Close but no cigar for Meyer in the Vuelta

By Felix Lowe / Expert

Orica-GreenEdge’s Cameron Meyer is showing flashes of promise in the gruelling Vuelta a Espana but the 24-year-old Australian still seems a long way from that elusive first Grand Tour stage win – and even further from becoming his team’s credible GC contender.

Following the first rest day, Meyer has been in swashbuckling form in Spain with a top ten in the individual time trial backed up by successive breakaways, including Friday’s nail-biting second place in Ferriol.

Alongside his team-mate Simon Clarke, winner of stage four in the ski resort of Valdezcarey, Meyer was part of a strong seven-man group that defied the peloton in the 173km stage 13 through Galicia.

With the pack in disarray and yet closing in, Britain’s Steve Cummings – one of Cadel Evans’s BMC team-mates from the Tour – launched a decisive attack three kilometres from the finish.

Meyer and Juan Antonio Flecha (Team Sky) were the only escapees who could react – but Cummings held on, forcing Meyer to settle for second place behind Flecha, four seconds behind.

It was the closest Meyer has come to a victory in a Grand Tour – and he’ll be kicking himself for allowing Cummings to deprive him the opportunity of contesting the win.

Earlier in the week, Meyer rode a strong time trial between Cambados to Pontevedra in stage 11, holding on to the best time for a long period before eventually sinking to eighth place.

The next day in the long 190km stage 12, Meyer succeeded where many had failed. As break after break was reeled in during a frenetic opening to the race, Meyer and three others finally formed the move that stuck after 75km of riding.

The quartet combined well to establish a seven-minute lead with 80km remaining.

With four and a half minutes to play with entering the final 35km, the break looked all but certain to contest the win atop the arduous Mirador de Ezaro ramp overlooking the Atlantic coast.

But nothing can be guaranteed in cycling – and as soon as the Katusha and Movistar teams of Joaquim Rodriguez and Alejandro Valverde combined on the front of the peloton, the lead was whittled down fast.

Starting the final 2km climb to the finish, the four riders had less than 40 seconds – clearly not enough considering the 20% maximum gradient and the calibre of the riders leading the chase.

Unsurprisingly, it was the red jersey of rampant Rodriguez who took the win in a thrilling uphill sprint against fellow Spaniard Alberto Contador.

Meyer finished best of the breakaway riders but down in 28th place, more than a minute off the pace.

Being caught inside the final two kilometres of a stage in the Vuelta is not something entirely new for Meyer: in last week’s stage eight to Andorra, the Perth-born rider was the last of six escapees to be caught on the final climb of the day, the arduous Collada de la Galina (like ‘Ezaro’s Lookout’, making its maiden appearance in the Vuelta).

Needing at least four minutes at the start of the final Cat.1 climb, the leading sextet had just two.

Where the others all fast faltered, Meyer rode alone solo and it was not until inside the final two kilometres that he was eclipsed by the race’s Big Four: Spaniards Rodriguez, Contador and Valverde, and the Briton Chris Froome.

Meyer would finish one minute and 37 seconds down in 20th place.

While three strong rides in three contrasting breaks plus a top ten in the Vuelta’s only time trial may be a respectable return for a former track specialist still clearly learning the ropes on the road, we shouldn’t get too carried away either.

For all his promise, Meyer still has no solid results to show for his efforts. Friday’s second place was admirable, but on paper you would expect Meyer to beat a rider like Cummings, especially given the Brit’s injury concerns this year (he broke his pelvis in February).

The harsh reality is that Meyer finished the Individual Time Trial two seconds slower than another Australian, Richie Porte.

Despite three gutsy breaks, he has failed to do what Aussie team-mate Clarke – another former track high-flyer – achieved in the opening week: that’s to say, both contest the win and take the spoils.

What’s more – the reason why Meyer has been allowed to infiltrate these breaks in the first place is quite simple: he’s sufficiently low down on the general classification not to be seen as a threat from the Vuelta’s main players.

Worse still, Meyer is not even seen as a big enough threat to those targeting the stage wins.

So, if Meyer can be congratulated for finally forming the breaks that stuck in stages 12 and 13, it was precisely because the make-up of those breaks was not deemed a veritable hazard.

They formed as much because of the riders’ persistence as the indifference of the pack – and a talent like Meyer should aspire more than sparking apathy among his colleagues.

Meyer is currently 93rd on GC, almost one hour down on race leader Rodriguez. It’s a gap that will no doubt swell over the next eight days of racing – which includes five pulsating mountain-top finishes.

So far in his Grand Tour history, Meyer has only even finished the Giro d’Italia twice – finishing 137th in both 2010 and 2011.

A debut Vuelta could see him break the top 100, but that’s not good enough for Australian cycling’s next biggest thing.

And yet for the time being, it’s not a huge cause for concern.

Meyer is still making the transition from track to road; but he’s a time trial specialist who was beaten by the likes of habitual ITT deadweights Valverde and Rodriguez in a Grand Tour race against the clock, albeit one that included a Cat.3 climb right in the middle.

Meyer’s biggest problem at the moment is a lack of direction. He has no specific role at Orica-GreenEdge.

Billed by many as the Australian team’s long-term GC prospect, the former winner of the Tour Down Under is very far from even being considered a viable GC option in the major stage races.

At the same time, he cannot be spoken of in the same breath as the sport’s big time trial talents – the likes of Bradley Wiggins, Fabian Cancellara and Tony Martin.

But Meyer has time on his side. Wiggins, Cancellara and Martin are well-established men at the peak of their powers.

Tour de France champion Wiggins didn’t ride his first Grand Tour until he was 25 after making the step sideways from the track – and it was not until he was 29 that Wiggo made his breakthrough performance with a fourth place in the 2009 Tour.

Meyer has effectively been undergoing an apprenticeship this year as his new team finds its feet. Once GreenEdge can bolster their squad with a senior GC rider in the mould of Evans or Mick Rogers, then Meyer will have the chance to shine – first in the wings, and then, perhaps, on centre-stage.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2012-09-04T11:28:07+00:00

Felix Lowe

Expert


It's early days for Meyer - as I said, Wiggins was 25 when he rode his first Tour and no one thought of him as a viable GC contender until he was 30. Even then, it took a lot of convincing after his first year at Sky...

2012-09-04T01:27:52+00:00

liquorbox_

Roar Rookie


and they had a rider capable of it too. I dont see any Australian rider who is currently in a major team having the ability to win a grand tour. So I am waiting for a new kid to burst on to the scene, this will take years. Meyer pulled out of the Vuelta last night

AUTHOR

2012-09-03T23:02:00+00:00

Felix Lowe

Expert


15 years? That's hardly ambitious. Sky managed it in three.

2012-09-03T14:19:49+00:00

liquorbox_

Roar Rookie


GreenEDGE marketing team to justify what was missing from their initial recruitment and the dream that Australia can win the GC at a Tour in the next 15 years

AUTHOR

2012-09-03T12:07:44+00:00

Felix Lowe

Expert


Hi DerailleurED, thanks for your post - which is brimming with excellent points. I agree that I may have been a bit harsh, perhaps for the sake of being provocative. There's no denying Meyer is a talent and there's no denying that he has ridden an aggressive and entertaining race (a race which is sadly over now - he withdrew ahead of stage 16). I'd like to think I wasn't writing a hatchet job on the guy - if you re-read you'll see that I praise him quite considerably. I just think there's a difference between attacking for the sake of it and attacking with real purpose - just ask Thomas Voeckler. In fact, ask Simon Clarke - he managed it. When I said that Meyer should beat a rider like Steve Cummings on paper, I meant just that. In a head-to-head, Meyer should, in theory, come out stronger. Of course, that doesn't factor in fatigue and the race scenario - but it was a shame (not just for Meyer, but Flecha too) that Cummings won uncontested. (That said, being a Brit, I was ecstatic). Also, you completely misunderstood my 'on paper' claim: you seem to think that I was saying Meyer was a better rider that all of the others in the break - Stelvio winner de Gendt, stage race winner Gerdemann, the experienced Flecha etc etc. I never said that. As for your claims of "nationalistic biased tripe" - bias to which nation, exactly?! Look, it was a really strong break - and credit to Meyer for being part of it. Credit for him for being in two other breaks too. It's progress and it's promising - but the road is long. My ultimate point is that Meyer is a rider finding his feet - and a huge talent that would benefit from having an elder statesman around taking the pressure off his shoulders. He's only 24 - he has ample time to develop into a more all-round package and, perhaps, compete on GC. As it is, he's become a breakaway artists that can't seal the deal, and a time trial specialist who is beaten by Rodriguez and Valverde against the clock. Full marks for coming on - but there's ample room for improvement. But okay, I'll hold my hands up - maybe I was being a bit sensationalist for the sake of sparking some debate. But the Roar is all about opinions - and this is just mine. Yours is equally insightful - and it certainly made me think and indeed revise my own. Thanks for reading - and enjoy the rest of the race. (Same to you too, Moses)

2012-09-02T08:20:39+00:00

Moses

Roar Rookie


I have to agree with the above. In my view Meyer has had a very good Vuelta so far: his performance should not be measured on numbers alone. I have no idea why Meyer is expected to do 'well' on the GC in this event. Where have these expectations come from?

2012-09-01T13:12:00+00:00

DerailleurED

Roar Rookie


A long way from showing his potential? That is a bit rich considering what he's done so far. If he was anonymous for the whole Vuelta like at the start then you could make that claim but not now. Showing potential for the GC isn't just about where you are placed or what you do on every stage, it's about showing what you can do now. Many riders who end up as GC riders start their time as domestiques or stage hunters, there is nothing new here. If Cam Meyer did nothing else this Vuelta, his performance on Stage 8 did more to prove that he actually has potential to be something in the future than anything he's done in the past. He actually showed climbing ability in a Grand Tour and for me, that is fantastic. That breakaway and the fact he's placed himself in two other breaks IS a result. Looking solely at the stage results will never tell you the whole story, and is a far too cynical way of passing judgement. Now for next year he has to build on what's he's achieved but the start is there. It is something that Jack Bobridge will have to try and achieve next year as well. Actually out of your whole article I probably most disagree most vehemently with this: "For all his promise, Meyer still has no solid results to show for his efforts. Friday’s third place was admirable, but on paper you would expect Meyer to beat a rider like Cummings, especially given the Brit’s injury concerns this year (he broke his pelvis in February). " On paper? Are you actually serious. Go have a look at the extensive palmares of Juan Antonio Flecha. Cast your mind back a few months to the Giro, who won on that "small" stage up the Stelvio? Thomas De Gendt. Linus Gerdermann, winner of week-long stage races (oh funny that, 2 actual GC riders in a break as well, fancy that). Go have a look at what sort of rider Elia Viviani is, for if the escapees had stayed together. Cam Meyer as the best rider on paper out of all that? This is a completely made up, nationalistic biased tripe. As I'm sure you well know too, when a breakaway succeeds its usually the best rider on the day (tactically, physically and fortune) who wins. Not just what looks good on paper, or how injured a rider has been in the past. I for one am very pleased for Steve Cummings.

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