blackcat said:
nah. Gerro is doing nothing wrong. As per peloton's norms. They decide the rules. You dont. I dont.
Gerro has always followed wheels. I thought he would win Ardennes and Worlds, cos besides Cavendish, he has the best nose for the line. And the tactics in his races, tangibibly different and require a different tactical nous, to field sprints. The fact he has won a stage in all 3 GTs is phenomenal. Win worlds, and win an Ardennes, and he is easily Australia's second best behind Evans, and over his mentor Skippy. Thats a big call.
I know he is doing nothing wrong per se regarding the rest of the peloton's norms. I'd given him some leeway till then...just seeing an Aussie back slapping Lance and Levi was nasty. Bad taste. I know it's the norm, but few Aussies had gone out and advertised it. Hanging with those two and some of his anti-doping speak...absolute pure lol moments. I had an issue with the advertising of it. Keeping it on the down low is far smarter.
Win the Worlds or one of the Ardennes? I know that was the aim. Especially now at Greenedge. He was nowhere at the Worlds. So far from the front it wasn't funny at the moment he needed to be. The Belgians had the best placement. Even Valverde, who had a smidgen of a chance of winning, was out of place and he had the entire Spanish team with him, Samu, Contador and Freire. Only he was in place.
I've found Gerrans to be the opposite of what you say. Early on in the season, yes he can compete against Valverde for a win. But latter on? I've never seen it. He can be there for say Amstel, but the rest he is out of the picture. It's his positioning I have a problem with. It use to be his ability to mark a big move, now it's positioning. He's been tactically getting better from 2010 onwards, but in 2009 the entire team voted for him to lead the team in Mendrisio (excluding Evans who voted for himself) and I knew what would happen. Someone would make a move and he'd have nothing to mark it with. I also knew Cadel would have what it took to at least cover the move. And that was how it played out. I've never understood this ragged determination Gerrans inspire and gets from so many, particularly the other riders and Aussie officials. Cadel never, ever got the same level of support and yet did much better.
If Gilbert gets back to 2011 form, aka, gets his doping right, Gerrans doesn't stand a chance. That's really the measure he needs. To be at that level or where Rodriguez has been this year. Plus I think that level requires some serious preparation with the vampires. He's about as likely IMO as Dan Martin to win and Dan has over half a decade in his favour to improve.
Actually the way I've seen Gerrans improve is akin to Gilbert and what the Belgians managed with him, but to a lesser degree. Their aims are similar. Similar, yet a bit older in age. I say give 2013 a chance and then move on. Aussie officials need to learn to move on. Let him get stage wins in GT's...his wins were solid, but the same as Gilberts. Hence my comparison...they are similar type riders. IMO the Aussie team should focus on Haussler (but I am not sure he is doing much if any medical assistance given his results) or if they really want someone who is close to getting a big one, go with the Tassie boy. Richie Porte. Porte is dialed in, on the page, get him to stop supporting Sky leaders as much, go for a win in the Ardennes, or a lower classic, and then the worlds. Problem is he rides for a British team. They won't allow an Aussie to train hard and beat them at the worlds. They'll wear him out mid season and have him pulling Wiggins and Froome up mountains. If they can win, IMO, Richie can as well. He's to me the most naturally gifted of the Sky big 4. The Brits will however IMO, play the Brit card and that is Geraint Thomas and Kennard. Thomas will be their focus and EBH. Porte could fill the role though. Be interesting to see if he stays after 2013.