Great ride. He is more temperamentally suited to one day racing, but he is finally showing that he can be a serious GC rider over three weeks.
happytramp said:Another great ride today. Thought he was left for dead! Can't believe he finished only 6sec behind Aru!!
Jspear said:Interesting....Wonder if he will want to continue and develop his gt abilities.
http://cyclingquotes.com/news/martin_thats_why_i_prefer_one-day_races/
Zinoviev Letter said:There aren't enough hilly classics of significance to build a whole season around. No matter what else he does, he, like the other specialists, Valverde, Purito, Gilbert, etc, will be aiming for excellent form during the Ardennes and Lombardia/WC.
The issue is what he does the rest of the year. That will involve riding a GT. Whether he does so for GC, for stages or some slightly contradictory combination of the two remains to be seen, but in the short term I suspect he won't give up on GC. His Vuelta was enough of a step forward for him to reasonably think further progress is possible. Whether that will work out, who knows?
There's no real clash with Talansky unless and until one of them starts looking like a TDF podium contender and get full team support. Short of that Garmin have never had any problem throwing multiple leaders into the same GT. That can work fine, and there would be even less of a clash if Martin is primarily stage hunting - Talansky isn't at this point the sort of contender who would have eight men dedicated to holding his hand. In any case, Garmin have three main leaders and three GTs to divide up. They will send Talansky to the Tour and Martin and a Hesjedal wherever the hell they feel like riding.
Zinoviev Letter said:There aren't enough hilly classics of significance to build a whole season around. No matter what else he does, he, like the other specialists, Valverde, Purito, Gilbert, etc, will be aiming for excellent form during the Ardennes and Lombardia/WC.
The issue is what he does the rest of the year. That will involve riding a GT. Whether he does so for GC, for stages or some slightly contradictory combination of the two remains to be seen, but in the short term I suspect he won't give up on GC. His Vuelta was enough of a step forward for him to reasonably think further progress is possible. Whether that will work out, who knows?
There's no real clash with Talansky unless and until one of them starts looking like a TDF podium contender and get full team support. Short of that Garmin have never had any problem throwing multiple leaders into the same GT. That can work fine, and there would be even less of a clash if Martin is primarily stage hunting - Talansky isn't at this point the sort of contender who would have eight men dedicated to holding his hand. In any case, Garmin have three main leaders and three GTs to divide up. They will send Talansky to the Tour and Martin and a Hesjedal wherever the hell they feel like riding.
parisroubaix18 said:Check this video out, I am interested to her what people think.
http://vimeo.com/108120315
barmaher said:I don't think Talansky will podum a GT either, but that is beside the point.
Big Doopie said:interesting given Talansky won the dauphine at age 25. finished 10th in his first TDF at 24 and 6-7th at the vuelta.
do you know the list of winners of the dauphine?
it must be amazing to see so far into the future and ignore history.
Amsterdam said:I - as a fan - expected more of Dan Martin this season. Before Fleche he was very bad. Ok he had bad luck in Liege and the Giro. But I was hoping more from him in the Vuelta because he was much fresher than the rest. But at the MTF's he mostly ended around place 8/10, nog stage win either. Lombardia was a nice win on tactics. He wasn't there when Gilbert, Costa and Valverde chased Wellens. Like i said I'm a fan and next year I want to see more of him.
Zinoviev Letter said:yes a bit disappointing but almost entirely because of crashes.
Anderis said:I see no reason to assume Talansky would've been surely outperformed by riders like Peraud or Pinot in this year's TdF had he not crashed. He is a pure GT rider who always gets better as the race progresses.
happytramp said:Realistically, what chances does Martin have to go on and win a third monument? Very few have done so recently and it mostly goes L-B-L/Lombardia or Roubaix/Flanders with Milan San Remo possibly being the middle ground. Dan showed he has one hell of a kick after a long hard day in the saddle but I just don't believe that M-S-R is selective enough for him to challenge there.
Amsterdam said:He wasn't there when Gilbert, Costa and Valverde chased Wellens.