infeXio said:dacooley said:Why was contador allegedly supposed to reach his peak condition in week 3 of the tour 2015 as it was planned whilst froome / nairito will very likely fade in the 3rd week of the vuelta. seems weiiird.
chaves is a top favorite. he's followed by quintana, froome and contador.
Contador didn't peak for the Giro 2015 - Froome and Quintana peaked for the Tour this year. Difference between reaching peak form and maintaining it. Though, in regards to Contador, I guess it was unlikely to happen anyways
Safe to say I didn't keep a close eye on him throughout, I only also watched the last 40 kms, but decent. While it was a hard stage, it wasn't overly hard and didn't get that many pictures from the favourite group on the last climb. Kiserlovski DNF which could prove to be very bad on a couple of stages (well, I guess just one).LaFlorecita said:I just got home and saw the result, can anybody tell me how Alberto looked?
Valv.Piti said:Safe to say I didn't keep a close eye on him throughout, I only also watched the last 40 kms, but decent. While it was a hard stage, it wasn't overly hard and didn't get that many pictures from the favourite group on the last climb. Kiserlovski DNF which could prove to be very bad on a couple of stages (well, I guess just one).LaFlorecita said:I just got home and saw the result, can anybody tell me how Alberto looked?
Netserk said:![]()
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Ezaro has a gain of 265m.
Camperona has a gain of 397m (the steep last 2.8km).
They have roughly the same average gradient, but Camperona has the steepest single km, while Ezaro has the highest maximum gradient.
Between Quintana and Froome, perhaps. Chaves crashed and Contador lost a lot of time and doesn't seem at his best.Poursuivant said:No crashes for anyone to spoil it now please , the vuelta is evenly poised right now.
LaFlorecita said:Between Quintana and Froome, perhaps. Chaves crashed and Contador lost a lot of time and doesn't seem at his best.Poursuivant said:No crashes for anyone to spoil it now please , the vuelta is evenly poised right now.
Valv.Piti said:While its nice objectively that Contador is behind, it all depends on his legs anyways. If he doesn't have it, it will be TdF 2013 and 2015 over again with small attacks leading nowhere. Obviously its better than nothing, but the Vuelta-route doesn't exactly invites to attack from far out so its likely to just come down to the final climb anyways.
For what, the podium? :lol: I realize Contador may get slightly better while Quintana and Froome raced the Tour, but I don't see Quintana fading much and Froome, well, if Contador is 3 minutes behind after Pena Cabarga, how is Froome ever going to lose that? We can point to 2012 when Froome lost 10 minutes or so but he was already behind at that point, it is a way different story when he's ahead and defending a 3 minute advantage. Personally, I feel if Contador doesn't lose more time on Camperona and Lagos de Covadonga, he's still very much in it to win it, if he does lose time (and I don't mean 3 or 4 seconds in a sprint) forget about it.PremierAndrew said:Technically speaking, a minor Chaves crash that hinders his recovery a bit but doesn't really affect him isn't all that bad as far as the race is concerned, considering he's most likely going to be the biggest challenger to Contador.
People keep saying that but let's be honest, when was Contador ever "exciting" while far down on the GC? 2011 TDF perhaps, but that was a different time, teams weren't as dominant in that race. Nowadays, when Contador is far down and it's not because he lost 3 minutes or so in a TTT or in crosswinds, he'll try some weak attacks which get reeled in by either Sky or Movistar within a minute. Now I can't speak for you but I cannot see how such attacks are great for the race when you know there is zero chance of them succeeding.And Contador being this far behind is a great thing for the race. He's still in contention, but far enough behind to be forced to go all out
I didn't see yesterday' stage but I read he tried a small attack, a spark of hope for me because if he was suffering he wouldn't do so, but anyway as a reply to your comment above (if he wasn't far behind he wouldn't attack on such a stage) what about stage 8 of the 2011 Giro, when he finished 2nd behind Gatto in Tropea ahead of the sprinting pelotonPremierAndrew said:Valv.Piti said:While its nice objectively that Contador is behind, it all depends on his legs anyways. If he doesn't have it, it will be TdF 2013 and 2015 over again with small attacks leading nowhere. Obviously its better than nothing, but the Vuelta-route doesn't exactly invites to attack from far out so its likely to just come down to the final climb anyways.
Well he's still likely to be the strongest, and if he wasn't so far behind, he wouldn't attack on stages like yesterday
LaFlorecita said:Personally, I feel if Contador doesn't lose more time on Camperona and Lagos de Covadonga, he's still very much in it to win it, if he does lose time (and I don't mean 3 or 4 seconds in a sprint) forget about it.
People keep saying that but let's be honest, when was Contador ever "exciting" while far down on the GC? 2011 TDF perhaps, but that was a different time, teams weren't as dominant in that race. Nowadays, when Contador is far down and it's not because he lost 3 minutes or so in a TTT or in crosswinds, he'll try some weak attacks which get reeled in by either Sky or Movistar within a minute. Now I can't speak for you but I cannot see how such attacks are great for the race when you know there is zero chance of them succeeding.
He was toying with the peloton in the 2011 Giro. When was the last time you saw Contador attack on a parcours like yesterday apart from that? And he fully committed to the attack btw, definitely had a gap, although the cameras didn't stick around on him long enough to see how large the gap wasLaFlorecita said:I didn't see yesterday' stage but I read he tried a small attack, a spark of hope for me because if he was suffering he wouldn't do so, but anyway as a reply to your comment above (if he wasn't far behind he wouldn't attack on such a stage) what about stage 8 of the 2011 Giro, when he finished 2nd behind Gatto in Tropea ahead of the sprinting peloton
after launching an attack on a short ramp a km or 2 before the finish.![]()
Miburo said:I still don't know why many are worried. It's proven in the past 15 years that it's impossible to be at the same level in the tour as in the vuelta.
Froome and quintana won't be 100% in the last week, Contador prob will. Will be quite the show