...I said the same, except I had Rodriguez instead of AyusoAyuso, Vlasov, and Evenepoel to finish ahead of Roglic to start some more controversy here.
I know. I was poking fun at some of the posts upthread.The meaning has probably broadened without my noticing, but I thought sandbagging referred to something riders (or runners, or other athletes) did while competing—like fading off the back of a group on a climb as though sick or gassed and then surprising the others with an attack? I wouldn’t have called what riders say before a race—when they do it to decrease expectations or trick others as “sandbagging,” but rather blowing smoke or smokescreening, etc. Very Similar intent, but one is an action the other a statement.
Ayuso, Vlasov, and Evenepoel to finish ahead of Roglic to start some more controversy here.
Last 500m start somewhere around here. It's not that steep anymore, but there's still a gradient.I haven't see the final km yet.
If it flattens out & there's a sprint from a reduced bunch, it's anyone's really (it'll depend on placement, teammates & power on that sort of finish).
If the finale is over 6% then I'd say Rogla has a good chance if a break doesn't take it.
Last 500m start somewhere around here. It's not that steep anymore, but there's still a gradient.
Last 10km's
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Depends on how hard they'll go from the amount the gradients go up. They should be able to drop Pedersen, but I'm not sure that Bora will take the race into their own hands. More than enough time to drop the hammer, they might want to wait until after the TT.It could go either way, IMO. Rog has his chances here but there's other (more obvious as well) stomp opportunities this week.
I thought Politt was just having a laugh when he went off the front, but it was a "proxy Soler" attack. The Tour will not be complete with out Soler.Ayuso is quite fast, he will want to put a marker down for the Le Tour, maybe get some radio throwin' practice in as well.
I saw Marc Soler egging on Politt to put that attack in today, yes its all coming together nicely.
Pedersen?? Today is a medium mountain stage with a mountain finish, and they climb at the last part from 400 m to 1250 m. First part is 7 Km at 5,8 km, It is more than enough to drop half the peloton including Pedersen, who is not a climber.Depends on how hard they'll go from the amount the gradients go up. They should be able to drop Pedersen, but I'm not sure that Bora will take the race into their own hands. More than enough time to drop the hammer, they might want to wait until after the TT.
Depends on how hard they go, there are a lot of semi flat parts to get back. If they go hard, they should drop himPedersen?? Today is a medium mountain stage with a mountain finish, and they climb at the last part from 400 m to 1250 m. First part is 7 Km at 5,8 km, It is more than enough to drop half the peloton including Pedersen, who is not a climber.
Normally, I'd say the part where the gradient eases up at km -8 is a perfect spot for Remco to just TT away from everybody. It still might be.Last 500m start somewhere around here. It's not that steep anymore, but there's still a gradient.
Last 10km's
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Not in 140km stages.It is a pity Remco isn’t in top form as this is a stage that has his name written all over it - these type of gradients, no one better
it is a mountain stage..even if iss a group of 50 Pedersen has no chances to be there.I dont think Pedersen and Trek really have studied the route, because just admitting defeat on this parcours would be very disappointing. Might as well give it a good shot. Isn't this exactly what you have trained for, Mads?