The 34th Edition Vuelta a España (Tour of Spain), a long-distance bicycle stage race and one of the three grand tours, was held from 24 April to 13 May 1979. It consisted of 19 stages covering a total of 3,373 km (2,096 mi), and was won by Joop Zoetemelk of the Miko–Mercier cycling team. Zoetemelk won two of the three ITT's and Fons De Wolf won the other. De Wolf also won the points classification as well as five stages, but Zoetemelk won the race with a comfortable lead ahead of Spanish climbing specialist Francisco Galdós and Michel Pollentier. Felipe Yáñez won the mountains classification.[1]

1979 Vuelta a España
Race details
Dates24 April – 13 May
Stages19 stages + Prologue, including 3 split stages
Distance3,373 km (2,096 mi)
Winning time94h 57' 03"
Results
Winner  Joop Zoetemelk (NED) (Miko–Mercier)
  Second  Francisco Galdós (ESP) (Kas)
  Third  Michel Pollentier (BEL) (Splendor)

Points  Alfons De Wolf (BEL) (Boule d'Or–Lano)
Mountains  Felipe Yáñez (ESP) (Novostil–Helios)
  Sprints  Roger De Cnijf (BEL) (Boule d'Or–Lano)
  Team Kas
 1978
1980 

Teams and riders

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Route

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List of stages[2][3]
Stage Date Course Distance Type Winner
P 24 April Jerez de la Frontera to Jerez de la Frontera 6.3 km (4 mi) Individual time trial  Joop Zoetemelk (NED)
1 25 April Jerez de la Frontera to Seville 156 km (97 mi)  Sean Kelly (IRL)
2 26 April Seville to Córdoba 188 km (117 mi)  Alfons De Wolf (BEL)
3 27 April Córdoba to Sierra Nevada 190 km (118 mi)  Felipe Yáñez (ESP)
4 28 April Granada to Puerto Lumbreras 222 km (138 mi)  Roger De Cnijf (BEL)
5 29 April Puerto Lumbreras to Murcia 139 km (86 mi)  Juan Argudo [es] (ESP)
6 30 April Murcia to Alcoy 171 km (106 mi)  Christian Levavasseur (FRA)
7 1 May Alcoy to Sedaví 173 km (107 mi)  Alfons De Wolf (BEL)
8a 2 May Sedaví to Benicàssim 145 km (90 mi)  Sean Kelly (IRL)
8b Benicàssim to Benicàssim 11.3 km (7 mi) Individual time trial  Joop Zoetemelk (NED)
9 3 May Benicàssim to Reus 193 km (120 mi)  Alfons De Wolf (BEL)
10 4 May Reus to Zaragoza 230 km (143 mi)  Noël Dejonckheere (BEL)
11 5 May Zaragoza to Pamplona 183 km (114 mi)  Noël Dejonckheere (BEL)
12 6 May Pamplona to Logroño 149 km (93 mi)  Frans Van Vlierberghe (BEL)
13 7 May Haro to Peña Cabarga [es] 180 km (112 mi)  Ángel López del Álamo [fr] (ESP)
14 8 May Torrelavega to Gijón 178 km (111 mi)  Bernardo Alfonsel (ESP)
15 9 May Gijón to León 156 km (97 mi)  Lucien Van Impe (BEL)
16a 10 May León to Valladolid 134 km (83 mi)  Adri van Houwelingen (NED)
16b Valladolid to Valladolid 22 km (14 mi) Individual time trial  Alfons De Wolf (BEL)
17 11 May Valladolid to Ávila 204 km (127 mi)  Francisco Albelda (ESP)
18a 12 May Ávila to Colmenar Viejo 155 km (96 mi)  Miguel María Lasa (ESP)
18b Colmenar Viejo to Azuqueca de Henares 104 km (65 mi)  Cees Bal (NED)
19 13 May Madrid to Madrid 84 km (52 mi)  Alfons De Wolf (BEL)
Total 3,373 km (2,096 mi)

Results

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Final General Classification

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RankRiderTeamTime
1Netherlands Joop ZoetemelkMiko–Mercier94h 57' 03"
2Spain Francisco GaldósKas–Campagnolo+ 2' 43"
3Belgium Michel PollentierSplendor–Euro Soap+ 3' 21"
4Spain Faustino RupérezMoliner–Vereco+ 5' 51"
5Belgium Lucien Van ImpeKas–Campagnolo+ 6' 30"
6Spain Pedro TorresTransmallorca–Flavia+ 6' 49"
7Spain Felipe YáñezNovostil–Helios+ 7' 41"
8France Christian SeznecMiko–Mercier+ 8' 03"
9Belgium Fons De WolfBoule d'Or–Lano+ 10' 01"
10Spain Julián AndianoMoliner–Vereco+ 10' 52"
11Spain Miguel María LasaMoliner–Vereco
12Spain Vicente López CarrilTeka
13France Raymond MartinMiko–Mercier
14Spain Alberto FernándezMoliner–Vereco
15Belgium Herman BeysensSplendor–Euro Soap
16Spain Manuel Esparza SanzTeka
17Spain Vicente BeldaTransmallorca–Flavia
18Spain José PesarrodonaTeka
19Spain Ángel ArroyoMoliner–Vereco
20Spain Juan Pujol PagesTransmallorca–Flavia
21Spain Ismael LejarretaNovostil–Helios
22Spain Carlos MeleroMoliner–Vereco
23Spain Bernardo AlfonselKas–Campagnolo
24Spain Jesús SuárezKas–Campagnolo
25Spain Gonzalo Aja BarguinNovostil–Helios

References

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  1. "Clasificaciones Oficiales" (PDF). El Mundo Deportivo. 14 May 1979. p. 36. Archived (PDF) from the original on 15 November 2020.
  2. "1979 » 34th Vuelta a Espana". Procyclingstats. Retrieved 29 July 2018.
  3. "34ème Vuelta a España 1979". Memoire du cyclisme (in French). Archived from the original on 25 October 2004.