Escarabajo said:He gave a stage away to Basso in the 2004 Tour in La Mongie. At least it was clear to me.
That one to Pantani He did not try to sprint. Your logic is good but at least on TV it looked like he eased off to let Pantani win.
IMHO.
There is something fundamentally wrong with this thread.
Obviously a best climber, best at everything, does not exist.
At my modest level people would consider me as a climber, but what I see is that on long races (cyclosportives), with several passes and many hours of effort, I very often used to finish well ahead of other cyclists who were much better climbers than I was on ONE CLIMB ( I am talking about 10% and more difference in VAM!!!)
(Either I was better trained or had more endurance, probably the latter most often).
The same has to be true among professionals.
Let's consider the pre-EPO period.
The more obvious example was Bahamontes-Gaul.
On a single climb, Ventoux 58 notwithstanding, Baha was a better climber than Gaul.
Yet on multiple climbs stages Baha never pulled the astounding performances of Gaul.
The reason I exclude Ventoux 58 is that Gaul on that day probably put his life on the line to win (he disappeared for a long time into an ambulance after passing the line) and did only 31 sec better than Baha.*
In the EPO period you have a guy like Virenque who was not near the top on single climbs but was always there for long epic rides in the mountains.
I am sure all of you can find similar examples.
I guess the initiator of the thread, not being accustomed to cycling competitevely in the mountains was blind to this, but I am really surprised nobody else raised that point.
* I would not be surprised if someone would invoque similar reasons for the defeat of Herrera (J-F Bernard won) on Ventoux in 87. Jeff climbed Ventoux in 58:08 that day. The stage had started in Carpentras, not Bédoin. Then the record passed to Vaughters in 1999 and Iban Mayo in 2004.