Vuelta Mexico Telmex

(Redirected from Vuelta Mexico)

Vuelta Ciclista Mexico Telmex was an annual road cycling race in Mexico that took place over the course of eight days, involving eight stages. The Mexico national tour had a rich history dating back to the 1940s,[1] and the latest incarnation was revived in late 2008 and early 2009 as the condensed evolution of the Vueltas de las Americas, a 21-day stage race, defunct from 2003.[2] This national tour was ranked 2.2, according to UCI race classifications, and was a part of the UCI America Tour. Title sponsorship was provided via CONADE (Comisión Nacional de Cultura Física y Deporte), as well as the Telmex Foundation,[3] a philanthropic entity created by Telmex C.E.O., Carlos Slim. Additional sponsorship was provided previously by BMW, Mercury, Coca-Cola, NovoSportware, and Metalurgica Creativa.

Vuelta Mexico Telmex
Race details
DateEarly March
RegionMexico, North America
English nameTour of Mexico
Nickname(s)
  • "Latin America's Grand Tour"
  • "Tour of the Americas"
DisciplineRoad cycling
CompetitionUCI America Tour
TypeStage race
OrganiserTelmex, CONADE
History
First edition1948
Editions28
Final edition2015
First winner Eduardo Aguilar (MEX)
Most wins
Final winner Francisco Colorado (COL)

History

edit

2008 Vuelta a Mexico

edit
 

With prizes of 2,000,000 Peso, worth roughly 188,000 (USD),[4] the 2008 Vuelta a Mexico was held between September 13–20,[5] and was centered primarily in the region north of Mexico City, commencing in Aguascalientes and concluded in the outskirts of Distrito Federal. Stage four was neutralized due to bad weather reducing the length of the Vuelta to 1,059 kilometers down from the scheduled 1,139.[6] The final General Classification [7] was won by New Zealand racer, Glen Chadwick riding for team sponsor Team Type 1, which supports persons inflicted with Type 1 diabetes. Chadwick would return in 2009 to defend his title, albeit with rival sponsor Rock Racing.

2009 Vuelta a Mexico

edit
 

In what was for all intents and purposes the "de facto" inaugural event, the revamped 2009 Vuelta Mexico Telmex was given a new date on the UCI America Tour calendar. This made it possible for American teams to join the race; the race was scheduled one week after the conclusion of February's Tour of California, and ended well before March's Redlands Bicycle Classic and April's Tour de Georgia. The Vuelta Mexico Telmex aimed to become the most significant stage race in Latin America, as a standard for Latin American teams, North American teams, and UCI Pro Continental teams seeking results and Grand Tour invite.[8]

 
Angel de la Independencia, Paseo de la Reforma, Mexico City

The 2009 Vuelta saw diverse North American presence, with first time participants including Rudy Pevenage directed, Rock Racing; Steve Bauer directed, Planet Energy; U.S. based OUCH–Maxxis featuring Floyd Landis, all alongside the 2008 winning team Team Type 1. In addition, Trek–Livestrong U-23 Developmental Team, featuring Taylor Phinney started the race. The team was directed by Axel Merckx and partially owned by Lance Armstrong, who was on hand to fire the start signal for the 2009 race.[9] During his trip to Vuelta Mexico, Armstrong stated that "a country the size of Mexico, with such diverse landscape needs to have a tour.[10]" With the primary devotion of fighting childhood cancer on behalf of his Lance Armstrong Foundation, Armstrong participated in various events with sponsors and the public, including a health care forum with Mexican President Felipe Calderon.[11]

With prizes of 2.5 million Peso, worth roughly 163,000 (USD),[12] the 2009 edition was held March 1–8,[13] and was centered primarily among regional states located in the south-central part of Mexico. The race began in Oaxaca and passed through Puebla, Tlaxcala, Morelos, Edomex, Guanajuato, and Hildago before culminating in the center of Mexico City.[14] The final stage, won by Canada's Andrew Pinfold, ended with a finish similar to that of the Tour de France as the 100 kilometer circuit race completed twelve laps of the Angel of Independence along a large portion of the 12-kilometre (7.5-mile) Paseo de la Reforma (Reform Promenade).[15] The extra wide boulevard, with its historically elegant design, sharply resembled Paris' Champs-Élysées. It stretched from Chapultepec Park, passing alongside Latin America's tallest building, the Torre Mayor, continuing through the Zona Rosa and then on to the Zócalo (Plaza de la Constitución). Among the largest central squares in the world, El Zócalo is bordered by the Mexico City Metropolitan Cathedral, National Palace, and is adjacent to the ancient Templo Mayor site. Ironically, Paseo de la Reforma, was modeled during the French occupation of the 1860s upon orders from Maximilian I with the dual purpose of linking Chapultepec Castle to the National Palace, while also creating a French legacy in the city centre.

Despite the presence of pre-race favorites Gilberto Simoni, Floyd Landis, Tyler Hamilton, Glen Chadwick, and Arquimedes Lam, the Final Overall General Classification[16][17][18] was won by Venezuelan racer Jackson Rodríguez, of Venezuelan team sponsor Diquigiovanni–Androni. The Best Young Rider Classification, awarded to the highest place rider under the age of 23, was won by American Peter Stetina of the U.S. National Team.[19] The combativity classification went to Karl Menzies (OUCH–Maxxis), David Vitoria (Rock Racing) won the mountains classification, and Carlos López (Canels Turbo) won the Mexican rider classification.

2010 Vuelta a Mexico

edit
 

The 2010 Vuelta Mexico Telmex was won by Óscar Sevilla, riding for the Rock Racing–Murcia team.[20]

Jerseys

edit
  •   Yellow = Overall Leader
  •   White = Best Mexican
  •   Red = Mountain Leader
  •   Green = Combativity Leader
  •   Blue = u23 Leader

Winners

edit

Vuelta Mexico

edit
Year Country Rider Team
1948   Mexico Eduardo Aguilar
1949   France Blaise Quaglieri
1950   Mexico Ricardo García
1951   Mexico Ángel Romero
1952   Mexico Ángel Romero
1953   Mexico Ángel Romero
1954   Mexico Rafael Vaca
1955 No race
1956   Mexico Rafael Vaca
1957   Mexico Rafael Vaca
1958–
1959
No race
1960   Mexico Porfirio Remigio
1961   Mexico Jacinto Brito
1962–
1967
No race
1968   Soviet Union Vladimir Sokolov

Ruta Mexico

edit
Year Country Rider Team
1989   Mexico Raúl Alcalá
1990   Mexico Raúl Alcalá
1991   Colombia Julio César Ortegon Postobón–Manzana–Ryalcao
1992 No race
1993   France Laurent Fignon Gatorade–Mega Drive–Kenwood
1994   Mexico Raúl Alcalá Motorola
1995   Colombia Luis Espinosa Postobón–Manzana
1996 No race
1997   Colombia José Luis Vanegas Caprecom
1998   Mexico Miguel Arroyo Canel's Turbo
1999   Colombia José Luis Vanegas Aguardiente Néctar-Selle Italia

Vuelta Mexico Telmex

edit
Year Country Rider Team
2008   New Zealand Glen Chadwick Team Type 1
2009   Venezuela Jackson Rodríguez Diquigiovanni–Androni
2010   Spain Óscar Sevilla Rock Racing–Murcia
2011 No race
2012   Colombia Julián Rodas Gobernación de Antioquia–Indeportes Antioquia
2013 No race
2014   Colombia Juan Pablo Villegas 4-72 Colombia
2015   Colombia Francisco Colorado Canel's–Specialized

References

edit
  1. ^ [1] History of Mexican National Tours (Official Site 2009)
  2. ^ [2] 2003 Vueltas de las Americas (cyclingnews.com)
  3. ^ [3] 2009 "Slim Comunicado" (carlosslim.com)
  4. ^ [4] 2008 Prizes (Official Site 2008, see page 26 of .pdf)
  5. ^ [5] 2008 Vuelta Mexico Telmex (cyclingnews.com)
  6. ^ [6] 2008 "Heavy rain stopped Fourth Stage" (cyclingnews.com)
  7. ^ [7] 2008 Final General Classification (cyclingnews.com)
  8. ^ [8] 2009 "The Longest Day" (teamtype12007.blogspot.com)
  9. ^ [9] 2009 "Lance Armstrong, Vuelta Ciclista godfather of Mexico" (bumeral.net)
  10. ^ [10] 2009 "Lance : Mexico deserves a tour" (Seattle Times)
  11. ^ [11] 2009 "Lance Armstrong meets with President Calderon" (Austin American Statesman)
  12. ^ [12] 2009 Prizes (Official Site 2009)
  13. ^ [13] 2009 Vuelta Mexico Telmex (cyclingnews.com)
  14. ^ [14] 2009 Route Map (Official Site 2009)
  15. ^ [15] 2009 Stage Eight Route (Official Site 2009)
  16. ^ [16] 2009 Final General Classification (velonews.com)
  17. ^ [17] 2009 Final General Classification (uciamericatour.com)
  18. ^ [18] 2009 Final General Classification (cyclingnews.com)
  19. ^ [19] 2009 "Stetina takes home Best Young Rider jersey from Vuelta Mexico." (usacycling.org)
  20. ^ "Vuelta Mexico Telmex 2010: Stage 8 Results". 26 April 2010.
edit