Re:
Libertine Seguros said:
Amstel Gold:
The final circuit needs to go. The climbs at Amstel Gold are different in character to the Belgian Ardennes races, they are shorter for one thing, and so few of them are able to create significant gaps in isolation. The short length of these climbs means that the gaps created by them even when attacks are made is small, and therefore unlike with Liège, the closer they are brought to the finish the more impact they will have on the race. Therefore we need to concentrate those hills that can create gaps, even if small - Eyserbosweg, Keutenberg for example - closer to the finish, because at present nobody dares move on these because you've got too long to last out.
Wait what ??? It's the other way round. These climbs - Eyserbosweg, Keutenberg & (Richard) Fromberg [sorry for the tennis pun] are way too close to finish. If they were even closer to it, we would have an even more locked race than we've had the last few years. There's an urgent need to return to Maastricht (despite the awful landscape) with the Côte d'Hallembaye as last decider. It's not a hard climbs but it should be the final one. The harder climbs should be at about 66 or 75% of a route to make it entertaining to watch. If it gets any closer, it's a waiting race. That's a general rule for every race. The climbs at the Tour of Flanders are even shorter than those in Dutch Limburg and yet when those were concentrated around 66% or 75% of the route (id est the old route), we could hope to get some nice editions, every other year. With the current route that is so hard in the finale, it's impossible.
Libertine Seguros said:
Flèche: Flèche will always have the problem that its finish is too iconic to lose. The Mur de Huy is the most important Murito of the year. I actually think they've been moving in the right direction with Flèche, but the importance of the final climb is such that they've little chance of drawing major action before it. The penultimate climb being introduced close to the line to make it less of a shoot-out as riders need to ensure they're placed well before the Mur is beneficial. The biggest thing they need to do with Flèche? Stop filming the boring run-in bit from Charleroi to Huy and switch over to the women's race which doesn't get any coverage (unlike de Ronde, Omloop or Strade Bianche where they at least film the women's race to show highlights later) and saw the script being torn up and the rider who arrived at the bottom of Huy solo won the race (the nearest we've come to that in men's Flèche in recent years was Fabian Wegmann's valiant solo, and that's nearly a decade ago now), at least that will give us double the Mur de Huy action to watch.
Well it's iconic for non-Walloons because here there are still a lot of nostalgics of the Côte de Chambralles or of the (cobbled) Mur de Thuin that some might have discovered during last years Tour of Wallonia.
The Arrow needs to recover its rightful distance first and foremost, if only out of respect for its history and to show the middle figure to Verbruggen when he decided to cut all non-World Cup classics and semi-classics to 200/210km. The Arrow's rightful distance is 250km. For the rest, a finish away from the Mur de Huy is needed but first and foremost, the length!
Libertine Seguros said:
Liège:
The late climbs are tough enough that riders are scared of them and are waiting, which means that they're riding conservatively until then, which means there are far too many domestiques left in the late going. If people make moves on Roche-aux-Faucons, there's too much respite before St-Nicolas that allows them to come back. We either need to reinstate Colonster after St-Nicolas, or move the finish away from Ans back into the city so that nobody can wait on that final uphill drag before the left hander into the finishing straight. Alternatively, from La Redoute, go over the Côte des Forges like in the old days and use a shorter final climb like the Côte de Henne or a shallower one like Colonster or the Côte de Romsée so that there isn't one climb that stands out more than any other for attacking from. Alternatively, if the riders ARE going to wait until the end to give us any action, then give them hell by sticking some steep beasts in the run-in - RAF to Embourg to La Lemmetrie would work - three severe climbs back to back. We may only get action in the last 20-30km but a) that 20-30k would take some time on the steeper gradients than at present, and b) that's still more than we've got in the last three editions of Liège.
This is correct. We need to ditch the Côte de Saint-Nicolas and of course the Falcon Rock and the even the Côte d'Ans and to bring back the finish to the Boulevard de la Sauvenière. Leblanc do not want to hear a word of it because of the 1987 Criquielion/Roche disaster. By the way that was the first edition with the Colonster and only one until 2013.
I have an interview of Jean-François Pescheux who admits that Saint-Nicolas was a mistake (actually it was not his decision, it's that of the late Arsène Vanhaeren, President of the Pesant Club Liégeois, the club is still the owner of the race, by the way).
We had a lot of debates on this. Very personally, I'd remove Saint-Nicolas and remake the finish in Liège. If only to just see. [...] I'd love the rider to say in hindsight that if they want to win, they have to attack. [...] I think that had we dropped the St-Nicolas in at Merckx's or Hinault's era they would still be packed together at the start of St-Nicolas. So I think the route influences the riders. Of course you need to do the experiment. If they arrive with 40 guys, I'd take it on the chin. But let's try, let us remake the finale of old with the Mont Theux and the Côte des Forges. But who will take the risk to do it? Yet it still is possible to attack with 30km to go and win. If Sagan someday comes to win in Liège, his Cannondale team would block the race. So would Quick Step... The top fifteen teams have interest in a packed bunch on the approach of St-Nicolas. What should we do? If you place the last climb 30km from finish, the Liège history is no longer the same. Today we no longer have one dropped rider in the Redoute. When I'm saying this, I'm considered a defeatist... The present-day constraint is that we are forced to suggest a "show" sport. Television plays a big part in it too.[...]
On the other hand, I fail to understand why they needed to drop the Vecquée, which is a lot harder than the Maquisard or the Theux.