1987 Vuelta a España|
| Dates | 23 April - 15 May |
|---|
| Stages | 22 + Prologue |
|---|
| Distance | 3,921 km (2,436 mi) |
|---|
| Winning time | 105h 34' 25" |
|---|
|
 |
Winner |
Luis Herrera (COL) |
(Café de Colombia–Varta) |
|---|
| |
Second |
Raimund Dietzen (GER) |
(Teka) |
|---|
| |
Third |
Laurent Fignon (FRA) |
(Système U) |
|---|
|
 |
Points |
Alfonso Gutiérrez (ESP) |
(Teka) |
|---|
 |
Mountains |
Luis Herrera (COL) |
(Café de Colombia–Varta) |
|---|
 |
Youth |
Johnny Weltz (DEN) |
(Fagor–MBK) |
|---|
 |
Combination |
Laurent Fignon (FRA) |
(Système U) |
|---|
 |
Sprints |
Miguel Ángel Iglesias (ESP) |
(Frinca Colchón-CR) |
|---|
| |
Team |
Ryalcao Postobón |
|
|---|
|
|
The 42nd Edition Vuelta a España (Tour of Spain), a long-distance bicycle stage race and one of the 3 grand tours, was held from 23 April to 15 May 1987. It consisted of 22 stages covering a total of 3,921 km, and was won by Luis Herrera of the Café de Colombia cycling team. It was the first win of a Grand Tour by a Colombian and also the first of a South American.[1]
With the 1986 Vuelta Champion, Álvaro Pino was absent due to health problems, the principal favourites for the overall classification were Laurent Fignon, Pedro Delgado and Sean Kelly. Jean Luc Vandenbroucke won the prologue and wore the first leader's jersey. Kelly who was in form after winning Paris–Nice for the sixth time won the first stage and took the jersey. The sixth stage saw the beginning of the fight for the overall classification. Luis Herrera in the company of Ángel Arroyo and Vicente Belda attacked several times on the final ascent of the stage. However Kelly was still able to ride into the leader's jersey again. On the following stage to Cerler which was won by the Spaniard Laudelino Cubino, Herrera put time into Kelly and Dietzen finished ahead of Kelly and took the leader's jersey. Herrera took the jersey after the 11th stage that finished on the Lagos de Covadonga. However Kelly retook the leader's jersey in the stage 18 time trial and with four stages to go it looked as if he was going to win his first grand tour. However Kelly was forced to withdraw from the race the following day due to a saddle boil.[2] Fignon won the following stage and moved up to third place overall ahead of Delgado. Herrera took back the jersey which he kept to the end to win the race. It was the first win of a Grand Tour by a Colombian and also the first of a South American.[3][4]
Teams and riders
Route
Classification leadership
Classification leadership by stage
| Stage
|
Winner
|
General classification
|
Points classification
|
Mountains classification
|
Young rider classification
|
Team classification
|
Sprint classification
|
Flying goal classification
|
| P
|
Jean-Luc Vandenbroucke
|
Jean-Luc Vandenbroucke
|
Jean-Luc Vandenbroucke
|
Not Awarded
|
Jesús Montoya
|
Kas
|
Not Awarded
|
Not Awarded
|
| 1
|
Sean Kelly
|
Sean Kelly
|
Sean Kelly
|
Henri Abadie
|
Johnny Weltz
|
José Enrique Carrera
|
Pello Ruiz Cabestany
|
| 2
|
Paolo Rosola
|
Roberto Pagnin
|
Omar Hernández
|
Luc Suykerbuyk
|
Roberto Pagnin
|
| 3
|
Sean Kelly
|
Sean Kelly
|
Jesús Montoya
|
| 4
|
Alfonso Gutiérrez
|
Mariano Sánchez Martinez
|
Jesús Suárez Cueva
|
Miguel Ángel Iglesias
|
| 5
|
Roberto Pagnin
|
Roberto Pagnin
|
Henri Abadie
|
Roberto Pagnin
|
Roberto Pagnin
|
| 6
|
Jesús Ignacio Ibáñez Loyo
|
Sean Kelly
|
Jesús Ignacio Ibáñez Loyo
|
Johnny Weltz
|
Miguel Ángel Iglesias
|
| 7
|
Laudelino Cubino
|
Reimund Dietzen
|
Luis Herrera
|
Postobón–Manzana–Ryalcao
|
Henri Abadie
|
| 8
|
Iñaki Gastón
|
Jesús Suárez Cueva
|
| 9
|
Felipe Yáñez
|
| 10
|
Enrique Aja
|
| 11
|
Luis Herrera
|
Luis Herrera
|
| 12
|
Carlos Hernández Bailo
|
Henri Abadie
|
| 13
|
Carlos Emiro Gutiérrez
|
| 14
|
Juan Fernández Martín
|
Jesús Suárez Cueva
|
| 15
|
Antonio Esparza
|
Henri Abadie
|
| 16
|
Dominique Arnaud
|
| 17
|
Roberto Pagnin
|
| 18
|
Jesús Blanco Villar
|
Sean Kelly
|
Teka
|
| 19
|
Laurent Fignon
|
Luis Herrera
|
Alfonso Gutiérrez
|
Postobón–Manzana–Ryalcao
|
| 20
|
Omar Hernández
|
| 21
|
Francisco Rodríguez Maldonado
|
| 22
|
Jaime Vilamajó
|
| Final
|
Luis Herrera
|
Alfonso Gutiérrez
|
Luis Herrera
|
Johnny Weltz
|
Postobón–Manzana–Ryalcao
|
Henri Abadie
|
Miguel Ángel Iglesias
|
Final classification standings
General classification
Final general classification (1–10)[7][8]
| Rank
|
Rider
|
Team
|
Time
|
| 1
|
Luis Herrera (COL) 
|
Café de Colombia–Varta
|
105h 34' 25"
|
| 2
|
Reimund Dietzen (FRG)
|
Teka
|
+ 1' 04"
|
| 3
|
Laurent Fignon (FRA)
|
Système U
|
+ 3' 13"
|
| 4
|
Pedro Delgado (ESP)
|
PDM–Ultima–Concorde
|
+ 3' 52"
|
| 5
|
Óscar Vargas (COL)
|
Postobón–Manzana–Ryalcao
|
+ 4' 03"
|
| 6
|
Vicente Belda (ESP)
|
Kelme
|
+ 4' 40"
|
| 7
|
Anselmo Fuerte (ESP)
|
BH
|
+ 4' 59"
|
| 8
|
Yvon Madiot (FRA)
|
Système U
|
+ 5' 25"
|
| 9
|
Henry Cárdenas (COL)
|
Café de Colombia–Varta
|
+ 7' 08"
|
| 10
|
Omar Hernández (COL)
|
Postobón–Manzana–Ryalcao
|
+ 7' 33"
|
Team classification
Final team classification (1–10)[8]
| Rank
|
Team
|
Time
|
| 1
|
Postobón–Manzana–Ryalcao
|
316h 51' 36"
|
| 2
|
BH
|
+ 1' 42"
|
| 3
|
Café de Colombia–Varta
|
+ 3' 20"
|
| 4
|
Système U
|
+ 13' 13"
|
| 5
|
Teka
|
+ 24' 58"
|
| 6
|
Kas
|
+ 1h 02' 20"
|
| 7
|
Zahor
|
+ 1h 09' 07"
|
| 8
|
PDM–Ultima–Concorde
|
+ 1h 14' 41"
|
| 9
|
Reynolds
|
+ 1h 20' 17"
|
| 10
|
Kelme
|
+ 1h 22' 11"
|
References
|
|---|
- Teams and cyclists
- Prologue–Stage 11
- Stage 12–22
|
|
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By year men | |
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By year women | |
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Classifications ("jerseys") | | Current | |
 Points classification (jersey verde)
|
 Mountains classification (jersey puntos azules)
|
 Young rider classification (jersey blanco)
|
 Team classification (clasificación por equipos)
|
 Combativity award (premio de la combatividad)
|
|
|
|---|
| Former |
Combination classification (jersey blanco)
|
|---|
|
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| Lists and topics | |
|---|
| Related articles | |
|---|
1987 Super Prestige Pernod International |
|---|
- Omloop Het Volk
- Paris–Nice
- Tirreno–Adriatico
- Milan–San Remo
- Tour of Flanders
- Gent–Wevelgem
- Paris–Roubaix
- La Flèche Wallonne
- Liège–Bastogne–Liège
- Vuelta a España
- Amstel Gold Race
- Rund um den Henninger Turm
- Züri-Metzgete
- Four Days of Dunkirk
- Tour de Romandie
- Giro d'Italia
- Clásico RCN
- Bordeaux–Paris
- Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré
- Grand Prix du Midi Libre
- Vuelta a Colombia
- Tour de Suisse
- Coors Classic
- Clásica de San Sebastián
- Tour de France
- World Championships
- Tour de la Communauté Européenne
- Volta a Catalunya
- Paris–Brussels
- Grand Prix des Nations
- Grand Prix d'Automne
- Tour of Ireland
- Giro di Lombardia
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