Critérium du Dauphiné May 30-June 6 2021

Page 35 - Get up to date with the latest news, scores & standings from the Cycling News Community.
A hairpin in the final km with a reduced group is an opportunity to attack. Everyone who got a copy of the road book knew that. Bahrain should have known that if they wanted a sprint for Colbrelli, they needed to control the race coming out of that hairpin. They didn't control it, so Colbrelli lost.
To be fair there was no one left to control it, everybody from Bahrain had been working pretty hard and especially Haig closing down the gap to Craddock (btw great racing by him considering he has GC ambitions!).
 
Wonder what Colbrelli can achieve in the TDF. Can he be at the front in any of the first two stages (3km at 6% and 2km at 7%) and can he stay close to Ewan/Bennett on the pure flat stages - to make a real green jersey attempt? Guess he was far away on Mur de Bretagne in 2018 so that will be out of the question.

The big question is how well he performs in the flat bunch sprints, against the big sprinters, and the big sprint trains.

If he can do 3rd/4th in those, he can pull a Sagan and hit a bunch of breaks for intermediate sprints, and will then be a strong candidate for the green jersey.

But if he is doing 6th, 7th, 8th in the bunch sprints, the gap to guys like Bennett, Ewan and Sagan will be too big.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Sandisfan
The big question is how well he performs in the flat bunch sprints, against the big sprinters, and the big sprint trains.

If he can do 3rd/4th in those, he can pull a Sagan and hit a bunch of breaks for intermediate sprints, and will then be a strong candidate for the green jersey.

But if he is doing 6th, 7th, 8th in the bunch sprints, the gap to guys like Bennett, Ewan and Sagan will be too big.

Yeah just checked and the 8 sprint stages are pretty much all more suited for Bennett, Ewan and pure sprinters rather than something like the stage Colbrelli won here. And then in stages 1, 2 the finishes will be too hard.
Maybe if he can stay 2nd, 3rd every day and take intermediate sprints...
 
To be fair there was no one left to control it, everybody from Bahrain had been working pretty hard and especially Haig closing down the gap to Craddock (btw great racing by him considering he has GC ambitions!).
Not having a go at Bahrain themselves, just they happened to be the team with the sprinter. But any team who wanted to have a chance at the stage win needed to be in control at that corner, and they all should have known it. Ineos did, so they got the W. If Craddock could have made it to that hairpin, he would've had a chance himself, just on how much more a group would need to slow down than a solo rider.

Have BV just run out of numbers each time? Teuns and Haig have been the only ones near the front group in each finale, that's not a "sprint train" by any stretch of the definition. Edit; Padun and Buitrago both had their best stage placing so far in the TT!
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: Sandisfan
Why is it a flaw exactly?

Races have key points close to the finish all the time, it may be the last corner before the straight, it may be a little hill 1 k from the finish, it may be a roundabout which is important, or a pavé, or whatever.

The good teams position their leaders for those kind of things.

But a hairpin virtually leads the peleton to a stand-still - Your chosen examples do not lead the peleton to a stand still.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Sandisfan
Looking at it again, the gap was just about 20m coming out of the corner, but growing. Colbrelli needed to take it on then, because Haig was never going to close that gap. If you put a Sagan/Bennett/Gaviria/Ewan in that situation, no way does Thomas get away.
 
  • Like
Reactions: SafeBet
Scouting is irrelevant when the final has a fatal flaw design - You can't have a hairpin with 1km to go when there are 40 or 50 riders left in the peleton.
Fatal flaw? Seems to me it created more interest in the race than any of the hills or any other part of the course. Turned a snooze-fest into an exciting finish with a surprise winner. More hairpins! :)
 
Only 43 riders didn't lose time today - some "sprinters stage" :p

As for tomorrow, some seem to think it will be a GC day.

I don't think so, I think despite it looking massive on the profile, there is only actually 15 k of climbing on the day, and most gradients are in the 5-7 % range.

I think we will see a group of 30-35 riders go to the end, unless a smaller break is still out front, then the peloton will be slower and bigger.
 
Only 43 riders didn't lose time today - some "sprinters stage" :p

As for tomorrow, some seem to think it will be a GC day.

I don't think so, I think despite it looking massive on the profile, there is only actually 15 k of climbing on the day, and most gradients are in the 5-7 % range.

I think we will see a group of 30-35 riders go to the end, unless a smaller break is still out front, then the peloton will be slower and bigger.
Yeah looking at the details of the climbs tomorrow I wasn't too impressed, if something is to happen it would probably have to be on the penultimate climb, the cat 2, but with the next two days in mind, that may not be the case (maybe someone a bit further down on GC)