I also will say that I like the prospective parcours for the alpine stages. More climbing near the start, less of the formula of "HC grinder, descent, HC MTF" that had gotten old, as wonderful a stage as Galibier/Granon was.
Yesterday I thought it could still be anywhere between a 4 and an 8 depending on what runors would pan out
They went for a bona fide 1. ASO is hopeless, anything good is by accident.
Today is a glorious day for the PWU. We are open to all applications
The best tours of the last 10 year were 2015 and 2019 and they had little ITT km.
Tom Dumolin has retired mateYesterday I thought it could still be anywhere between a 4 and an 8 depending on what runors would pan out
They went for a bona fide 1. ASO is hopeless, anything good is by accident.
Today is a glorious day for the PWU. We are open to all applications
The same Vuelta he had the long range attack in and if he was following Mas and Yates MAL would have been on the podium? Considering the circumstances he had a great Vuelta that with better luck would have been better.Excluding a Vuelta where he lost to Mäder and a couple of races where his back plagued him (Tirreno 2021,
I doubt that the tour suits Vingegaard. He is the guy for the long and high climbs, not those zig zag 30 minute climbs. Only the stage over the Col de la Loze really suits him. I mean he definitely can win it, but he needs Pogacar to have a bad day on his favourite terrain
And if there are no time gaps that put the better climbers at a disadvantage, then they don't race on the road because they can do it in smaller, energy-saving bursts. We can point at the positive race in the 2022 Tour, but just the same you have the 2020 Tour, with Jumbo trying to win in time gains from uphill sprints exclusively before losing the title in the only ITT at the end of the race, or the 2012 Giro where everybody was so close on time that surely it was a super exciting race... except it wasn't, it was an absolute heap of mediocrity with everybody riding in formation on every mountain stages and then Purito attacking to gain five seconds at 250m to go (hyperbole).Why does people suddenly love ITTs??
Nobody wants to win the Tour like Wiggens , nobody wants to be Mick Rogers or Tony Martin.
People like Remco because of the way he won Liege, not because he win a Vuelta ITT in extremadura or Alicante or somewhere
The best tours of the last 10 year were 2015 and 2019 and they had little ITT km.
Put 80km of TT and Vingeggad or Pogacar or Evenpoel or whoever puts 4 mins without thinking and makes the other stages obsolete. Might as well just do a zwift race with who has the best numbers, then combine that in a formula with the team budget and we have the le Tour de france winner for all the forum members here. Le Tour de Zwift
Its good to have riders racing on the road , making decisions, climbing, descending, sprinting, crosswinds etc. ITT don't make a good race.
The only annoying part of this is Remco will do the Giro which means our Fausto will lose another opportunity to lead the team. On the other hand, Landa will be in contention for a podium at the Tour.
Stage 13 is not a unipuerto. I think they will pass col du ballon before grand colombier.I'm not sure if Vingegaard has to rely on Pog having a bad day. I think his likely superior recovery could give him the edge on this course.
stages 13 through 17 are pretty hard by recent TDF standards.
stage 13 Unipuerto MTF
stage 14: almost 4,300 m elevation gain
stage 15: 4,700 m +
stage 17: 5,400 m +
The stage 16 ITT is underrated, I think. Great design and pretty hard despite its distance.
One good Tour doesn't outweigh a gazillion terrible Tours based on the same modelIt's amazing that we just had one of the best Tours in the last 20 years, one which had only a short ITT to begin the race and a meaningless ITT at the end. Basically, the ITTs stayed out of the way of the real racing. Yet posters want to return to 2012? Or the even worse Tours before that?
One good Tour doesn't outweigh a gazillion terrible Tours based on the same model
If I have to award bonus points for basic, okay things then I also have to give penalty points for when things are offensively bad.
We have had four good Tours in a row. Sure, there were a couple of dud stages in 2020 and 2021 was decided early but they definitely weren't bad races.
If I have to award bonus points for basic, okay things then I also have to give penalty points for when things are offensively bad.
And there's a lot of the offensively bad going around.
2020 was not particularly great despite the memorable ending. The Pyrenees were good but they were good because, guess what, a major contender lost time on a crosswind stage and was forced to attack. Of course that can happen in any race, but it still demonstrates that having major GC contenders be forced to get back time can lead to good racing, unlike Jumbo attempting to choke the race to death until the final TT.
Except the time trialists.On reflection, I love the route - It has punchy finishes at the beginning, some tough mountain stages, some decent transitional stages and enough sprint stages - It's a route that suits all riders.