Says Luis Ángel Maté, “I simply wanted to grab my bike and ride home without using a plane or a car, under my own steam, in order to be in harmony with myself”
Photo by Benoit Tessier/Reuters/File Photo
(Reuters) – After racking up 3,500 kilometers in finishing his 10th Vuelta de España last weekend, Luis Ángel Maté could have been excused a few days off but instead has opted to cycle another 1,000km home.
The 37-year-old who rides for the Euskaltel–Euskadi team finished 30th overall in the three-week slog that finished on Sunday in the northwest city of Santiago de Compostela.
Now he is back in the saddle, ‘bike-packing’ his way to his home on the southern coast in Marbella.
He is calling the journey, which will take him around six days, the ‘Vuelta de la Vuelta.’
“When I saw the Vuelta was finishing in Santiago de Compostela, the idea of doing an adventure like this immediately sprang to mind,” Maté wrote in a column for Rouleur, saying he was inspired by the ‘Camino’ pilgrimage trail to Santiago.
“It seemed a unique opportunity to be able to enjoy the bike in a different way to competition and all the stress, the braking, the crashes, the watts… I simply wanted to grab my bike and ride home without using a plane or a car, under my own steam, in order to be in harmony with myself.”
“It’s a precious journey that I need to do to break that cycle you get into after three weeks of racing.”
Stopping off for coffee and cake will be a far cry from the adrenaline-fueled world of the professional peloton in which he has completed 207 Vuelta stages.
“For me, cycling is more than a sport or a job; it’s a way of understanding life and knowing who you are,” Maté wrote.
“I’ve told myself I’ll arrive by Saturday at midday to have a dip in the sea and a meal at home,” he added.
(Reporting by Martyn Herman; Editing by Christian Radnedge)