It's called diving in English.
Is that something they taught you in the brutto troupe?
It's called diving in English.
Is that something they taught you in the brutto troupe?
And GVA won TA over Sagan by the bonus seconds. I’m sure each year there’s week stage races won due to the bonus seconds. I think Contador has won and lost some of them due to there either being or not being bonus seconds.Not a GT, but Sagan won the Tour of California over Alaphilippe on Bonus seconds. For what it's worth.![]()
I'm unsure about whether bonus seconds should be applied (especially when a positive drug test can potentially change the order like in the 2013 Tour of Turkey).
There are bonus seconds on top of climbs in the Vuelta? Have I not been paying attention?I'm interested in hearing from those who would like bonus seconds on top of (some) climbs (@Pantani_lives @IndianCyclist @SHAD0W93 @burning @tobydawq @Gigs_98 @Sandisfan @Earns1985) if they prefer how it is in the Tour or the Vuelta, or whether they would like a different system.
In 1989, there was 6-4-2 at each intermediate sprint ("catch" sprints) on the first 8 stages, no bonus seconds at the finish-line.
In 1990, there was 20-12-8 at the finish-line of non-mountain stages and 6-4-2 at each intermediate sprint in some of the stages.
No, but 10-6-4 is half of 20-12-8. The question was about the origin of that particular distribution:Okay, but that was not the birthplace of bonus seconds. They reach far back, also in the form of bonus minutes.
Does anyone know what the origin of the strange 10-6-4 was, when it first came in, or what the rationale was?
They were used in the Tour in the 1930s, at stage finishes and on mountain tops.Okay, but that was not the birthplace of bonus seconds. They reach far back, also in the form of bonus minutes.
I would have it on every stage that has a KoM point and only one KoM point per stage award the bonus seconds. Which one is selected when there is multiple KoM points throughout the stage I’m not sure, but I think the penultimate climb on stages that finish on a KoM point (unless the penultimate KoM point finish and start of the next climb is like 30-40+ kms distance) and the final KoM point on descent finishes would be the best. That way the KoM bonus points aren’t “doubled up” with the stage finish bonus points.I'm interested in hearing from those who would like bonus seconds on top of (some) climbs (@Pantani_lives @IndianCyclist @SHAD0W93 @burning @tobydawq @Gigs_98 @Sandisfan @Earns1985) if they prefer how it is in the Tour or the Vuelta, or whether they would like a different system.
In track racing they would often offer these numbers and 10-6-4 is often enough to put someone back in contention that made early mistakes. I personally struggled with getting destroyed in final sprints and in American crit racing would sprint as a spoiler for time bonuses or for dinner for 2, something shiny because I know I am not getting anything in the final.. I have made $100 bucks from a crowd prime and it's more than 3rd,4th or 5th place prize money.Does anyone know what the origin of the strange 10-6-4 was, when it first came in, or what the rationale was? It certainly seem anomalous that the gap from 2nd to 3rd is less that 3rd to 4th, and that 3rd to 4th is equal to 1st to 2nd:.
I would guess some kind of thinking that "Being on the podium matters more than which minor step on the podium you occupy". That argument might hold more water if there actually were a 3 rider stage podium, but if they ever happen in stage races they are very rare.
I didn't give it that much thought, but I quite liked the uphill sprints in the Tour - as long as no motors got in the way. It gives some extra suspense in the mountain stages, and a motivation to catch the break.I'm interested in hearing from those who would like bonus seconds on top of (some) climbs (@Pantani_lives @IndianCyclist @SHAD0W93 @burning @tobydawq @Gigs_98 @Sandisfan @Earns1985) if they prefer how it is in the Tour or the Vuelta, or whether they would like a different system.
I didn't think of it too much but I mostly thought of strategically placed bonus seconds, whether those are awarded on climbs or not doesn't really matter to me. The Benelux Tour used to have the golden kilometre (or does it still have that?) which I always really enjoyed. I'd like gts to play around with things like that. I feel like if you have bonus seconds already you might as well use them to generate some exciting moments.I'm interested in hearing from those who would like bonus seconds on top of (some) climbs (@Pantani_lives @IndianCyclist @SHAD0W93 @burning @tobydawq @Gigs_98 @Sandisfan @Earns1985) if they prefer how it is in the Tour or the Vuelta, or whether they would like a different system.
Nobody gets dropped on an easy 5% hill at 25km to go. And teams aren't super keen to chase all day for a few seconds with no stage win on offer, though we saw it more in Paris-Nice. I only think it works okay on a stage like Jaizkibel, but that's also because it favored one favorite so heavily over the other. On the other hand, it definitely made Joux Plane worse.I didn't think of it too much but I mostly thought of strategically placed bonus seconds, whether those are awarded on climbs or not doesn't really matter to me. The Benelux Tour used to have the golden kilometre (or does it still have that?) which I always really enjoyed. I'd like gts to play around with things like that. I feel like if you have bonus seconds already you might as well use them to generate some exciting moments.
What my vote really didn't mean was an approvement of how the Tour did this. It sometimes felt like bonus seconds became the sole purpose of a climb which was easily hard enough to be relevant on its own. I don't want riders to not attack because they want to be in the best possible position for the bonus sprint.
But then, if we had bonus seconds on an easy 5% hill with 25 km to go where we'd otherwise never see gc action, I wouldn't complain. Maybe it leads to a split in the peloton, maybe it reveals the bad day of a gc contender. It would simply be another variable thrown into the mix.