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We have already speculated about Ventoux (and longer climbs in general) erlier in the thread. The w/kg differences also do not specifically refer to fresh efforts, where the gap between the two should be slightly smaller on average anyway. Possible reason for smaller differences on Ventoux:
-Roglic had his best day of the year, better than Peyragudes in my Index
-Pogacar did not go as fast as possible (irregular pacing) and probably had an average day
-Gaps on long climbs seem to be smaller in general (%-wise), especially on Ventoux where the first 10 minutes are always in a bunch. This already reduces the potential gaps at the end.
- Pogacar may be relatively worse on long climbs, while 20 minute efforts are his bread and butter
Edit: And if you just took the time from Vingegaard's attack, it would a 68 second gap on a ~23 minute effort.
I intentionally took those two performances by Roglic: due to his terrible preparation he was closest to his best on uni-puerto fresh efforts. He was like a 5-10 km running specialist: capable of superb single efforts ranging between anaerobic threshold and VO2max but missing a bit in ultra-marathon distances (
Relative differences are smaller on long climbs usually due to weak pacing in the first half. PdB 2024 was an incredible outlier. On Ventoux'25 about 35-40 minutes of the climb were paced by Vingo's teammates or by Vingo himself so the pacing was good by this climb's standards. Obviously we can't take 68 seconds in just a 23 minute effort as the pace had been good for some time before (and fatigue was cumulating).
All in all I think Pogacar was good but maybe not at his best and OTOH Roglic (and Lipo as well) was helped by the rest day after the Pyrenees (Peyreguades killed guys due to monster efforts on Hautacam stage).
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