We then head north with two classic 'Vuelta sprint' stages.
Stage 2 looks like the hardest of the pair, with the tricky Alto de Puig Llorenca climb falling just 30km from the finish. This will rule out the majority of the sprinters.
Stage 5 and we're already into GC territory. The Vuelta is renowned for chucking in early summit finishes, and this one to Alto de Javalambre is an absolute bruute!
I expect a cagey race however, not many will want to show all their cards this early.
Stage 12 is one of those days that most would glance over in the roadbook, but looking at the final trio of climbs it could be one of the most pivotal!
The climbs are short, but real punchy. The final 40km are going to be an absolute rollercoaster...
From Bilbao we then head to the infamous Los Machucos.
Did you know Los Machucos locally translates to 'hell on earth?' Well, not quite, but it should do, this climb is enough to make even us sitting on the couch start sweating.
We leave the mountains behind on stage 16, stop for a quick rest day and then jump right back onto the road with this, super long, super boring-looking stage to Guadalajara.
Just saying the finishing town's name is more fun than previewing this one 👇🤨
Looking at the nature of this year's route, it looks like a lot of GC groundwork is going to be laid down in week one, before one humongous explosion in week two as we head to the Basque Country.
Week three is all about defense, this is where a strong team will...
With the GC battle happening a lot earlier in this race, riders are going to have to come flying out of the blocks early. Expect to see a lot hitting their top numbers in the first few days.
An earlier GC battle also means that the GC boys are going to have to take their opportunities as soon as possible. With fewer big days in the final week to gradually make back time, you need to attack much earlier, and harder.
As I said at the start of the #PreviewTime, teams and riders are much more willing to risk it all in this race, try out tactics they haven't been confident in before, give the green light to their domestiques to attack, that sort of thing.
You've also got to consider how many riders lining up for this race are without a contract for next year. Money is a massive motivation and it has driven many a fine performance at the Vuelta in recent years.
This, combined with the risk-it-all tactics and crazy...
And of those GC favourites, I'm going to go for....
Primoz Roglic.
He's fresh, more than capable of sticking with the top dogs on the steepest climbs, has the best TT of the lot, and his team are built for a solid defense over the final week.
I think it would be fair to say that the Yorkshire Worlds have so far been a resounding success! Yes, we’ve had some biblical rain, and yes, there have been a fair few dodgy decisions, but overall there’s been edge-of-your-seat action in each and every event!
Who’d have thought today’s stage, with no categorised climbs in sight, would turn into one of the most crucial stages of this year’s race! Perhaps that’s what made it so entertaining, that and the wild Movistar tactics 😉
Anyway, tomorrow we head back into the mountains, a stage with no less than four Cat 1 climbs on the menu. Now Movistar have smelt blood, will they try and punish Roglic some more?
You bet they will – the question is where are they going to do it?
We've got a roundabout route around Andorra tomorrow - passing several spots more than twice as we zip up and down the mountains that surround the valley town of Andorra la Vella.
The organisers have really tried to pack in as much climbing as possible...
Despite all the drama however, we did get a very interesting GC dynamic unfold on theIseran - Team INEOS finally assuming the dominant control that we've always known them for.
Whether their original plan was to send Thomas or Bernal on the attack...
What an absolute belter of a stage today, right? Admittedly it was a bit of a slow burner, but boy was it fun to watch it explode on those final slopes of the Galibier.
Still, despite a flurry of attacks from the INEOS boys, and a crack from Alaphilippe, the GC remains very much as it was when we left the Pyrenees - with only Bernal gaining on the GC contenders.
THIS. IS. IT. The moment we've all been waiting for #PreviewTime
Stage 18: Embrun > Valloire (208km)
We've finally made it to the Alps and beginning of the end of this year's epic race. Time to don the oxygen masks, tomorrow we're heading above the clouds!
With the gaps so tight and the mountains we've got to come over the next three days, I'd bet my house (conveniently my parent's house😉) on the GC royally exploding - the final results looking vastly different to how they do now.