at the 2018 Vuelta a San Juan (Getty Images)
The Route
San 🙈Juan is in a wine-growing🌌 valley east of the Andes, in the northwest of Argentina. Like Adelaide and the Tour Down Under, the riders and race caravan stay in the city for the whole race, with stages starting and finishing in different locations nearby.
The opening two stages to Pocito and Peri Lago Punta Negro suit the sprinters, with the rolling road of the latter perhaps better for Sag🌟an after Cavendish and Gaviria have fought tooth and nail for stage 1.
The 12km time trial on stage 3 🥂is on a flat out-and-back course and🧸 so suits the specialists who can successfully adapt to using their modified road bikes.
Stage 4 is the longest of the race at𒆙 185km and includes a mid-stage climb. However, the long descent to Villa San Agustin should see some kind of♔ regrouping and a sprint.
The riders enjoy an unusual rest day on Thursday, as the locals get ▨to ride a Gran Fondo. The racing resumes on Friday with the Queen stage to Alto Colorado. A 9am start and the long climb to the finish at altitude will make for a hard day outꦐ and no doubt shake up the overall classification.
The Alto Colorado climb is officially 15km long and gets steeper as it climbs into the clouds. It should be enough for an on-form climber to make up any losses accumulated during the 12km time trial and perhap♛s secure a winning advantage. Winds could be a big factor on the exposed cli🧸mb.
Stage 6 finishes on the fast and wide Autodromo de Villicum a♉nd is perfect for the sprinters and their lead-o🍨ut trains, while the final stage covers nine laps of San Juan on a flat circuit. It will crown the final winner of the white and blue overall classification jersey and be the last chance for Cavendish, Sagan, Gaviria and others to show their 2019 sprinting ability.
The lates𒀰t race content, interviews, features, reviews🦂 and expert buying guides, direct to your inbox!

Stephen is one of the most experienced member of the Cyclingnews team, having reported on professional cycling since 1994. He has been Head of News at Cyclingnews since 2022, before which he held the position of European editor since 2012 and previously worked for Reuters, Shift Active Media, and CyclingWeekly, among other publications.
Latest on Cyclingnews
-
How to watch the Tour de France 2025: TV, Streaming, official broadcasters
Where to watch the biggest race in the world this July -
Tour de France stage 4 Live – Could Tadej Pogačar win on a punchy day to Rouen?
Short, steep climbs litter the run-in to Rouen on a day made for the puncheurs -
'Froomey had some dog in him and that was one moment when it came out' – 'Road Captain' by Luke Rowe book extract
Rowe recounts an incident between Chris Froome and Vincenzo Nibali in insightful new book -
Amazon Prime Day 2025 Live: All the best deals as soon as we unearth them
We're trawling Amazon and beyond to bring you some absolute bargains