You might be right, he finished T-A unlike most pure sprinters.King Boonen said:I think Greipel might surprise...
cineteq said:You might be right, he finished T-A unlike most pure sprinters.
Lanark said:Sagan is certainly the favorite by a mile, but Sanremo is so unpredictable, there could be a dozen things that could go wrong, or split second decisions that determine the result.
A bit of a weird edition though, because outside of Sagan most of the usual favorites for a race like this haven't shown a lot.
Patter said:I believe Sagan is still too young to win Milano-San Remo. The race is yet too long and hard for his bodily structure.
Last year Sagan won the peloton sprint ahead of Degenkolb. I think those rules about age have changed a bit these days. Not for every rider, of course.Patter said:I believe Sagan is still too young to win Milano-San Remo. The race is yet too long and hard for his bodily structure.
Patter said:I believe Sagan is still too young to win Milano-San Remo. The race is yet too long and hard for his bodily structure.
He almost won last year, and he was younger.Patter said:I believe Sagan is still too young to win Milano-San Remo. The race is yet too long and hard for his bodily structure.
Angliru said:In honor of Cipo's win in MSR I'm posting a link that was emailed to me by a good friend:
http://www.pezcyclingnews.com/?pg=fullstory&id=11246&status=True&catname=Feature Stories
Lucky guy. An experience to tell his grandchildren when he's old but still turning the pedals.
theyoungest said:Last year Sagan won the peloton sprint ahead of Degenkolb. I think those rules about age have changed a bit these days. Not for every rider, of course.
This crossed my mind as well. I'm thinking Sky are looking for GT to peak at Flanders and EBH to peak at PR. Whatever they can do in San Remo is an eventual bonus.will10 said:Is San Remo even the big target? The timing makes much better sense for Roubaix and particularly Flanders.
That's maybe not entirely true... as cycling lore has it, it's the easiest in terms of the parcours, but it's the hardest to win. Just ask Tom Boonen.Lanark said:And Milano Sanremo is probably the 'easiest' of the classics. I could see Sagan needing a couple of years to be able to handle Liège, or possibly the Ronde van Vlaanderen, but Sanremo is almost perfect for him.
Angliru said:In honor of Cipo's win in MSR I'm posting a link that was emailed to me by a good friend:
http://www.pezcyclingnews.com/?pg=fullstory&id=11246&status=True&catname=Feature Stories
Lucky guy. An experience to tell his grandchildren when he's old but still turning the pedals.
Angliru said:In honor of Cipo's win in MSR I'm posting a link that was emailed to me by a good friend:
http://www.pezcyclingnews.com/?pg=fullstory&id=11246&status=True&catname=Feature Stories
Lucky guy. An experience to tell his grandchildren when he's old but still turning the pedals.
rainman said:Sagan massive favourite no matter what the configuration. The bad weather will also suit Purito (could he possibly pull off a loner from Poggio?) and Nibali. I'd be surprised if Cav figures in the final.