2016 Critérium du Dauphiné, 2.UWT, June 5-12

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Jun 30, 2014
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StryderHells said:
Zinoviev Letter said:
Eclipse said:
One day we'll see Froome, Martin & Zakarin all attacking together and it will be so ugly that cycling will never be broadcast for a public audience again

Just need Mollema in the group to make it the apocalypse for cycling stylists.

They couldn't ride close together as the elbows and knees would be flying :D
And then Aru an Voeckler come from behind, wrestling their bikes and showing the world their pain faces. :D
At least Aru looks somewhat decent on the bike when he's riding hard on the flat, like a few days ago, that's his only redeeming quality when it comes to looking horrible on a bike.
 
Mar 10, 2010
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Why is contador in bad shape and froomey in good shape after long period of preparation ? Dont try to find excuses for contador
It is end of an era . Froome evolved to top level cyclist from nothing while contador was big star even under 23. This is the success of british cycling against spanish. Success of science against tradition. But french , spanish and italians are still insisting on old school.

Contador is always training but Froome is always winning.
 
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undencem said:
Why is contador in bad shape and froomey in good shape after long period of preparation ? Dont try to find excuses for contador
It is end of an era for contador.

Looks like contador is always training but froomey is always winning.

Contador will beat Froome today. Just wait and see. :cool:
 
Aug 31, 2014
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Stage 7, Le Pont-de-Claix → Superdévoluy (151 km, Mountain)

Sunday, June 12th • Stage infoStartlistLive tickerLivestreams • Weather forecast: Start, Halfway, Finish
Starts at 10:50 - Live video from 13:30 - Finish at 15:00 (CEST)

Profile:
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Mountain passes & hills:
Km 13.5 - Côte de Monteynard 10.6 kilometre-long climb at 4.7% - category 2
Km 33.5 - Côte des Terrasses 2.7 kilometre-long climb at 6.9% - category 3
Km 83.0 - Côte de Saint-Laurent-du-Cros 2.8 kilometre-long climb at 4.9% - category 4
Km 102.5 - Col de Moissière 8.3 kilometre-long climb at 8.2% - category 1
Km 139.5 - Col du Noyer 7.5 kilometre-long climb at 8.4% - category 1
Km 151.0 - SUPERDÉVOLUY 3.8 kilometre-long climb at 5.9% - category 3

Climbs:
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INRNG said:
The Route: 151km south by south-east across the Alps as the race sticks to the valley floor as much as possible even if a lot of the stage is run at close to 1,000m above sea level. The opening climb is labelled as the Côte de Monteynard by the race, it’s the Col de la Festinière to locals, perhaps they don’t want to scare the riders with a big sounding climb at the start? Still it’s not so hard, a railway runs by the road at times and it’s an obvious launchpad for attacks and a lot easier for the big teams to filter who goes off the front as the road is wide. Then follows a more stable part of the course.

Just past halfway, after the Côte de Saint-Laurent, comes a familiar road past La Rochette, scene of chamois-browning descents in the past but they stay on the main road rather than taking the hardest section where Geraint Thomas lost his sunglasses last summer. It’s still a fraught descent.

The comes the Col de Moissière, not a famous name but it will leave it’s mark today, a hard climb on a narrow, rough road and then only a short descent as they drop on to a plateau and then 25km across to the main climb of the day.

The Finish: a combo of climbs, identical to the finish used in 2013 when Samuel Sanchez won. The Col du Noyer (“Walnut Tree Pass”) is hard with irregular gradients and a series of hairpin bends with stunning views of the valley below. The upper slopes are particularly steep. They’re followed a fast six kilometre descent and then it’s straight to the finish, 4km at 5.9%.

Current standings:
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Abandons Stage 6:
DNS: NERZ, Dominik (Bora-Argon 18)
DNF: SARAMOTINS, Aleksejs (IAM Cycling)
DNF: BEPPU, Fumiyuki (Trek - Segafredo)
DNF: HAAS, Nathan (Dimension Data)
DNF: ANTON, Igor (Dimension Data)
DNF: BOZIC, Borut (Cofidis, Solutions Crédits)
153 of 176 riders remain in the race.
 
Mar 10, 2010
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RattaKuningas said:
undencem said:
Why is contador in bad shape and froomey in good shape after long period of preparation ? Dont try to find excuses for contador
It is end of an era for contador.

Looks like contador is always training but froomey is always winning.

Contador will beat Froome today. Just wait and see. :cool:

What makes you hope this ?
 
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undencem said:
RattaKuningas said:
undencem said:
Why is contador in bad shape and froomey in good shape after long period of preparation ? Dont try to find excuses for contador
It is end of an era for contador.

Looks like contador is always training but froomey is always winning.

Contador will beat Froome today. Just wait and see. :cool:

What makes you hope this ?

After going on attack twice earlier in yesterdays stage Contador didn't lose much in the end to Froome. He was clearly much better than in stage 5.
I just hope that as Contador was better yesterday that he is even better today.
 
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undencem said:
Why is contador in bad shape and froomey in good shape after long period of preparation ? Dont try to find excuses for contador
It is end of an era . Froome evolved to top level cyclist from nothing while contador was big star even under 23. This is the success of british cycling against spanish. Success of science against tradition. But french , spanish and italians are still insisting on old school.

Contador is always training but Froome is always winning.


There isn't that much between them...
For one thing Contador tries too hard some times to chase the race as yesterday so tired at the stage end
The day before the climb suited Froome/Porte better
Tinkoff team is not half as strong as SKY who can chase Contador for Froome
Froome is not unbeatable but Contador needs to wait and bide his time at the Tour...Froome will weaken as the race goes on

However Contador has lost some of his explosive speed with age...But hence he needs to wait for the longer later climbs before attacking and needs ot use his power selectively
 
Mar 10, 2010
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HelloDolly said:
undencem said:
Why is contador in bad shape and froomey in good shape after long period of preparation ? Dont try to find excuses for contador
It is end of an era . Froome evolved to top level cyclist from nothing while contador was big star even under 23. This is the success of british cycling against spanish. Success of science against tradition. But french , spanish and italians are still insisting on old school.

Contador is always training but Froome is always winning.


There isn't that much between them...
For one thing Contador tries too hard some times to chase the race as yesterday so tired at the stage end
The day before the climb suited Froome/Porte better
Tinkoff team is not half as strong as SKY who can chase Contador for Froome
Froome is not unbeatable but Contador needs to wait and bide his time at the Tour...Froome will weaken as the race goes on

However Contador has lost some of his explosive speed with age...But hence he needs to wait for the longer later climbs before attacking and needs ot use his power selectively

With this squad of tinkoff , contador cannot beat froome. Pls try to match Geraint thomas , landa , henao , poels , sergio henao with riders from tinkoff. No hope for tdf. Cycling is a team sport , brothers . Never forget it
 
Looks like Sky might not be ready to let this break go just yet. Not sure why they'd worry too much with JVDB best placed 8 minutes down.

Edit: Probably they were just pulling back Rolland who was in the middle. Gap expanding now.
 
Mar 14, 2016
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Ryo Hazuki said:
etixx controlling, might try to win this stage with alaphillippe or daniel martin
If I was a betting man, which I ain't, I'd put my money on Martin rather than Alaphilippe. The latter seems to be fading a bit.
 
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Valv.Piti said:
I actually heard on The Telegraph's podcast during the Giro that it basically came down to the routes. On paper, I would definitely say that this years TdF route suits Chaves better than the Giro's, but then you obviously also have to compete against the best of the best and you still have Yatesx2 who probably don't wan't to do the Giro.

It comes down to what Chaves wants ultimately after his performance in this Giro. Orica wanna please him as much as they can

You are correct - OGE wanted Chavez to have more experience riding GT's, hence why he rode the Giro and will do the Vuelta - The profile at the 2016 TDF was more suitable for Chavez, but of course the competition would be more challenging.

Bank it in - Chavez will ride the 2017 TDF as well as during the Australian summer.