Kazistuta said:
Kinda funny that a race "hyped" by some very prolific posters in here might end up being decided on a time trial, just like Paris-Nice and all the other "Tony Martin-made" stage races
I know Mestre is a decent climber, so the comparison ids a bit harsh, but I would''ve thought that Volta A Portugal should've (should
of?

) been decided in the mountains....
The German Panzerwagen would have easily won this years edition
To be fair, I'm as opposed to the "win-the-one-big-climb-win-the-race" events (eg Tour de Langkawi, Catalunya this year) as the "win-the-time-trial-win-the-race" evends - just there are fewer of the former.
I would have liked them to climb São Macário or Marão, sure, but even from the places they chose I would have liked to see a bit more challenge; the Senhora da Graça stage was not as difficult as recent years given the lack of Alvão or Campanhó as a lead-in, and the Gouveia stage was never going to be very selective without a climb like Penhas Douradas first.
So yes, the climbers' chances to take the race have been sadly a little limited, but today's big climb is a big obstacle and will give people the chance to catch things up. And let's be fair - that was a really hard ITT yesterday. That wasn't a flat grind, that was a difficult one.
I had no problem with Cadel Evans winning the Tour in the time trial. He deserved it for holding on in the mountains. Sure I would have liked him to have had to defend yellow a bit rather than just wearing it for one day, but whose fault is it that the Schlecks didn't do anything on Luz Ardiden or Plateau de Beille? The chance was there for them to try something, they just didn't take it.
Now later in the race, they tried and failed to open up a satisfactory-sized gap to Evans, and that's not a problem. You can't always succeed when you attack. But the point was that the climbers that can't TT had their chances, but weren't able or willing to take enough time on the TTer that can also climb. Similarly, Denis Menchov won the Giro in the hard, hard, hard 60km TT in Sestri Levante. Danilo di Luca had chances to distance him after that - but Menchov had enough to hold on.
Mestre has his lead. Now let's see if he can hold on. Tavira are strong in the mountains, but all it takes is Mestre having an off day, and suddenly rather than controlling a 40 second lead, they're trying to find a minute on Hernâni Broco somewhere for Cardoso.