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As it happened: Ben O'Connor loses Vuelta a España lead to Primož Roglič on Moncalvillo mountain finish

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Hello and welcome to our live coverage of stage 19 of the Vuelta a España.

Hola! We're ready to race.

It's show time! 

As the Cyclingnews blimp takes height, the riders are in the neutralised sector of the stage.

139 riders are still in the Vuelta. 

This is today's stage profile. Look at that finish! 

This is the stage 19 map. A long loop before a hard finish.

Primož Roglič was cautious pre-race but seemed ready.

168.5km to go

The stage includes a 90km ride to the foot of the Puerto de Pradilla, on gradually rising roads. 

The Puerto de Pradilla is only 5.2km long, before a descent and another long valley ride to the foot of the Alto de Moncalvillo. 

The last stage start in Logroño was four years ago, when the stage also finished on the Alto de Moncalvillo. 

Thomas De Gendt and Eduardo Sepulveda (Lotto Dstny) made the first attack of the stage, others joined them but they were soon chased down.

155km to go

To understand what could and what will happen today at the Vuelta, read Alasdair Fotheringham's preview. 

23km covered and now there are 23 riders on the attack.

Gruppo compatto. The 50km/h speeds mens the attacks are quickly controlled.

Marc Soler was one of the riders on the attack but even the strong and aggressive Spaniard was brought to heel. 

This is what Bahrain DS expects Neil Stephens to happen today. 

At the Vuelta, you have to take the bull by the horns in you want to win!

Yesterday's stage wasn't a big mountain finish like today but a lot still happened. 

Ben O’Connor survived a dangerous late attack by Richard Carapaz to keep his his five-second overall lead intact, but the Australian admitted it had been anything but a straightforward day through the sierras of Alava.

Carapaz is the third man and danger man in the Vuelta. He and EF planned their attack yesterday.

Back to today's stage and then attacks keep coming. 

Thursday was a bad day Mikel Landa on his local Basque roads. He was dropped when Carapaz attacked and with little support from his teammates he went on to lose 3:00, slipping from fifth to tenth. 

125km to go

Eduardo Sepulveda (Lotto Dstny) is trying to get across to the attack but he faces a huge task. 

Isaac Del Toro (UAE Team Emirates), Edward Planckaert (Alpecin Deceuninck), Fran Miholjevic (Bahrain Victorious), Vito Braet and Simone Petilli (Intermarché-Wanty) are 1:25 ahead of Eduardo Sepulveda (Lotto Dstny). 

Jay Vine (UAE Team Emirates) has been involved in a crash.

105km to go

Vine is back up and riding after crash. He is getting treatment from the race doctor's car.

Isaac Del Toro (UAE Team Emirates), Edward Planckaert (Alpecin Deceuninck), Fran Miholjevic (Bahrain Victorious), Vito Braet and Simone Petilli (Intermarché-Wanty) lead by 5:00. 

100km to go

It's 25km to the foot of the Puerto de Pradilla climb.

The peloton passes through the feed zone, snatching musettes and taking on food and drinks.

After the feed, riders are now emptying their pickets in the green zone. Someone (hopefully) will clean up all their rubbish. 

88km to go

The breakaway is on the Puerto de Pradilla. 

The break passes the summit of the Puerto de Pradilla with a lea of 2:40 on the peloton.

Ouch! there was a crash in the peloton. 

Jasha Sütterlin (Bahrain Victorious) crashed but is back riding. However there is some tension in the peloton as the kilometres tick down

Movistar raised the speed on the descent with Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe. 

The two groups are coming back together but it was a moment of tension.

60km to go

Race leader Ben O'Connor has stopped for a natural break but is returning to the front of the peloton with a teammate and other riders.

50km to go

just Isaac Del Toro (UAE Team Emirates), Edward Planckaert (Alpecin Deceuninck), Fran Miholjevic (Bahrain Victorious) and Simone Petilli (Intermarché-Wanty) are up front now.

The break of the day at the Vuelta a España.

The Vuelta a España passed through the Rioja wine region today.

32km to go

25km to go

The profile of the Alto de Moncalvillo.

Red Bull, Groupama and Decathlon are leading the peloton as the GC battle nears. 

12km to go

The break splits as their freedom ends.

Petilli accelerates but he is going nowhere. 

Behind, the peloton is almost sprinting to have the best position into the climb. 

9km to go

Red Bull, EF and Decathlon are banging shoulders as they fight for position.

Red Bull have three riders working for Roglic. 

The Red Bull trio are Lipowitz, Dani Martinez and Vlasov. 

There are only 30 riders left in the front group. The break as caught and spat out as the climb started.

6km to go

Behind Roglic are Mas, Carapaz and Gaudu. 

But the Red Bull train has dropped everyone!

O'Connor is in the chase group but  everyone seems to have eased-up, preferring not to go with Roglic.

Vlasov goes deep and suffers, so Roglic takes over and goes solo. 

4km to go

Gaudu tries to chase alone but now Carapaz attacks too. 

O'Connor is the chase group but he is losing the race lead to Roglic.

Landa is dropped and so will lose more time.

Mas accelerates to try to distance Carapaz and others. 

O'Connor is suffering. He has to pace himself and race his own race to defend second place in the GC.    

He leads Mas by 1:20. That is the gap he has to defend. 

3km to go

Mas is arguably the best in this year's Vuelta. Can he fight back? 

The O'Connor group is at 45 seconds.

Roglic powers on like a robot. 

Mas has done a superb ride and is only 30 seconds down on Roglic but 30 seconds ahead of everyone else.  

1km to go

Here comes Roglic! 

Roglic suges to the finish to set-up yet another overall Vuelta victory.

Gaudu kicks hard to pass Mas at the finish to finish second. 

Skelmose also mugs Mas and so the Spaniard misses out on any bonus seconds. 

Ben O'Connor races hard all the way to the line but finishes 1:49 down on Roglic.

Meanwhile, Roglic is already on the rollers, warming down. He does not even look to tired. 

Thanks to attacks, shake-out and time gaps, Roglic takes the race lead but O'Connor is second at 1:54. 

This is the first shot of Roglic winning the stage.

That was another thrilling finish. Red Bull and Roglic dominated but there was a real fight for the podium places and even the young rider's white jersey.  

Roglic is about to pull on his 40th red Vuelta leader's jersey. 

On the podium Roglic lists the trophy that shows the stage profile and the steep finish.

Roglic was, as so often, cryptical when spoke immediately after the stage.  

Roglic refuted the idea that the job was done, that he has sealed overall victory in the Vuelta. 

It was a hard day in the saddle, for everyone.

To read out full stage report and see our photo gallery and results, click below. 

Here is Roglic in red. 

The Vuelta mountains continue for one last day on Saturday with stage 20 to Picón Blanco. 

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