- Apr 6, 2009
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Thoughtforfood said:It doesn't matter. Canc will not be caught.
Bravo to the posters who said it was not over!
Thoughtforfood said:It doesn't matter. Canc will not be caught.
ak-zaaf said:Erik Dekker named Nuyens as the favorite...
Is he for real or is it sour grapes about Nuyens never being good at Rabobank?
roundabout said:Nuyens looked in fine form this spring to anyone who was paying attention. Surprise my foot.
Flamin said:Museeuw: "But I was behind him when he was in the break with Chavanel and he kept asking for food and bottles and that was a moment I thought to myself that he was in a little bit of trouble."
Most likely the reason he collapsed. Forgot to eat and drink. What a pity. He was almost begging to other teams' carriers for a bottle.
Jamsque said:I don't think Spartacus bonked, I think he got cramp, which is actually what he said in the post-race interviews.
auscyclefan94 said:Boonen wasn't very smart though he doesn't have form.
The Hitch said:But then how comes he managed to get back to brilliance the second the peloton caught him. The time went from 50 to 0 in about 70 seconds, but when they caught him he stayed with them. In fact at first he continued to cycle at the front.
You could be right, but the way i saw the timer go down and looking at Canc and Chavanel the way they were going up, i thought immediately that it was a timing error. If he had cracked so badly, how comes he managed get a high pace once the peloton caught him?
Granville57 said:With all the talk of strategy and tactics, I can't believe the final sprint hasn't gained any traction for discussion!
Zinoviev Letter said:I hate to interrupt the festival of hate, but what Vaughter's tweeted does actually fit. Garmin were screwed by that point, with their main Classics riders cooked. Having Farrar hang on and hope for a sprint was a sensible tactical decision. What was he supposed to do? Send his non-existent bunch of fresh contenders to the front?
I don't think a decision to have Farrar ease up reflects badly on Garmin. I do think however that the fact that only Farrar was in a position to even consider pulling on the front at that point in the race pretty clearly demolishes the Classics 'superteam" hype.
Bordercollie1 said:Wonderful race. Trying to think of a better classic and struggling a bit. Clinic material, I know, but everyone seemed on the same planet.
How come Chav and Canc shake on the run in? My initial thoughts were that NN bought it. Saxo need an early season win and they are not going to get it at Paris Roubaix or in the Ardennes. In the Ardennes Riis stands to be humiliated as Frandy show glimpses of Tour form.
The rightward (unnecessary if you are sprinting) look by FC in the last 100metres seemed to confirm that thought, but the handshake has really thrown me. Can someone spell it out? What was the deal?
+1boomcie said:No deal man.
It was just a respectful gesture IMO. If there was a deal than why would they shake hands, a little obvious no?
Buffalo Soldier said:I see a lot of people writing about the smart moves quickstep made.
But the more I think about it, the more i'm convinced quickstep failed big time.
When you're in the last 10km, with an elite group, and you have the best rider of the group (maybe next to gilbert) and by far the best sprinter (had beaten bennati, farrar and greipel a week before). you CAN NOT lose the race!
boomcie said:No deal man.
It was just a respectful gesture IMO. If there was a deal than why would they shake hands, a little obvious no?
r_mutt said:that was not a hand shake- everyone's got it wrong!
chavanel had just taken a turn at the front, and rather than going to the back, he slotted in 2nd wheel behind nuyens. so, instead of taking another pull when it was really cancellera's turn to work, he reached back and gave cancellera a hand sling into 1st wheel.
watch it again.
r_mutt said:that was not a hand shake- everyone's got it wrong!
chavanel had just taken a turn at the front, and rather than going to the back, he slotted in 2nd wheel behind nuyens. so, instead of taking another pull when it was really cancellera's turn to work, he reached back and gave cancellera a hand sling into 1st wheel.
watch it again.
r_mutt said:i thought boonen's move was smart. launch an attack to draw cancellera out, and then let fabian do all the work to bridge them both up to chavenel, then you have 2 teamates against one. the problem was that boonen couldn't hang with fabian.
am i crazy- but boonen looked really strong in the final 200 meters. if chavenel doesn't work in those last few km's and makes the other 2 do all of the work, boonen catches them and outsprints them easily to the line.
r_mutt said:i thought boonen's move was smart. launch an attack to draw cancellera out, and then let fabian do all the work to bridge them both up to chavenel, then you have 2 teamates against one. the problem was that boonen couldn't hang with fabian.
thank you for that. and a very belated thank you for the link to the last 3K.boomcie said:Try this:
"After his late attack was neutralized, Cancellara and Chavanel shook hands. Asked about it, Cancellara called it “fair play,” and also took a jab at Nuyens."
Source
thirteen said:thank you for that. and a very belated thank you for the link to the last 3K.
thirteen said:bitter, bitter.
you watch again.
boomcie said:Try this:
"After his late attack was neutralized, Cancellara and Chavanel shook hands. Asked about it, Cancellara called it “fair play,” and also took a jab at Nuyens."
The Hitch said:I still cant see or find the handshake. Does someone who has have a picture or maybe the number of seconds in the video that the handshake happens at?
M Sport said:3:17 in the link of Boomcie's
