He didn't went too early, he attacked at the right time IMO.Pennino said:Yeah he went too early but these races are not about winning but about getting the legs ready for Paris-Nice. This is a very very decent training. Fantastic.
Valv.Piti said:He didn't went too early, he attacked at the right time IMO.Pennino said:Yeah he went too early but these races are not about winning but about getting the legs ready for Paris-Nice. This is a very very decent training. Fantastic.
No, not at all. But we can (at least me)Arredondo said:Matteo. said:He is on the right track to achieve TdF podium. He went 500m too early , but still a very good ride. I'm satisfied
Should he be happy with that?
Winning is important, but its definitely not do and die. My point is, the setup by Felline and the point when Contador attacked was all perfect; if only he had judged his effort better it had been cycling by the book. Cause he most definitely seemed the strongest psychically - at least to me.Pennino said:Valv.Piti said:He didn't went too early, he attacked at the right time IMO.Pennino said:Yeah he went too early but these races are not about winning but about getting the legs ready for Paris-Nice. This is a very very decent training. Fantastic.
Apparently not for the win, but my point is that winning here isn't important. He delivered a great show while making a great training. And tomorrow will be even greater.
He says the same thing every year.LaFlorecita said:@ DFA
Yes Felline was very important, reminded me a bit of the way Majka used to launch Berto
Contador: "Es el 2º día de competición. El corazón se me pone a 200 pulsaciones, y así voy un poco limitado".
He says his heart rate was rather high which is why he struggled a bit. It's normal because it's only his 2nd race day.
Fabio is super impressive. He's really a key rider on Trek and perhaps one of the most versatile riders in the entire peloton.DFA123 said:Big take away for me from that stage was Felline's performance. He's probably not on top form yet, but was still able to put in a dig that had Valverde on the limit, Poels dropping and Pinot struggling to hang on. Contador couldn't capitalize ultimately, perhaps hehasn't quite got the depth of fitness yet; but anyway a eammate who can raise the tempo so high relatively late on a climb, is something Contador hasn't had for several years and could be a massive weapon in a GT to break up the Sky train.
He doesn't have to do it in a genuine mountain stage; although I'm sure he probably could on targeted efforts. If he can launch a springboard like today towards even the end of a medium difficulty stage finishing uphill - there is still the potential to gain significant time.roundabout said:It was a moderately difficult stage ending with a 6k climb. Too early to say whether Felline can be this useful in a genuine GT mountain stage.
Trek is much more of a diesel on the actual climbs. I think people have also underestimated Zubeldia's ability to still perform as a high level domestique.LaFlorecita said:@ DFA
Yes Felline was very important, reminded me a bit of the way Majka used to launch Berto
Contador: "Es el 2º día de competición. El corazón se me pone a 200 pulsaciones, y así voy un poco limitado".
He says his heart rate was rather high which is why he struggled a bit. It's noremal because it's only his 2nd race day.
DFA123 said:He doesn't have to do it in a genuine mountain stage; although I'm sure he probably could on targeted efforts. If he can launch a springboard like today towards even the end of a medium difficulty stage finishing uphill - there is still the potential to gain significant time.roundabout said:It was a moderately difficult stage ending with a 6k climb. Too early to say whether Felline can be this useful in a genuine GT mountain stage.
And there are plenty of medium stages finishing with a tough climb or descent in the Tour this year: Planches de Belles Filles, Mont du Chat, Foix, Izoard... You'd expect him to be in the main group on the final climb on all of those.
Of course, it's not a medium stage overall, but because the first two climbs come fairly early, followed by a flat section before Chat, you'd expect Felline to still be at the front going into the final climb. Which is all the matters as far as his domestique role is concerned.Netserk said:The Chat stage is a medium one?????
Did you see last year's Vuelta?roundabout said:DFA123 said:He doesn't have to do it in a genuine mountain stage; although I'm sure he probably could on targeted efforts. If he can launch a springboard like today towards even the end of a medium difficulty stage finishing uphill - there is still the potential to gain significant time.roundabout said:It was a moderately difficult stage ending with a 6k climb. Too early to say whether Felline can be this useful in a genuine GT mountain stage.
And there are plenty of medium stages finishing with a tough climb or descent in the Tour this year: Planches de Belles Filles, Mont du Chat, Foix, Izoard... You'd expect him to be in the main group on the final climb on all of those.
Seems a tad optimistic for a rider who previously could just about make top-20 in selected stages in week 3 by De Greefing his way up.
But maybe he will indeed suddenly magically get better at 27. It has happened before.
Seems like you missed the Vuelta last year. Anyway, he doesn't need to challenge for the stage and pace his efforts, helping Contador up the whole climb. He's not the kind of rider to do that. What he can do is put in one really powerful pull to break up the SKy train somewhere fairly early on the final climb. Try to isolate Froome as much as possible. That's certainly within his capabilities.roundabout said:DFA123 said:He doesn't have to do it in a genuine mountain stage; although I'm sure he probably could on targeted efforts. If he can launch a springboard like today towards even the end of a medium difficulty stage finishing uphill - there is still the potential to gain significant time.roundabout said:It was a moderately difficult stage ending with a 6k climb. Too early to say whether Felline can be this useful in a genuine GT mountain stage.
And there are plenty of medium stages finishing with a tough climb or descent in the Tour this year: Planches de Belles Filles, Mont du Chat, Foix, Izoard... You'd expect him to be in the main group on the final climb on all of those.
Seems a tad optimistic for a rider who previously could just about make top-20 in selected stages in week 3 by De Greefing his way up.
But maybe he will indeed suddenly magically get better at 27. It has happened before.
LaFlorecita said:Did you see last year's Vuelta?roundabout said:DFA123 said:He doesn't have to do it in a genuine mountain stage; although I'm sure he probably could on targeted efforts. If he can launch a springboard like today towards even the end of a medium difficulty stage finishing uphill - there is still the potential to gain significant time.roundabout said:It was a moderately difficult stage ending with a 6k climb. Too early to say whether Felline can be this useful in a genuine GT mountain stage.
And there are plenty of medium stages finishing with a tough climb or descent in the Tour this year: Planches de Belles Filles, Mont du Chat, Foix, Izoard... You'd expect him to be in the main group on the final climb on all of those.
Seems a tad optimistic for a rider who previously could just about make top-20 in selected stages in week 3 by De Greefing his way up.
But maybe he will indeed suddenly magically get better at 27. It has happened before.
DFA123 said:Seems like you missed the Vuelta last year. Anyway, he doesn't need to challenge for the stage and pace his efforts, helping Contador up the whole climb. He's not the kind of rider to do that. What he can do is put in one really powerful pull to break up the SKy train somewhere fairly early on the final climb. Try to isolate Froome as much as possible. That's certainly within his capabilities.roundabout said:DFA123 said:He doesn't have to do it in a genuine mountain stage; although I'm sure he probably could on targeted efforts. If he can launch a springboard like today towards even the end of a medium difficulty stage finishing uphill - there is still the potential to gain significant time.roundabout said:It was a moderately difficult stage ending with a 6k climb. Too early to say whether Felline can be this useful in a genuine GT mountain stage.
And there are plenty of medium stages finishing with a tough climb or descent in the Tour this year: Planches de Belles Filles, Mont du Chat, Foix, Izoard... You'd expect him to be in the main group on the final climb on all of those.
Seems a tad optimistic for a rider who previously could just about make top-20 in selected stages in week 3 by De Greefing his way up.
But maybe he will indeed suddenly magically get better at 27. It has happened before.
He doesn't have to become better; he did it today. He put in an attack which launched Contador while dropping Nieve, Poels and Rosa - who will be three of Froome's main domestiques. He's a more explosive rider than the Sky train - that's the difference he can make. Of course he can't outclimb Sky's doms on a major mountain - but he doesn't have to - he just has to get Contador in a position where he is being chased down by Froome himself rather than by Poels or Rosa.roundabout said:DFA123 said:Seems like you missed the Vuelta last year. Anyway, he doesn't need to challenge for the stage and pace his efforts, helping Contador up the whole climb. He's not the kind of rider to do that. What he can do is put in one really powerful pull to break up the SKy train somewhere fairly early on the final climb. Try to isolate Froome as much as possible. That's certainly within his capabilities.roundabout said:DFA123 said:He doesn't have to do it in a genuine mountain stage; although I'm sure he probably could on targeted efforts. If he can launch a springboard like today towards even the end of a medium difficulty stage finishing uphill - there is still the potential to gain significant time.roundabout said:It was a moderately difficult stage ending with a 6k climb. Too early to say whether Felline can be this useful in a genuine GT mountain stage.
And there are plenty of medium stages finishing with a tough climb or descent in the Tour this year: Planches de Belles Filles, Mont du Chat, Foix, Izoard... You'd expect him to be in the main group on the final climb on all of those.
Seems a tad optimistic for a rider who previously could just about make top-20 in selected stages in week 3 by De Greefing his way up.
But maybe he will indeed suddenly magically get better at 27. It has happened before.
Yes, he will suddenly become a lot better than he was previously and break up much more solid and consistent GT riders, because it's "certainly" within his capabilities.
Shame that he wasted years before realizing what he was "capable" of.
http://www.cyclingnews.com/news/contador-moves-into-ruta-de-sol-lead-but-misses-out-on-stage-win/?utm_content=bufferde8a0&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer"It was a very hard ascent, and we wanted to drive as hard as we could in the team," Contador said afterwards. "I maybe went for it too early, there was a strong headwind, but I wanted to be sure my attack counted.
"My pulse rate went up quite high quite soon, but that’s what always happens to me in these early races. It would be the same in the Algarve when I’ve raced there. The climb, finally, was just a little too long for me, although I was surprised that Pinot caught me. I’m disappointed I didn’t win, because I wanted to do that to thank the team. But overall I’m pleased.
"Not knowing the climb didn’t help. I think maybe if I’d got to the last 200 metres alone I would have won, but that’s all there is. In any case, given I’m building towards Paris-Nice, this was a very good sign for the future."
DFA123 said:He doesn't have to do it in a genuine mountain stage; although I'm sure he probably could on targeted efforts. If he can launch a springboard like today towards even the end of a medium difficulty stage finishing uphill - there is still the potential to gain significant time.roundabout said:It was a moderately difficult stage ending with a 6k climb. Too early to say whether Felline can be this useful in a genuine GT mountain stage.
And there are plenty of medium stages finishing with a tough climb or descent in the Tour this year: Planches de Belles Filles, Mont du Chat, Foix, Izoard... You'd expect him to be in the main group on the final climb on all of those.