Re:
I agree with all of this. When a bike rider has such an obvious power advantage over the rest of the field it is exaggerating it to say that it was a 'tactically superb' manoeuvre. The power needed to first bridge across and then bring that move to the line from 10km out for a supposed mountain goat(!!), is massive. You can have all the tactical awareness you like but if you don't have the physical capabilities to deliver then it is not worth a ball of blue. Most riders simply do not have the physical capabilities to do what Froome done today, not to mention being multi faceted in being able to spin a ridiculous cadence going up a mountain and to churn out huge power in a TT.
He has now been dominant for long enough that this is considered his 'normal' level with many casual fans. If it weren't for a team orders and a crash he would lnow be going for his 5th TDF in a row having previously been a grupetto rider. I don't think there is any great love for Froome among die hard bike followers as those who know enough about the sport realise that there is something going on. However sky by using their carefully managed PR campaign only have to convince enough of the casual fans to reap the harvest.
Saint Unix said:Could very well be that he'll take about a minute on the time trial and leave it there. After the sh*tstorm that followed the Pierre St. Martin stage last year, I doubt we'll see Froome obliterating the field on a MTF unless he absolutely has to. To the layman, taking time in the downhills, echelons and time trials seems much less sketchy. It just looks like good tactics and skillful riding, plus Froome was always a better TT-rider than Nairo, so that's just normal. People in the know can tell you all about the ridiculous power output needed to pull off a stunt like the one we saw today or competing at the top of flat TT.
People are far too willing to forget the long list of suspect performances that precede this one. Even in 2012 the fact that Froome had made the quantum leap from total anonymity less than a year earlier wasn't even a subject amongst most people. "He did well in the Vuelta," they'd tell you. Same with Wiggins. Oh, he came fourth behind three of the most obvious dopers in the peloton in 2009 after being a track rider/fat TT guy for the entirety of his career? Nothing suspect about that at all. He lost some weight, after all.
Cycling fans in general are idiots. It blows my mind that the reaction from so-called experts hasn't been utter disbelief and refusal to accept what's going on right from the get-go, and at this point we're getting so deep into it that Froome "was always a great cyclist". Making it seem like he's winning a Tour with "good tactics" and "great bike-handling" rather than having a massive power advantage over everyone will make the masses forget even more what a fraud this guy is, not to mention the rest of his team.
I agree with all of this. When a bike rider has such an obvious power advantage over the rest of the field it is exaggerating it to say that it was a 'tactically superb' manoeuvre. The power needed to first bridge across and then bring that move to the line from 10km out for a supposed mountain goat(!!), is massive. You can have all the tactical awareness you like but if you don't have the physical capabilities to deliver then it is not worth a ball of blue. Most riders simply do not have the physical capabilities to do what Froome done today, not to mention being multi faceted in being able to spin a ridiculous cadence going up a mountain and to churn out huge power in a TT.
He has now been dominant for long enough that this is considered his 'normal' level with many casual fans. If it weren't for a team orders and a crash he would lnow be going for his 5th TDF in a row having previously been a grupetto rider. I don't think there is any great love for Froome among die hard bike followers as those who know enough about the sport realise that there is something going on. However sky by using their carefully managed PR campaign only have to convince enough of the casual fans to reap the harvest.