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1994 Vuelta a España

The 1994 Vuelta a España was the 49th Edition of the Vuelta a España, one of cycling's Grand Tours. The Vuelta started on April 25 with a short 9 km (5.6 mi) prologue around the Spanish city of Valladolid.[1] The race came to a close on May 15 with a flat stage that stretched from Palazuelos de Eresma to the Spanish capital of Madrid.[1] Seventeen teams entered the race, which was won by Tony Rominger of the Mapei–CLAS team.[2] Second and third respectively were the Spanish riders Mikel Zarrabeitia and Pedro Delgado.[2]

1994 Vuelta a España
Race details
Dates25 April - 15 May
Stages20 + Prologue
Distance3,531.6 km (2,194 mi)
Winning time92h 07' 48"
Results
Winner  Tony Rominger (SUI) (Mapei–CLAS)
  Second  Mikel Zarrabeitia (ESP) (Banesto)
  Third  Pedro Delgado (ESP) (Banesto)

Points  Laurent Jalabert (FRA) (ONCE)
Mountains  Luc Leblanc (FRA) (Festina–Lotus)
Sprints  Mauro Radaelli (ITA) (Brescialat–Ceramiche Refin)
  Team Banesto
← 1993
1995 →

Tony Rominger became the first rider to win the Vuelta a España three consecutive times. Amongst the race's other classifications, Laurent Jalabert of the ONCE team won the points classification, Festina–Lotus rider Luc Leblanc won the mountains classification, Mauro Radaelli of the Brescialat team won the intermediate sprints classification, and Amore & Vita rider Alessio Di Basco won the special sprints classification. Banesto finished as the winners of the team classification, which ranked each of the twenty teams contesting the race by lowest cumulative time.

Race preview and favorites edit

Tony Rominger, winner of the past two editions, was once again the favorite. Alex Zülle the previous year's runner up and Pedro Delgado, twice winner of the Vuelta, were expected to be his main rivals.

Teams edit

A total of 17 teams were invited to participate in the 1994 Vuelta a España.[3][4] Each team sent a squad of ten riders, so the Vuelta began with a peloton of 170 cyclists.[3][4] Out of the 170 riders that started this edition of the Vuelta a España, a total of 121 riders made it to the finish in Madrid.[2][4]

The 17 teams that took part in the race were:[3][4]

Route and stages edit

The 1994 Vuelta a España began with a brief 9 km (6 mi) individual time trial that circuited the city of Valladolid.[4] The official race route contained three individual time trial events with distances that ranged from 9 km (6 mi) to 53 km (33 mi) in length.[4] There were a total of eight stages that held many high mountains, while there was only one hilly stage that contained climbs of lesser degree. The nine remaining stages were primarily flat.

Of the stages that contained mountains, six contained summit finishes: stage 6 to Sierra Nevada,[4] stage 10 to Andorra-Arcalís,[4] stage 11 to Cerler,[4] stage 14 to Sierra de la Demanda,[4] stage 16 to Lakes of Covadonga,[4] and stage 17 to Monte Naranco.[4]

Stage Date Course[1][4] Distance Type Winner
1 25 April Valladolid 9 km (6 mi)   Individual time trial   Tony Rominger (SUI)
2 26 April Valladolid to Salamanca 178.4 km (111 mi)   Plain stage   Laurent Jalabert (FRA)
3 27 April Salamanca to Cáceres 239 km (149 mi)   Plain stage   Laurent Jalabert (FRA)
4 28 April Almendralejo to Córdoba 235.6 km (146 mi)   Plain stage   Endrio Leoni (ITA)
5 29 April Córdoba to Granada 166.9 km (104 mi)   Plain stage   Laurent Jalabert (FRA)
6 30 April Granada to Sierra Nevada 151.7 km (94 mi)   Stage with mountain(s)   Tony Rominger (SUI)
7 1 May Baza to Alicante 256.5 km (159 mi)   Plain stage   Simone Biasci (ITA)
8 2 May Benidorm to Benidorm 39.5 km (25 mi)   Individual time trial   Tony Rominger (SUI)
9 3 May Benidorm to Valencia 166 km (103 mi)   Plain stage   Jean-Paul van Poppel (NED)
10 4 May Igualada to Andorra-Arcalís (Andorra) 205 km (127 mi)   Stage with mountain(s)   Ángel Camargo (COL)
11 5 May Andorra la Vella (Andorra) to Cerler 195.3 km (121 mi)   Stage with mountain(s)   Tony Rominger (SUI)
12 6 May Benasque to Zaragoza 226.7 km (141 mi)   Plain stage   Laurent Jalabert (FRA)
13 7 May Zaragoza to Pamplona 201.6 km (125 mi)   Plain stage   Laurent Jalabert (FRA)
14 8 May Pamplona to Sierra de la Demanda 174 km (108 mi)   Stage with mountain(s)   Tony Rominger (SUI)
15 9 May Santo Domingo de la Calzada to Santander 209.3 km (130 mi)   Hilly stage   Alessio Di Basco (ITA)
16 10 May Santander to Lakes of Covadonga 147.7 km (92 mi)   Stage with mountain(s)   Laurent Jalabert (FRA)
17 11 May Cangas de Onís to Monte Naranco 150.4 km (93 mi)   Stage with mountain(s)   Bart Voskamp (NED)
18 12 May Ávila to Ávila 189 km (117 mi)   Stage with mountain(s)   Giuseppe Calcaterra (ITA)
19 13 May Ávila to Palazuelos de Eresma 171 km (106 mi)   Stage with mountain(s)   Marino Alonso (ESP)
20 14 May Segovia to Palazuelos de Eresma 53 km (33 mi)   Individual time trial   Tony Rominger (SUI)
21 15 May Palazuelos de Eresma to Madrid 165.7 km (103 mi)   Plain stage   Laurent Jalabert (FRA)
Total 3,531 km (2,194 mi)

Race overview edit

Rominger showed from the very start that he was unlikely to be easily beaten, as he won the prologue by a large margin. On the sixth stage, ending at the top of the 2700m climb of the Sierra Nevada, Rominger took advantage of an attack by youngster Mikel Zarrabeitia to leave all other riders behind and win the stage. After only one mountain stage Rominger was now the leader by over two minutes over his rivals.

In the second week, Rominger put his overall win beyond doubt, gaining another two minutes on his rivals at the Benidorm individual time trial and taking two more stage wins, albeit without much time gain, on the mountaintop finishes at Cerler and the Alto de la Cruz de la Demanda.

Even though the overall winner was set in stone, there was a spirited fight for second and third places between ONCE leader Zülle and Banesto riders Delgado and Zarrabeitia. This fight was mostly decided when Zülle cracked on the Lagos de Covadonga climb and lost several minutes. This very stage marked the beginning of Laurent Jalabert's transformation from sprinter into GC contender as he took the stage win.

In Segovia, on the outskirts of Madrid, Marino Alonso took the only stage win by a Spanish rider in this edition of the Vuelta. It was also in Segovia that the penultima stage was held, a 53 km individual time trial. Zülle set the fastest intermediate times and looked set to win the stage and finish on the podium, but bad luck struck, and after four consecutive mechanical issues he lost any chance of doing so. Rominger took his 6th stage win.

The final stage, ending in Madrid, resulted in Jalabert's seventh stage win, a record that also netted him the points classification. Also a record was Rominger's third Vuelta win. He also held the leader's jersey from start to finish (which only three riders had achieved before) and won six stages. The Banesto duo of Zarrabeitia and Delgado accompanied him on the podium.

It was the last time that the race was held in late spring as from 1995 onwards the race was held in September.

Classification leadership edit

Classification leadership by stage[1][5]
Stage Winner General classification
 
Points classification
 
Mountains classification
 
Team classification
P Tony Rominger Tony Rominger Tony Rominger not awarded Banesto
1 Laurent Jalabert
2 Laurent Jalabert Laurent Jalabert José Manuel Uría
3 Endrio Leoni Ignacio García Camacho
4 Laurent Jalabert Luc Leblanc
5 Tony Rominger Mapei–CLAS
6 Simone Biasci
7 Tony Rominger Tony Rominger
8 Jean-Paul van Poppel Luc Leblanc Banesto
9 Ángel Camargo Tony Rominger
10 Tony Rominger Tony Rominger Mapei–CLAS
11 Laurent Jalabert Laurent Jalabert
12 Laurent Jalabert
13 Tony Rominger
14 Alessio Di Basco Banesto
15 Laurent Jalabert
16 Bart Voskamp
17 Giuseppe Calcaterra Luc Leblanc
18 Marino Alonso
19 Tony Rominger Tony Rominger
20 Laurent Jalabert Laurent Jalabert
Final Tony Rominger Laurent Jalabert Luc Leblanc Banesto

Final standings edit

Legend [2][6]
  Denotes the winner of the General classification   Denotes the winner of the Points classification
  Denotes the winner of the Mountains classification   Denotes the winner of the Intermediate sprints classification
  Denotes the winner of the Special sprints classification

General classification edit

Rider Team Time
1   Tony Rominger (SUI)   Mapei–CLAS 92h 07' 48"
2   Mikel Zarrabeitia (ESP) Banesto + 7' 28"
3   Pedro Delgado (ESP) Banesto + 9' 27"
4   Alex Zülle (SUI) ONCE + 10' 54"
5   Oliverio Rincón (COL) ONCE + 13' 09"
6   Luc Leblanc (FRA)   Festina–Lotus + 15' 27"
7   Vicente Aparicio (ESP) Banesto + 15' 48"
8   Luis Pérez (ESP) Cavas Castellblanch + 16' 46"
9   Fernando Escartín (ESP) Mapei–CLAS + 16' 54"
10   Alberto Camargo (COL) Artiach-Royal Fruco + 20' 35"

Points classification edit

Rider Team Points
1   Laurent Jalabert (FRA)   ONCE 243
2   Tony Rominger (SUI)   Mapei–CLAS 227
3   Alex Zülle (SUI) ONCE 121
4   Mikel Zarrabeitia (ESP) Banesto 117
5   Pedro Delgado (ESP) Banesto 89
6   Juan Carlos González Salvador (ESP) Carrera Jeans–Tassoni 83
7   Oliverio Rincón (COL) ONCE 78
8   Jean-Paul van Poppel (NED) Festina–Lotus 77
9   Roberto Pagnin (ITA) Navigare–Blue Storm 67
10   Paulo-Antonio Fanelli (ITA) Carrera Jeans–Tassoni 64

Mountains classification edit

Rider Team Points
1   Luc Leblanc (FRA)   Festina–Lotus 158
2   Michele Coppolillo (ITA) Navigare–Blue Storm 148
3   Tony Rominger (SUI)   Mapei–CLAS 136
4   Oliverio Rincón (COL) ONCE 99
5   Mikel Zarrabeitia (ESP) Banesto 76

Team classification edit

Team[2] Time
1 Banesto 276h 42' 43"
2 Mapei–CLAS + 10' 01"
3 ONCE + 18' 15"
4 Cavas Castellblanch + 40' 55"
5 Festina–Lotus + 43' 32"
6 Artiach-Royal Fruco + 48' 18"
7 Kelme–Avianca–Gios + 54' 52"
8 Euskadi–Petronor + 1h 40' 24"
9 Mercatone Uno–Medeghini + 1h 51' 54"
10 Recer-Boavista + 2h 30' 44"

Intermediate sprints classification edit

Rider[2] Team Points
1   Mauro Radaelli (ITA)   Brescialat 44
2   Orlando Rodrigues (POR) Artiach-Royal Fruco 29
3   Roberto Pagnin (ITA) Navigare–Blue Storm 22
4   Fabio Roscioli (ITA) Brescialat 8
5   Julio Cesar Cadena (COL) Kelme–Avianca–Gios 7

Special sprints classification edit

Rider[2] Team Points
1   Alessio Di Basco (ITA)   Amore & Vita 39
2   Giuseppe Calcaterra (ITA) Amore & Vita 18
3   Fabio Roscioli (ITA) Brescialat 11
4   Michele Coppolillo (ITA) Navigare–Blue Storm 11
5   Roberto Pagnin (ITA) Navigare–Blue Storm 6

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Esta carrera es la mas importante" [This race is the most important] (PDF) (in Spanish). El Mundo Deportivo. 16 May 1994. p. 44. Retrieved 27 May 2012.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g "La Vuelta - 94" [The Vuelta - 94] (PDF) (in Spanish). El Mundo Deportivo. 16 May 1994. p. 45. Retrieved 27 May 2012.
  3. ^ a b c "La Vuelta - 94" [The Vuelta - 94] (PDF) (in Spanish). El Mundo Deportivo. 26 April 1994. p. 45. Retrieved 27 May 2012.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m [Year 1994] (in Spanish). Unipublic. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 August 2011. Retrieved 27 May 2012.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-08-27. Retrieved 2013-01-26.
  6. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "Vuelta a España 1994; Etapa 10 Igualada - Ordino Arcalisu 4-May 205 Km; Ángel Yesid Camargo". YouTube.

External links edit

  • La Vuelta (Official site in Spanish, English, and French)

1994, vuelta, españa, 49th, edition, vuelta, españa, cycling, grand, tours, vuelta, started, april, with, short, prologue, around, spanish, city, valladolid, race, came, close, with, flat, stage, that, stretched, from, palazuelos, eresma, spanish, capital, mad. The 1994 Vuelta a Espana was the 49th Edition of the Vuelta a Espana one of cycling s Grand Tours The Vuelta started on April 25 with a short 9 km 5 6 mi prologue around the Spanish city of Valladolid 1 The race came to a close on May 15 with a flat stage that stretched from Palazuelos de Eresma to the Spanish capital of Madrid 1 Seventeen teams entered the race which was won by Tony Rominger of the Mapei CLAS team 2 Second and third respectively were the Spanish riders Mikel Zarrabeitia and Pedro Delgado 2 1994 Vuelta a EspanaRace detailsDates25 April 15 MayStages20 PrologueDistance3 531 6 km 2 194 mi Winning time92h 07 48 ResultsWinner Tony Rominger SUI Mapei CLAS Second Mikel Zarrabeitia ESP Banesto Third Pedro Delgado ESP Banesto Points Laurent Jalabert FRA ONCE Mountains Luc Leblanc FRA Festina Lotus Sprints Mauro Radaelli ITA Brescialat Ceramiche Refin TeamBanesto 19931995 Tony Rominger became the first rider to win the Vuelta a Espana three consecutive times Amongst the race s other classifications Laurent Jalabert of the ONCE team won the points classification Festina Lotus rider Luc Leblanc won the mountains classification Mauro Radaelli of the Brescialat team won the intermediate sprints classification and Amore amp Vita rider Alessio Di Basco won the special sprints classification Banesto finished as the winners of the team classification which ranked each of the twenty teams contesting the race by lowest cumulative time Contents 1 Race preview and favorites 2 Teams 3 Route and stages 4 Race overview 5 Classification leadership 6 Final standings 6 1 General classification 6 2 Points classification 6 3 Mountains classification 6 4 Team classification 6 5 Intermediate sprints classification 6 6 Special sprints classification 7 References 8 External linksRace preview and favorites editTony Rominger winner of the past two editions was once again the favorite Alex Zulle the previous year s runner up and Pedro Delgado twice winner of the Vuelta were expected to be his main rivals Teams editA total of 17 teams were invited to participate in the 1994 Vuelta a Espana 3 4 Each team sent a squad of ten riders so the Vuelta began with a peloton of 170 cyclists 3 4 Out of the 170 riders that started this edition of the Vuelta a Espana a total of 121 riders made it to the finish in Madrid 2 4 The 17 teams that took part in the race were 3 4 Amore amp Vita Artiach Royal Fruco Banesto Brescialat Cavas Castellblanch Euskadi Petronor Festina Lotus Jolly Cage Kelme Avianca Gios Mapei CLAS Mercatone Uno Medeghini Navigare Blue Storm ONCE Recer Boavista Santa Clara Samara Sicasal Acral TVM Bison KitRoute and stages editThe 1994 Vuelta a Espana began with a brief 9 km 6 mi individual time trial that circuited the city of Valladolid 4 The official race route contained three individual time trial events with distances that ranged from 9 km 6 mi to 53 km 33 mi in length 4 There were a total of eight stages that held many high mountains while there was only one hilly stage that contained climbs of lesser degree The nine remaining stages were primarily flat Of the stages that contained mountains six contained summit finishes stage 6 to Sierra Nevada 4 stage 10 to Andorra Arcalis 4 stage 11 to Cerler 4 stage 14 to Sierra de la Demanda 4 stage 16 to Lakes of Covadonga 4 and stage 17 to Monte Naranco 4 Stage Date Course 1 4 Distance Type Winner1 25 April Valladolid 9 km 6 mi nbsp Individual time trial nbsp Tony Rominger SUI 2 26 April Valladolid to Salamanca 178 4 km 111 mi nbsp Plain stage nbsp Laurent Jalabert FRA 3 27 April Salamanca to Caceres 239 km 149 mi nbsp Plain stage nbsp Laurent Jalabert FRA 4 28 April Almendralejo to Cordoba 235 6 km 146 mi nbsp Plain stage nbsp Endrio Leoni ITA 5 29 April Cordoba to Granada 166 9 km 104 mi nbsp Plain stage nbsp Laurent Jalabert FRA 6 30 April Granada to Sierra Nevada 151 7 km 94 mi nbsp Stage with mountain s nbsp Tony Rominger SUI 7 1 May Baza to Alicante 256 5 km 159 mi nbsp Plain stage nbsp Simone Biasci ITA 8 2 May Benidorm to Benidorm 39 5 km 25 mi nbsp Individual time trial nbsp Tony Rominger SUI 9 3 May Benidorm to Valencia 166 km 103 mi nbsp Plain stage nbsp Jean Paul van Poppel NED 10 4 May Igualada to Andorra Arcalis Andorra 205 km 127 mi nbsp Stage with mountain s nbsp Angel Camargo COL 11 5 May Andorra la Vella Andorra to Cerler 195 3 km 121 mi nbsp Stage with mountain s nbsp Tony Rominger SUI 12 6 May Benasque to Zaragoza 226 7 km 141 mi nbsp Plain stage nbsp Laurent Jalabert FRA 13 7 May Zaragoza to Pamplona 201 6 km 125 mi nbsp Plain stage nbsp Laurent Jalabert FRA 14 8 May Pamplona to Sierra de la Demanda 174 km 108 mi nbsp Stage with mountain s nbsp Tony Rominger SUI 15 9 May Santo Domingo de la Calzada to Santander 209 3 km 130 mi nbsp Hilly stage nbsp Alessio Di Basco ITA 16 10 May Santander to Lakes of Covadonga 147 7 km 92 mi nbsp Stage with mountain s nbsp Laurent Jalabert FRA 17 11 May Cangas de Onis to Monte Naranco 150 4 km 93 mi nbsp Stage with mountain s nbsp Bart Voskamp NED 18 12 May Avila to Avila 189 km 117 mi nbsp Stage with mountain s nbsp Giuseppe Calcaterra ITA 19 13 May Avila to Palazuelos de Eresma 171 km 106 mi nbsp Stage with mountain s nbsp Marino Alonso ESP 20 14 May Segovia to Palazuelos de Eresma 53 km 33 mi nbsp Individual time trial nbsp Tony Rominger SUI 21 15 May Palazuelos de Eresma to Madrid 165 7 km 103 mi nbsp Plain stage nbsp Laurent Jalabert FRA Total 3 531 km 2 194 mi Race overview editRominger showed from the very start that he was unlikely to be easily beaten as he won the prologue by a large margin On the sixth stage ending at the top of the 2700m climb of the Sierra Nevada Rominger took advantage of an attack by youngster Mikel Zarrabeitia to leave all other riders behind and win the stage After only one mountain stage Rominger was now the leader by over two minutes over his rivals In the second week Rominger put his overall win beyond doubt gaining another two minutes on his rivals at the Benidorm individual time trial and taking two more stage wins albeit without much time gain on the mountaintop finishes at Cerler and the Alto de la Cruz de la Demanda Even though the overall winner was set in stone there was a spirited fight for second and third places between ONCE leader Zulle and Banesto riders Delgado and Zarrabeitia This fight was mostly decided when Zulle cracked on the Lagos de Covadonga climb and lost several minutes This very stage marked the beginning of Laurent Jalabert s transformation from sprinter into GC contender as he took the stage win In Segovia on the outskirts of Madrid Marino Alonso took the only stage win by a Spanish rider in this edition of the Vuelta It was also in Segovia that the penultima stage was held a 53 km individual time trial Zulle set the fastest intermediate times and looked set to win the stage and finish on the podium but bad luck struck and after four consecutive mechanical issues he lost any chance of doing so Rominger took his 6th stage win The final stage ending in Madrid resulted in Jalabert s seventh stage win a record that also netted him the points classification Also a record was Rominger s third Vuelta win He also held the leader s jersey from start to finish which only three riders had achieved before and won six stages The Banesto duo of Zarrabeitia and Delgado accompanied him on the podium It was the last time that the race was held in late spring as from 1995 onwards the race was held in September Classification leadership editClassification leadership by stage 1 5 Stage Winner General classification nbsp Points classification nbsp Mountains classification nbsp Team classificationP Tony Rominger Tony Rominger Tony Rominger not awarded Banesto1 Laurent Jalabert2 Laurent Jalabert Laurent Jalabert Jose Manuel Uria3 Endrio Leoni Ignacio Garcia Camacho4 Laurent Jalabert Luc Leblanc5 Tony Rominger Mapei CLAS6 Simone Biasci7 Tony Rominger Tony Rominger8 Jean Paul van Poppel Luc Leblanc Banesto9 Angel Camargo Tony Rominger10 Tony Rominger Tony Rominger Mapei CLAS11 Laurent Jalabert Laurent Jalabert12 Laurent Jalabert13 Tony Rominger14 Alessio Di Basco Banesto15 Laurent Jalabert16 Bart Voskamp17 Giuseppe Calcaterra Luc Leblanc18 Marino Alonso19 Tony Rominger Tony Rominger20 Laurent Jalabert Laurent JalabertFinal Tony Rominger Laurent Jalabert Luc Leblanc BanestoFinal standings editLegend 2 6 nbsp Denotes the winner of the General classification nbsp Denotes the winner of the Points classification nbsp Denotes the winner of the Mountains classification nbsp Denotes the winner of the Intermediate sprints classification nbsp Denotes the winner of the Special sprints classificationGeneral classification edit Rider Team Time1 nbsp Tony Rominger SUI nbsp Mapei CLAS 92h 07 48 2 nbsp Mikel Zarrabeitia ESP Banesto 7 28 3 nbsp Pedro Delgado ESP Banesto 9 27 4 nbsp Alex Zulle SUI ONCE 10 54 5 nbsp Oliverio Rincon COL ONCE 13 09 6 nbsp Luc Leblanc FRA nbsp Festina Lotus 15 27 7 nbsp Vicente Aparicio ESP Banesto 15 48 8 nbsp Luis Perez ESP Cavas Castellblanch 16 46 9 nbsp Fernando Escartin ESP Mapei CLAS 16 54 10 nbsp Alberto Camargo COL Artiach Royal Fruco 20 35 Points classification edit Rider Team Points1 nbsp Laurent Jalabert FRA nbsp ONCE 2432 nbsp Tony Rominger SUI nbsp Mapei CLAS 2273 nbsp Alex Zulle SUI ONCE 1214 nbsp Mikel Zarrabeitia ESP Banesto 1175 nbsp Pedro Delgado ESP Banesto 896 nbsp Juan Carlos Gonzalez Salvador ESP Carrera Jeans Tassoni 837 nbsp Oliverio Rincon COL ONCE 788 nbsp Jean Paul van Poppel NED Festina Lotus 779 nbsp Roberto Pagnin ITA Navigare Blue Storm 6710 nbsp Paulo Antonio Fanelli ITA Carrera Jeans Tassoni 64 Mountains classification edit Rider Team Points1 nbsp Luc Leblanc FRA nbsp Festina Lotus 1582 nbsp Michele Coppolillo ITA Navigare Blue Storm 1483 nbsp Tony Rominger SUI nbsp Mapei CLAS 1364 nbsp Oliverio Rincon COL ONCE 995 nbsp Mikel Zarrabeitia ESP Banesto 76Team classification edit Team 2 Time1 Banesto 276h 42 43 2 Mapei CLAS 10 01 3 ONCE 18 15 4 Cavas Castellblanch 40 55 5 Festina Lotus 43 32 6 Artiach Royal Fruco 48 18 7 Kelme Avianca Gios 54 52 8 Euskadi Petronor 1h 40 24 9 Mercatone Uno Medeghini 1h 51 54 10 Recer Boavista 2h 30 44 Intermediate sprints classification edit Rider 2 Team Points1 nbsp Mauro Radaelli ITA nbsp Brescialat 442 nbsp Orlando Rodrigues POR Artiach Royal Fruco 293 nbsp Roberto Pagnin ITA Navigare Blue Storm 224 nbsp Fabio Roscioli ITA Brescialat 85 nbsp Julio Cesar Cadena COL Kelme Avianca Gios 7Special sprints classification edit Rider 2 Team Points1 nbsp Alessio Di Basco ITA nbsp Amore amp Vita 392 nbsp Giuseppe Calcaterra ITA Amore amp Vita 183 nbsp Fabio Roscioli ITA Brescialat 114 nbsp Michele Coppolillo ITA Navigare Blue Storm 115 nbsp Roberto Pagnin ITA Navigare Blue Storm 6References edit a b c d Esta carrera es la mas importante This race is the most important PDF in Spanish El Mundo Deportivo 16 May 1994 p 44 Retrieved 27 May 2012 a b c d e f g La Vuelta 94 The Vuelta 94 PDF in Spanish El Mundo Deportivo 16 May 1994 p 45 Retrieved 27 May 2012 a b c La Vuelta 94 The Vuelta 94 PDF in Spanish El Mundo Deportivo 26 April 1994 p 45 Retrieved 27 May 2012 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Ano 1994 Year 1994 in Spanish Unipublic Archived from the original PDF on 27 August 2011 Retrieved 27 May 2012 Web Oficial de la Vuelta a Espana informacion etapas Archived from the original on 2011 08 27 Retrieved 2013 01 26 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Vuelta a Espana 1994 Etapa 10 Igualada Ordino Arcalisu 4 May 205 Km Angel Yesid Camargo YouTube External links editLa Vuelta Official site in Spanish English and French Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1994 Vuelta a Espana amp oldid 1198997662, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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