Broccolidwarf said:
Logic-is-your-friend said:
Dekker_Tifosi said:
The Belgians were kinda disappointing...
Not really. Unless you expected guys that can't climb (well), to start climbing with the best all of a sudden. Vanhoucke is 1 minute down in GC, he also lacks consistency as a GC rider, has been ill, and we'll have to wait and see how representative such an unusual short climbing stage is.
Odd really, with the great cycling culture in Belgium, that they so rarely produce GT contenders.
Meanwhile, Holland, right next door (and much flatter), seem to be pumping them out with great regularity.
Since the 70's & 80's, the focus has (unfortunately) been on classics almost exclusively. Belgium has been spitting out classics winners left and right (Museeuw, Boonen, Gilbert, Van Avermaet...) but not so much on the GT side. However which GT contenders has Holland been "pumping out with great regularity", other than their current generation? We've also had guys like Axel Merckx, Kurt Van de Wouwer inside the top 10 of the TDF (in a "difficult" era) in the past, if you feel like those results qualify as "GT contender". Criquelion finished top 10 in the TDF a couple of times (incl top 5) and a podium in the Vuelta between 79 and 90. Both Vandenbrouck and De Gendt finished top 3 in a GT not too long ago. If you take Dumoulin out of the equation, the difference is not quite as big as you make it out to be, imo. They have strength in numbers at the moment, this can't be denied, and as a Belgian, all we can do is hope for the future and cheer a bit for the Dutch in the meanwhile. But i don't agree that they've been pumping them out regularly. If you go back in time 10 years, who did they have in the GT's top 10? In 2008, there was not one Dutch rider in a top 10 in any GT. Jurgen Vandenbrouck finished 6th in the Giro that year. If you go back 10 more years, you'll find Boogerd 5th for Holland and A. Merckx 10th for Belgium in the TDF. No top 10 in Giro or Vuelta.
The focus has only recently starting shifting a bit towards GC/GT, with guys like De Plus, Lambrecht (2nd behind Bernal last year in l'Avenir), and hopefully Evenepoel. We'll see how that goes though. Wellens was also supposed to become a GT contender, and Vervaeke seems to have hit a bump the past two years and needs to get some results that can help him get back on track. That's why they should try to keep Evenepoel out of the spotlights, because there is too much attention focused on him at the moment, carrying the weight of hopes and dreams of a small nation.