GvA is the better sprinter after a hard race.portugal11 said:GVA will never be stronger than cancellara 2016. So sagan is still the man to beat
When has Sagan lost such a sprint *when the others worked as much as he did*?DFA123 said:He doesn't have the one glaring weakness that Sagan does though - the inability to sprint well after working hard in the last few kms. GVA can absolutely bury himself in the last 10km and still put out a great sprint - which means he doesn't have to be so cautious about closing gaps or using up resources. I think Sagan knows very well his big weakness and it's playing on his mind even more after MSR.Dekker_Tifosi said:Nah, I agree what is being said earlier. Sagan is more marked than GVA somehow. Which makes racing easier for Greg. If he was the only favourite, he would have a much harder time doing these things
Exactly Sagan,you are world champion he should work for youTomLPC said:"I don't know what terpstra was doing, I'm not his teammate"
"Against everyone, this is not sport, this is cheap"
Not too happy is peter, great interview like, like the authenticity
You've got to wonder why Van Avermaet is not as heavily marked though. It's really weird.kingjr said:It's his own fault for showcasing his strength in every race, he could ride much more carefully and have the same palmares, maybe better. You reap what you sow.
GVA is certainly one of the ones to beat at RVV and who'd I'd like to see win but it's complete nonsense that GVA would have won without his crash last year and that he's necessarily any stronger than Sagan.kingjr said:No, GvA is stronger in these races and already was last year. He is the man to beat.jaylew said:Uh...I like GVA too but that's a pretty big assumption, no?DFA123 said:It's looking increasingly like Sagan got very lucky that GVA crashed out of RVV last year - otherwise he'd probably be monument-less. GVA is better tactically and the stronger sprinter from a small breakaway - Sagan will need a lot of luck to win again next week.
Sounds like he cut off his nose to spite his face. It was much more in his interests to close the gap than it was for Terpstra - who had relatively little chance of winning with that run in.TomLPC said:"I don't know what terpstra was doing, I'm not his teammate"
"Against everyone, this is not sport, this is cheap"
Not too happy is peter, great interview like, like the authenticity
DFA123 said:Sounds like he cut off his nose to spite his face. It was much more in his interests to close the gap than it was for Terpstra - who had relatively little chance of winning with that run in.TomLPC said:"I don't know what terpstra was doing, I'm not his teammate"
"Against everyone, this is not sport, this is cheap"
Not too happy is peter, great interview like, like the authenticity
Of course Terpstra wouldn't have won from that group. He should still have closed that gap immediately. When you have two of the best sprinters behind, you don't let 2 riders go without having a man with them.DFA123 said:Sounds like he cut off his nose to spite his face. It was much more in his interests to close the gap than it was for Terpstra - who had relatively little chance of winning with that run in.TomLPC said:"I don't know what terpstra was doing, I'm not his teammate"
"Against everyone, this is not sport, this is cheap"
Not too happy is peter, great interview like, like the authenticity
I'm not convinced of that at all. Now, I'd agree if you said that GVA is the better sprinter when racing a bit smarter and not doing as much work but maybe it's just implied that that will always be the case.kingjr said:GvA is the better sprinter after a hard race.portugal11 said:GVA will never be stronger than cancellara 2016. So sagan is still the man to beat
He might not necessarily have won - but him being absent leaves some question marks over Sagan's win imo. If the best cobbled rider of the last two years crashes out, then of course it's fair to say there is some luck involved for the guy who eventualy wins.jaylew said:GVA is certainly one of the ones to beat at RVV and who'd I'd like to see win but it's complete nonsense that GVA would have won without his crash last year and that he's necessarily any stronger than Sagan.kingjr said:No, GvA is stronger in these races and already was last year. He is the man to beat.jaylew said:Uh...I like GVA too but that's a pretty big assumption, no?DFA123 said:It's looking increasingly like Sagan got very lucky that GVA crashed out of RVV last year - otherwise he'd probably be monument-less. GVA is better tactically and the stronger sprinter from a small breakaway - Sagan will need a lot of luck to win again next week.
No he just send msg for Etixx and another teams I've got my money and won already some bigger races so comon guys start to work otherwise you will not get a new contract or better next contract because you will not win anything.DFA123 said:Sounds like he cut off his nose to spite his face. It was much more in his interests to close the gap than it was for Terpstra - who had relatively little chance of winning with that run in.TomLPC said:"I don't know what terpstra was doing, I'm not his teammate"
"Against everyone, this is not sport, this is cheap"
Not too happy is peter, great interview like, like the authenticity
The best cobbled classics rider of the last two years did not crash outDFA123 said:He might not necessarily have won - but him being absent leaves some question marks over Sagan's win imo. If the best cobbled rider of the last two years crashes out, then of course it's fair to say there is some luck involved for the guy who eventualy wins.jaylew said:GVA is certainly one of the ones to beat at RVV and who'd I'd like to see win but it's complete nonsense that GVA would have won without his crash last year and that he's necessarily any stronger than Sagan.kingjr said:No, GvA is stronger in these races and already was last year. He is the man to beat.jaylew said:Uh...I like GVA too but that's a pretty big assumption, no?DFA123 said:It's looking increasingly like Sagan got very lucky that GVA crashed out of RVV last year - otherwise he'd probably be monument-less. GVA is better tactically and the stronger sprinter from a small breakaway - Sagan will need a lot of luck to win again next week.
Alternatively you don't close the gap yourself, because you assume the guy who has a better shot of winning will close it. You don't assume he's going to throw his dummy out of the pram and refuse to work to prove some kind of point.Netserk said:Of course Terpstra wouldn't have won from that group. He should still have closed that gap immediately. When you have two of the best sprinters behind, you don't let 2 riders go without having a man with them.DFA123 said:Sounds like he cut off his nose to spite his face. It was much more in his interests to close the gap than it was for Terpstra - who had relatively little chance of winning with that run in.TomLPC said:"I don't know what terpstra was doing, I'm not his teammate"
"Against everyone, this is not sport, this is cheap"
Not too happy is peter, great interview like, like the authenticity
There is not any even little question mark Sagan beat Cancellara even in solo,period.You really can not compare GVA with Fabian.DFA123 said:He might not necessarily have won - but him being absent leaves some question marks over Sagan's win imo. If the best cobbled rider of the last two years crashes out, then of course it's fair to say there is some luck involved for the guy who eventualy wins.jaylew said:GVA is certainly one of the ones to beat at RVV and who'd I'd like to see win but it's complete nonsense that GVA would have won without his crash last year and that he's necessarily any stronger than Sagan.kingjr said:No, GvA is stronger in these races and already was last year. He is the man to beat.jaylew said:Uh...I like GVA too but that's a pretty big assumption, no?DFA123 said:It's looking increasingly like Sagan got very lucky that GVA crashed out of RVV last year - otherwise he'd probably be monument-less. GVA is better tactically and the stronger sprinter from a small breakaway - Sagan will need a lot of luck to win again next week.
Well, I completely disagree with that. His win was definitive and well-earned. Anyone trying to downgrade that victory is grasping at straws.DFA123 said:He might not necessarily have won - but him being absent leaves some question marks over Sagan's win imo. If the best cobbled rider of the last two years crashes out, then of course it's fair to say there is some luck involved for the guy who eventualy wins.jaylew said:GVA is certainly one of the ones to beat at RVV and who'd I'd like to see win but it's complete nonsense that GVA would have won without his crash last year and that he's necessarily any stronger than Sagan.kingjr said:No, GvA is stronger in these races and already was last year. He is the man to beat.jaylew said:Uh...I like GVA too but that's a pretty big assumption, no?DFA123 said:It's looking increasingly like Sagan got very lucky that GVA crashed out of RVV last year - otherwise he'd probably be monument-less. GVA is better tactically and the stronger sprinter from a small breakaway - Sagan will need a lot of luck to win again next week.
OK perhaps not, but Kristoff didn't have the same form last year as 2015. GVA has been the guy hoovering up the wins since then.Cance > TheRest said:The best cobbled classics rider of the last two years did not crash outDFA123 said:He might not necessarily have won - but him being absent leaves some question marks over Sagan's win imo. If the best cobbled rider of the last two years crashes out, then of course it's fair to say there is some luck involved for the guy who eventualy wins.
If you're an idiot. The gap was only there because Sagan sat up. It would have taken no energy for Terpstra to close it immediately, but he refused to do so.DFA123 said:Alternatively you don't close the gap yourself, because you assume the guy who has a better shot of winning will close it. You don't assume he's going to throw his dummy out of the pram and refuse to work to prove some kind of point.Netserk said:Of course Terpstra wouldn't have won from that group. He should still have closed that gap immediately. When you have two of the best sprinters behind, you don't let 2 riders go without having a man with them.DFA123 said:Sounds like he cut off his nose to spite his face. It was much more in his interests to close the gap than it was for Terpstra - who had relatively little chance of winning with that run in.TomLPC said:"I don't know what terpstra was doing, I'm not his teammate"
"Against everyone, this is not sport, this is cheap"
Not too happy is peter, great interview like, like the authenticity
It was probably a tactical error by both. But Sagan criticising Terpstra for not bridging is ridiculous when he did nothing himself - and had more to gain by doing so.
Velolover2 said:One thing is for sure: you are doing the best you can when it comes to hyping the duel (Sagan vs. GVA) for RVV.