- Jul 11, 2013
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Re: Re:
Sagan was able to take advantage of a situation he did not solely create..
Despite everyone of his contenders being fully aware of what was needed to stop him he pulled it off..
The race could have been different if (insert hypethetical scenarios) but it wasn't..
And he won by obeing the same rules everyone else had to...
He won the race not only because of weird bonus rules or changed tt routes but also because he managed to be in the mix on every single stage.. That is remarkable because several different types of stages were on the menu...
I don't think you are the one trying to take something from him..
All though I know he is not your cup of tea it was more a general observation i responded to..
Libertine Seguros said:I don't think people are denying the victory to Sagan or saying that he doesn't deserve it.mrhender said:I don't get the issue with Bonus seconds, altered TT etc...
I mean those are (sometimes) part of the racing and final GC..
You could also argue that Sagan being able to seek out the little opportunities is even harder when they become determing to the overall win and others have interest in declining him them..
Being able to cope with the pressure and seeking the chance by going full hard on the MTF yesterday and delevering the necessary bonus seconds today speaks of quality and not luck or bad rules.....
The thing with the shortened TT was nothing to do with him, that was weather, and the organizers did the best they could. I might have preferred it had they done two laps of the course for the sake of maintaining the original balance, but I can't complain with the option they took as otherwise it would have been cancelled anyway and made it a one-stage race.
The thing with the time bonuses is not people complaining at Sagan, but complaining at the artificiality created by the bonuses not being consistent. If you apply no time bonuses, and everything is on pure race time, then the result is whoever was fastest on the road. If you apply time bonuses to all road stages, then it benefits all equally, because the sprinters will get the bonuses in the sprint stages, the climbers will get the bonuses in the mountain stages, and so on. Sometimes the bonus seconds settle the GC (such as the 2011 Vuelta) but it's fair. Here, however, in the stages Alaphilippe had the chance to win, he could not gain bonus time, and in the stages Sagan had the chance to win, he could. That bonus time that had not been available to Alaphilippe could have settled the GC, therefore the organizers' inconsistency creates a situation imbalanced in favour of one type of athlete over another. They likely did not expect that a guy like Sagan would be in close enough contention for that to matter, but because he was on stupendous form, it did.
Sagan was able to take advantage of a situation he did not solely create..
Despite everyone of his contenders being fully aware of what was needed to stop him he pulled it off..
The race could have been different if (insert hypethetical scenarios) but it wasn't..
And he won by obeing the same rules everyone else had to...
He won the race not only because of weird bonus rules or changed tt routes but also because he managed to be in the mix on every single stage.. That is remarkable because several different types of stages were on the menu...
I don't think you are the one trying to take something from him..
All though I know he is not your cup of tea it was more a general observation i responded to..
