Tour of Spain: Dominance of the “killer wasps”: jumbo spectacle at the Vuelta

Tour of Spain
Dominance of the “killer wasps”: jumbo spectacle at the Vuelta

Standing on the verge of the greatest success of his career: US professional cyclist Sepp Kuss. photo

© Alvaro Barrientos/AP/dpa

The final Vuelta stage is just a formality. Jumbo-Visma will be the first cycling team to win all three major national tours. The historic triumph calls out the doubters.

It was an image for eternity. Sepp Kuss, Jonas Vingegaard and Primoz Roglic rolled arm in arm across the finish line of the penultimate stage Tour of Spain.

Favorites on the same team

The historic triumph was actually perfect, the final stage to Madrid was just the deserved lap of honor. The untouchable trio forms the podium in the overall standings – and rides in the same team. “It’s hard to put it into words,” said designated Vuelta winner Kuss. “I’m very happy and it was great how we finished it.”

The Jumbo-Visma team, reverently known as the Killer Wasps because of their black and yellow jerseys, dominated the three major national tours this year like no other team before. Roglic won the Giro d’Italia in May, Vingegaard won the Tour de France in July – and in Spain it was now Edelhelfer Kuss’ turn. No team has ever won all three Grand Tours in one year. The KAS racing team had only had three riders from a team on the podium at the Vuelta in 1966.

Evenepol cannot continue

One reason for Jumbo’s strength is the weakness of the competition. Defending champion Remco Evenepoel did not compete in the form of the previous year and the strong climbing Spaniards like Juan Ayuso, Enric Mas and Mikel Landa once again did not fulfill the desires of their compatriots. “We expected more resistance, but in the end we had the three strongest drivers in the race,” said sports director Grischa Niermann. His riders have won five stages in the last three weeks in Spain.

Dominance is poison for sports because it can lead to boredom. It also provides breeding ground for all sorts of suspicions, especially in cycling. Of course the Jumbo professionals were asked about it. “We understand the skepticism,” says Vingegaard. “But people should know that we sacrifice a lot and work in great detail. We do everything perfectly in this team and that makes a big difference.” He is “100 percent sure, my two colleagues won’t take anything and the same applies to me.”

Heßmann with a positive doping test

What Jumbo cannot explain away, however, is Michel Heßmann’s positive doping test. The Freiburger tested positive for a diuretic during a training check on June 14th in Germany. The agents stimulate urine production and thus ensure the body’s drainage. His team suspended him until further notice in August after it became known. The public prosecutor’s office searched his apartment, where no doping substances were found. The investigation is ongoing. Heßmann was Roglic’s helper at the Giro this year.

The Vuelta brought yet another fraud issue back to the table this year. After Kuss attacked at the Tourmalet with breathtaking speed, was thwarted by a spectator and repeated the attack without hesitation, ex-professional Jerome Pineau spoke of motor doping. “Sepp Kuss drove ten kilometers per hour faster on the Tourmalet than the group before him,” said the Frenchman.

However, after each stage, the top riders’ wheels and a random sample are x-rayed to rule out mechanical fraud. This is not an argument for Pineau. “There is no evidence, but with Armstrong we didn’t have it either and everyone knew it,” said the ex-professional. The team’s dominance is a concern. Jumbo-Visma denied the fraud alleged by Pineau.

dpa

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