2021 World Championships in Flanders: Road Races

Page 64 - Get up to date with the latest news, scores & standings from the Cycling News Community.
Sep 5, 2016
5,300
8,343
23,180
But it's ok because he is better on the decline :p
I think that the retaining World Champion is also on the incline..often..his out of the saddle,getting on top of the gear..sewing machine style is complimented by his tiny body being able to generate 10,000 Gigawatts while in the saddle..
also have small man crush on him because he took a photo w w mom and small child at the tour of California,gave the kid his cycling cap..probably tosses many out per week..meant was significant to the child and mom..

I think that overall I didn't see the course as exclusively for climbers for sure..I am sure that Kristoff and Cav,Caleb would all agreed with me...yesterday..I see Quickstep merch flying off the shelves..
I think Kro may need another cup of coffee and a You Tube replay of the last @70k to more fully appreciate the brilliant bike racing..and our American has no shame,he drilled it whenever he could and had the presence of mind to always look for a wheel and close everything before the gaps became unworkable..fundamentally fantastic..these guys have the bodies of super models yet crush a 53 something for hours..
 
  • Love
  • Haha
Reactions: Koronin and noob
Apr 30, 2011
47,173
29,815
28,180
What a surprise that the perpetual pessimists of the forum didn't get it right when they predicted how a sprint would be an unavoidable conclusion to a 280 km race with 42 climbs.
Do you count Emil Axelgaard as one of the "perpetual pessimists"? Do you think today's racing before the second flandrien lap was what one on average could expect?

Or is this an actualist take?
 
Feb 20, 2012
53,936
44,324
28,180
Do you count Emil Axelgaard as one of the "perpetual pessimists"? Do you think today's racing before the second flandrien lap was what one on average could expect?

Or is this an actualist take?
Jasper Stuyven is also one of them.
 
Feb 20, 2012
53,936
44,324
28,180
Showed no form coming into the race though and it was 270km which could easily have been too long for him.
Pidcock?

His form was steadily improving throughout the Vuelta. He was ripping those Cat 2 climbs on stage 20 just before MAL had his meltdown.
 
Nov 16, 2013
26,686
27,791
28,180
Do you count Emil Axelgaard as one of the "perpetual pessimists"? Do you think today's racing before the second flandrien lap was what one on average could expect?

Or is this an actualist take?

A bit, yes (to your first question). I have thought the whole week that a sprint was extremely unlikely, yet so many have been convinced it was the only possible outcome. Red Rick because he said he himself was able to ride up the climbs.

I just never understood that. With all the racing we have seen the last couple of years, it was always going to open up early. And even if I might have expected the Belgians to be stronger than they were (probably Van Aert specifically) and ridden differently, I still didn't see one team being capable of keeping the race together.

I just don't think you can use the four other races to anything because the elite men ride way more aggressively these years than the other classes and have much, much longer to ride.
 
Feb 20, 2012
53,936
44,324
28,180
A bit, yes (to your first question). I have thought the whole week that a sprint was extremely unlikely, yet so many have been convinced it was the only possible outcome. Red Rick because he said he himself was able to ride up the climbs.

I just never understood that. With all the racing we have seen the last couple of years, it was always going to open up early. And even if I might have expected the Belgians to be stronger than they were (probably Van Aert specifically) and ridden differently, I still didn't see one team being capable of keeping the race together.

I just don't think you can use the four other races to anything because the elite men ride way more aggressively these years than the other classes and have much, much longer to ride.
A lot of people thought it could easily be a reduced bunch sprint, and considering that would've been a good scenario for the main favorite who also happened to have the strongest team backing him in addition to the other road races all having very small gaps and relatively large groups at the finish I don't think it was an outrageiously pessimistic take that a group sprint was likely.
 
  • Like
Reactions: noob
Nov 16, 2013
26,686
27,791
28,180
A lot of people thought it could easily be a reduced bunch sprint, and considering that would've been a good scenario for the main favorite who also happened to have the strongest team backing him in addition to the other road races all having very small gaps and relatively large groups at the finish I don't think it was an outrageiously pessimistic take that a group sprint was likely.

When people were talking of Ewan as a possible winner, then yes, it was outrageously pessimistic!

It was a very wrong reading of the toughness of the course. No, the climbs were not particularly tough individually but the endless repetitions would inevitably produce a lot of separation if a few teams were to have an aggressive attitude from far out.
 
  • Like
Reactions: noob
Apr 30, 2011
47,173
29,815
28,180
A bit, yes (to your first question). I have thought the whole week that a sprint was extremely unlikely, yet so many have been convinced it was the only possible outcome. Red Rick because he said he himself was able to ride up the climbs.

I just never understood that. With all the racing we have seen the last couple of years, it was always going to open up early. And even if I might have expected the Belgians to be stronger than they were (probably Van Aert specifically) and ridden differently, I still didn't see one team being capable of keeping the race together.

I just don't think you can use the four other races to anything because the elite men ride way more aggressively these years than the other classes and have much, much longer to ride.
Imola was raced super closed. Innsbruck too (but it's a special case). Likewise for Bergen, really. If the teams had approached today like Bergen, I'm certain it would have been a reduced sprint.
 
Feb 20, 2012
53,936
44,324
28,180
Imola was raced super closed. Innsbruck too (but it's a special case). Likewise for Bergen, really. If the teams had approached today like Bergen, I'm certain it would have been a reduced sprint.
I guess we can come back to the other idea that circuit WC favor final lap attacks and this route with 2 different laps and with the hardest laps finishing 50km from the line was a good idea.

I just hadn't anticipated the hard lap to be hard enough in the first place.
 
  • Like
Reactions: noob and tobydawq
May 5, 2010
51,697
30,247
28,180
Okay, just read Voeckler said that wasn't exactly his plan. Alaphilippe had a free role and could do what he wanted, but actually he did the opposite of what they had planned (don't know what the plan exactly was) by constantly attacking, relied on his instinct.

Voeckler's plan wasn't constantly attacking?
Okay, that's it! We're definitely in a parallel universe!
 

TRENDING THREADS

Latest posts