Cycling-Contador to retire after 2017 Vuelta a Espana
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[August 07, 2017]
(Reuters) - Twice Tour de France
champion Alberto Contador will hang up his racing bike after this
year's Vuelta a Espana, bringing to an end the career of one of the
world's greatest cyclists.
The Spaniard, one of six riders to have won all three Grand Tours in
a 14-year professional career marred by a doping ban, made his
announcement on social media site Instagram on Monday.
"I will participate in the next Vuelta a Espana from August 19 and
that will be my last race as a professional," the 34-year-old
seven-times Grand Tour champion said.
"I say this happy, without sadness. It's a decision that I have
thought very well and I don't think there is a better farewell than
in the home race and in my country."
"I'm sure they will be three wonderful weeks."
Nicknamed El Pistolero for his attacking style and ability to mount
devastating attacks in the mountains, Contador won his first Tour de
France in 2007 with the Discovery Channel team before moving to
Astana and winning it again in 2009.
He also won the 2010 edition but in 2012 was stripped of that title
after being banned for two years after testing positive for the
banned substance clenbuterol at the race.
Contador, who blamed it on contaminated steak, initially had a
one-year ban lifted by the Spanish cycling federation but the Court
of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) eventually banned him, backdating it
to January 2011 and erasing all his results from July 2010 to
February 2012.
He returned later in 2012 to win the Vuelta.
While Contador, who was also stripped of the 2011 Giro d'Italia
title, divided opinion within the sport he remained one of the most
popular riders among cycling fans.
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Trek-Segafredo rider Alberto Contador of Spain on the finish line.
REUTERS/Christian Hartmann
As well as his Tour triumphs, he won the 2008 and
2015 Giros and the Vuelta in 2008, 2012 and 2014.
In 2015 he announced that he would attempt to become the first rider
since Marco Pantani in 1998 to win the Giro and the Tour
back-to-back. After winning the Italian race his Tour hopes
evaporated as he struggled in the Alps and finished fifth.
Contador joined the Trek Segafredo team this season and finished
ninth in the Tour de France.
His hopes of bowing out with victory in the Vuelta look slim as the
race includes Tour winner Chris Froome (Team Sky), Italian Vincenzo
Nibali (Bahrain-Merida) and France's Romain Bardet (Ag2r) who was
third on the podium in Paris.
"It was great to have him in the team, even it was only for one
season, and we will keep giving it our all to help him to achieve a
big result in his last Vuelta a Espana," Trek-Segafredo general
manager Luca Guercilena said.
"It goes without saying we wish him the very best for his future
afterwards!"
(Reporting by Martyn Herman; editing by Sudipto Ganguly/Amlan
Chakraborty) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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