Cookster15
Moderator
No, Pogacar had a shocker by his standards.pogacar did amazing, but the rest did more amazing!
No, Pogacar had a shocker by his standards.pogacar did amazing, but the rest did more amazing!
Colnago made some carbon parts in Italy some years back. Likely small shop stuff but they followed Pignarello to China for the moncoque frames, forks, etc. Heard Colnago made Ferrari winglets and other small batch items.For a few years the same investment group that controlled Mavic name also had Louisville Slugger!!!American consumers are easy to wind up..for years baseball gloves and balls were made in Haiti.. Then moved, Costa Rica is majority maker of quality baseballs.
Because of the suck factor of Astana, the no more faking it almost happened, likely will in the future!! Chinese sponsor, skip rebrand...For now riders, race teams and media will still connect brands like Colnago with Europe..Colnago is at least intentionally vague, high end made in Italy, everything else Taiwan!!
More and more brands skipping the Euro branding bit, coming up with generic name and fessing up to... made in China!!
Once you're rolling that seems true based on fixed gear riding. That's all good but longer cranks and bigger gears allow a lower cadence. That can keep pulse lower if you're trained for that.I have a question:
Wouldn't the riders using different length pedal arms impact the importance of W/kg - and thus make it difficult to compare from rider to rider directly?
In other words, with a shorter pedal arm you apply less force at a higher cadence, to achieve the same speed?
As per usual, I'm not entirely sure what your point is but ALL brands have skipped the Euro branding bit for quite some years now. When I bought my current bike, which is years ago, I remember Colnago being the only European brand that actually still made their frames in-house. And I just assume (but haven't researched) that since the takeover their frames are being produced in Asia as well.For a few years the same investment group that controlled Mavic name also had Louisville Slugger!!!American consumers are easy to wind up..for years baseball gloves and balls were made in Haiti.. Then moved, Costa Rica is majority maker of quality baseballs.
Because of the suck factor of Astana, the no more faking it almost happened, likely will in the future!! Chinese sponsor, skip rebrand...For now riders, race teams and media will still connect brands like Colnago with Europe..Colnago is at least intentionally vague, high end made in Italy, everything else Taiwan!!
More and more brands skipping the Euro branding bit, coming up with generic name and fessing up to... made in China!!
No. Power (Watts) is simply force (torque) multiplied by speed (rpm). Like two car engines with the same power but one generates peak power at lower RPM. This would be like a rider with lower cadence but longer cranks.Wouldn't the riders using different length pedal arms impact the importance of W/kg - and thus make it difficult to compare from rider to rider directly?
I fixed that for you...As per usual, I'm not entirely sure what your point is but ALL brands have skipped the Euro branding bit for quite some years now. When I bought my current bike, which is years ago, I remember Colnago being the only European brand that actually still made their frames in-house. And I just assume (but haven't researched) that since the takeover their frames are being produced in Asia as well.
I don't know, there's nothing wrong with that in my book. It's not like we see frames breaking all over the place all of a sudden. Kinda reminds me of how SOME USA car lovers started hating on Japan in the 70s/80s when all they did was put out a better product at a lower pricepoint.
I'm old enough to remember when Jean-François Bernard won the Mount Ventoux tt at the 87 Tour, taking yellow, only to fade in the race with all the weight of France resting on his shoulders.Old enough to remember when Iban Mayo beat Armstrong by two minutes in a 20k time trial at the Dauphine in 2004. Armstrong went on to win the Tour by six minutes. Of course, that 20k time trial was up Ventoux.
That has to be like several trillion tons, not surprised he faded, glad he made it out aliveI'm old enough to remember when Jean-François Bernard won the Mount Ventoux tt at the 87 Tour, taking yellow, only to fade in the race with all the weight of France resting on his shoulders.
Just goes to show you how much the head and handling the pressure counts in cycling. Bernard was such a talented and elegant rider, but just couldn't handle being the heir of Hinault and Fignon. It makes it all the more impressive Lemond slaying the badger on a French team with threats of sabotage looming for two weeks. Unvelievable.That has to be like several trillion tons, not surprised he faded, glad he made it out alive
Just goes to show you how much the head and handling the pressure counts in cycling. Bernard was such a talented and elegant rider, but just couldn't handle being the heir of Hinault and Fignon. It makes it all the more impressive Lemond slaying the badger on a French team with threats of sabotage looming for two weeks. Unvelievable.
Hinault didn't wait, he got caught coming down and then dropped on the last climb. Over the Peyresourde, the third climb, it became obvious that Bernard didn't have every ace. He was weakening while the chasers weren't. Lemond won the stage and in the Alpes showed his superiority on the Granon. Greg should have dropped Hinault on Alpe d'Huez too, which was a mistake not having done so. If Hinault had not so brazzenly attacked on the Peuresourde stage and ridden defensively, he may have won that Tour on tactics, but Greg was unquestionably stronger that year and so the gods rendered justice (for once) in the end.not hard to win when Hinault waits for you on the Peyresourde.
Vingegaard used 150 mm in the ITT.Once you're rolling that seems true based on fixed gear riding. That's all good but longer cranks and bigger gears allow a lower cadence. That can keep pulse lower if you're trained for that.
Curious to know what Remco was using. Pogacar and Jonas were reputedly on 165cm cranks. That would be odd that two guys with that height differential would use similar crank lengths. Judging from Remco's cadence uphill he was more comfortable at high rpm than the other two appeared to be. Anyone know what his setup was?
Old enough to remember when Iban Mayo beat Armstrong by two minutes in a 20k time trial at the Dauphine in 2004. Armstrong went on to win the Tour by six minutes. Of course, that 20k time trial was up Ventoux.
Close but no cigar. Jorgenson spoiled the party and bigger gaps. Now the mountains.A hard call for this TT. I will go for:
1. Remco
2. Vingegaard +10s
3. Pogacar +20s
Maybe a specialist spoils the party.
Timewise, more than 100% off prediction.Close but no cigar. Jorgenson spoiled the party and bigger gaps. Now the mountains.
A Dane saying another Dane will win. If they ask Mohoric, he'll probably say Pogacar will win 😅
It doesn't affect watts because energy equals force times distance. Riding in a different gear doesn't affect watts requirement for the same reason.I have a question:
Wouldn't the riders using different length pedal arms impact the importance of W/kg - and thus make it difficult to compare from rider to rider directly?
In other words, with a shorter pedal arm you apply less force at a higher cadence, to achieve the same speed?
Yes why would it be a concer for anyone, cause it's best for the sport if his never again in last years shape. Über alien-level.I have absolutely zero concern that Pogi won't be on top form come July.
100% this. One of Lemond's biggest problems was he was simply too nice a guy; Hinault repeatedly tried to stab Greg in the back; the whole 'holding hands at the finish' thing was so disingenuous in my view. If the roles were reversed you better believe Hinault isn't pretending to joyfully hold Greg's hand across the line. Greg dropping him on the Alpe would have been so perfect. "Hey Bernie, you've been trying to stab me in the back all race, but I'm gonna shove this sword right in your chest while looking you straight in the eye!" I actually was a fan of Hinault, but he was a double-crossing bastard, let's face it. Lemond was also screwed in the 85 Tour and I think you could make a solid case for him winning that one too if he hadn't been a victim of his own team. But I digress...Hinault didn't wait, he got caught coming down and then dropped on the last climb. Over the Peyresourde, the third climb, it became obvious that Bernard didn't have every ace. He was weakening while the chasers weren't. Lemond won the stage and in the Alpes showed his superiority on the Granon. Greg should have dropped Hinault on Alpe d'Huez too, which was a mistake not having done so. If Hinault had not so brazzenly attacked on the Peuresourde stage and ridden defensively, he may have won that Tour on tactics, but Greg was unquestionably stronger that year and so the gods rendered justice (for once) in the end.