I don't like them. They are a bit random, and there is already a benefit to winning a stage. Riders will give just as much effort to win a stage regardless of whether there are 10 bonus seconds or not.
Bonus seconds on mountain stages for sprinters only.
Bonus seconds on flat stages for GC riders only.
Bonus seconds on hilly stages, every man for themselves.
As a tennis fan, this actually reminds me of a situation where someone wins lots of tiebreakers but no breaks of serve (but the other player DOES get a break): something like 7-6, 4-6, 3-6, 7-6, 7-6.The problem here is no one remembers how many bonus seconds went to make up any victory. In others words, no, a victory won by bonus seconds is no less valuable, you still won, it's still your name in the history books.
Look, it's a bit like American politics: you can win the popular vote, but if you don't play to how the system actually works - the electoral college - that's your fault, no one else's.
I wouldn't say it's low. And in terms of actual influence ... every bonus second won today influences how the race will be run tomorrow, and so on. Whether the margin of victory in a race is likely to be down to how many more or less bonus seconds the winner had over the runner up, the probability of that may be low, but every second won or lost will have influenced the race.The probability that bonus seconds will influence the final GC is very low.
Does anyone have a list of GTs won on bonus seconds?
That’s fair, although if the seconds themselves have no direct impact it comes down to whether the teams actually believe that or not. For ex in this Tour even if UAE was always going for them, JV could’ve played some stages differently if they truly weren’t worried about them.I wouldn't say it's low. And in terms of actual influence ... every bonus second won today influences how the race will be run tomorrow, and so on. Whether the margin of victory in a race is likely to be down to how many more or less bonus seconds the winner had over the runner up, the probability of that may be low, but every second won or lost will have influenced the race.
The problem I have is that I think GC teams will actually let the break win more often when there's bonus seconds on bigger mountain stages. Typically the defending team will always wanna let the break go.I still think stage winners should be rewarded so I support bonus seconds at the finish line. But I think they should have a different distribution to the current one because as we saw in the Tour sometimes is better to get third than to get second which doesn't make sense. 10-5-2 seconds would be my choice, it rewards the winner a bit more but there is still an incentive to get second instead of third.
Regarding bonus seconds at the top of climbs, I don't think 8-5-2 is a good idea, its almost as many bonus seconds than at the finish line and these uphill sprints in crowded climbs can be random at times as we saw at this year's TDF. 3-2-1 seconds in intermediate sprints which could be hold in different kinds of terrain its better at least in my view.
They weren't.If finish line bonus seconds with the current values were there in 1989, Fignon would have won the Tour de France by 2 seconds.
Chaotic option.
Only on some stages, and it should only be decided - by random draw - partway through the stage.
I think it should be decided after the race by a partial (as opposed to impartial) jury.
My 2 cents worth, no to bonus seconds.
Why should someone who comes second by a couple of millimeters be penalized? With all the new technological gizmos and gadgets why not have the actual times that riders cross the line and ditch the "everyone gets the same time" norm?
Because many riders trying to squeeze into few spaces is a recipe for disaster.With all the new technological gizmos and gadgets why not have the actual times that riders cross the line and ditch the "everyone gets the same time" norm?
Because many riders trying to squeeze into few spaces is a recipe for disaster.
Listen to riders as it is at the moment, how the pressure for everyone with hopes of the stage/GC has to try to be in the first 15 or so during the stage, look at the chaos as everyone with hopes of the stage/GC is fighting for position approaching climbs, or changes of direction where echelons will likely form.
The current system for bunch finishes works, why *** with it? You want more crashes?
I have previously proposed individual timing (down to one hundredth of a second) for stages where the 3 km rule is not in effect, i.e. uphill finishes.Because that would make sprint stages a minefield.
If it is what it is with GC fighting the sprinters teams to lead the bunch into the final 3km, with that suggestion it would be carnage with them trying to get their GC hopeful into the first positions up into the final metres.