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Primož Roglič wins on the steep climb ahead of Enric Mas at the end of stage 8 of the 2024 Vuelta a España.

Vuelta stage 8 report: Roglič takes the stage and a chunk of time as O’Connor sees red

Race leader Ben O'Connor loses almost a minute on the steep wall that ended another punishingly hot day in Spain.

Primož Roglič (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) wins stage 8 ahead of Enric Mas (Movistar) at the 2024 Vuelta a España. Photo: © Cor Vos

Kit Nicholson
by Kit Nicholson 24.08.2024 Photography by
Cor Vos
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It was a finish that suited Primož Roglič down to the ground – short, uneven and violently steep – and the stage 4-winner hit the foot of the climb with cool intent: to take back some of the time lost to Ben O’Connor on stage 6, and go after the stage victory to boot.

Roglič landed his first blow near the base of the Sierra de Cazorla (4.8 km at 7.2%; first kilometre 17.3%), and from there would not relent. O’Connor reacted well in the first half of the climb, but as soon as he began to struggle with the repeated accelerations, Roglič and Enric Mas (Movistar) were able to take advantage and ride away to the line, gathering up the last survivors of the breakaway as they went. Mas tried to play Roglič at his own game in the last few hundred metres, but Roglič’s explosiveness won the day.

O’Connor had the help of teammate Felix Gall for much of the climb, but ultimately the red jersey struggled home in 17th, losing 56 seconds (taking bonus seconds into account) and seeing his lead tumble to 3:49 over the stage winner. After another brilliant day on the bike, Mas moves up to third overall, taking the place of João Almeida (UAE Team Emirates) whose jour sans – and the bad luck of being caught behind a crash – leaves him in 26th overall, one ahead of teammate Adam Yates.

Ben O'Connor gasps in the heat, dressed head to toe in the red of Vuelta race leader, at the end of stage 8 of the 2024 Vuelta a España.
O’Connor lost almost a minute of his lead on the explosive finishing climb of stage 8, but will now look ahead to more favourable territory, still holding almost four minutes over current second-place Roglič.

How it happened

Harold Tejada, Luca Vergallito and Oier Lazkano try to cool themselves down in the latter stages of stage 8 of the 2024 Vuelta a España.
Tejada, Vergallito and Lazkano attempt to cool themselves down on the run-in to the finale.
Sepp Kuss upends a bottle of water in an attempt to cool himself down at the finish of stage 8 of the 2024 Vuelta a España.
Defending champion Sepp Kuss lost another 67 seconds on the climb to the finish.

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Quote of the day

The opportunity was there, and I went for it. It was hard, hot. I was lucky – I had the legs to take it today. I’m going every day full racing, just see how I will respond to all of this input to my body after a hard period with my injury – I still feel it, so we’ll see.”

Roglič said at the finish, where he also took the polka-dot jersey.

Brief analysis

Up next

The last stage before the first rest day will be a major test. The Puerto de El Purche and Alto de Hazallanas (which will be tackled twice) are very steep, and riders will have very little time to recover as they do three back-to-back-to-back climbing efforts. The stage win could go to a break or to someone who can attack the GC group and then shine on the descent into Granada.

Originally appeared in our stage-by-stage preview.

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