etymology said:get rid of race radio and power meters.
Yep. It's was exellent to see Voeckler just riding without race radio and power meters. He knew himself enough to know how to ride and to eventually win.
etymology said:get rid of race radio and power meters.
Whatever encourage racing and add to tactics to it, I'm forwannab said:- Smaller teams of maybe 6 riders, this makes it harder to control a race by 1 team.
- Shorter distance for the flat stages, this in combination with the smaller teams maybe make it less predictable.
- At least 2 MTF with the climb being Hors Category (or shorter but steeper).
- I also enjoyed the shorter, very mountainous stages, these in combination with a MTF would make it very attractive to attack I think.
- Without a doubt bonifications on the top of a MTF.
- There's no need for +-100km of ITT (this years tdf)
- 1 hilly course/climb ITT or TTT instead of 2 relatively flat ITT
Bavarianrider said:Each GT should be done only once all 4 years!
Imagine this! Then you wouldn't see any soft pedelaing or anything. It would be crazy, every stuge would be a ****ing slug fest.
Eshnar said:very long mountain stages should never finish on a HC. The last climb should always be easier than the others, otherwise it's true the riders will wait for the final climb (though this holds true for any kind of stage, not only long ones)
icefire said:...HRM and power meters.
nothing ofc. My point was: if you wanna see early attacks, stages should never end on a HC. Probly I didn't make it clear, sorry.Magnus said:What's wrong with variety?
indeed. This is why the more good stages you have, the higher is the chance to see something good.Magnus said:I think all this micro designing of things is kind of ridiculous. You can never ensure a certain outcome of things.
This year's Giro had its route problems too. The single stages were fine, but the route, as a whole, was too backloaded and lacked ITT. That way everyone just waited until they realized it was too late. The stage to Pampeago is the biggest deception of the year imhoMagnus said:Take this year's GdI. The Alpe di Pampiaggio stage should be perfect to attack on the second last ascent. Nothing happened. On the Stelvio stage everybody said there was way to much valley after the Mortirolo, but it turned out that the valley was practically the most entertaining part of the race and where DeGendt got his gap.
the problem of lenght is that shorter stages help teams to control the race. It's not fine for me. Tastes. As I said, I can bear one of them, all in the name of variety.Magnus said:I also don't get why there is so much discussion about stage length. What's wrong with having stage with 180 km flat and then ending with a mtf? That is not to say that all stages should be like that. But that there should also be stages like that. Different types of stages suit different riders.
No one talked about MORE gc stages (at least not me)... but we need to improve those stages. Not to make more of themMagnus said:Another thing that some posters seems to neglect: GC riders tend to chose the one or two stages that suits them the best to make their move. Making more stages that suits GC-action doesn't necessarily cause more GC action. It might as well just be more spread out (as in this year's GdI).
Another_Dutch_Guy said:This.
In my opinion the ability to assess whether it makes sense to make or follow a move is one key characteristics of a good cyclist. These times knowing how to read a power meter is sufficient.
The tactical part of cycling has been reduced to nearly zero this way; from every GC contender you can tell beforehand what they will do leading to a great loss of excitement.
Oh, and smaller teams of course.
It's not overrated, it's a cancer: "When we were riding on the front at 450 watts (of power) or whatever, someone would attack and Mick Rogers would say ‘just leave him, he can’t sustain it’." Wiggins said.Magnus said:I think people over estimates HRM and power meters impact on races. Especially in GT's as riders will have very little data on how they perform after 7-10 days of TdF. Besides: this is professional we're talking about. They know their own bodies. HRM and power meters is surely very good tools in training (at least for some riders). I can't really see that they should affect the outcome of races.
cineteq said:It's not overrated, it's a cancer: "When we were riding on the front at 450 watts (of power) or whatever, someone would attack and Mick Rogers would say ‘just leave him, he can’t sustain it’." Wiggins said.
Kender said:they need to find a way to stop so many crashes in the first week. it's a rough one to fix too. maybe a nice hard hilly stage 2 (hmmm Corsica) to tire out some riders
Magnus said:I don't think the powermeter is instrumental in this. Wiggins said "at 450 watts or whatever". It's a paraphrase for riding hard. I think Wiggins point is that Rogers was a really good Capitane de Route. You could see it a few times where somebody attacked and the sky train got confused. Then Rogers would say what to do and they continued their work.
hiero2 said:But reducing the team size? Brilliant. The organizers need to do something. That might do it. Front-end loading a couple of mountains might work, but somehow I doubt it. If that would work, I think we would be seeing it.
hiero2 said:They definitely need to fix the crashes. The ONLY OP idea that I think would work toward the desired effect would be the reduced peloton. I'll vote a definite yes to reduced team size.
Reduce the number or distance of TT? Nonsense - the TT's made it MORE competitive this year. The race organizers do a good job year-to-year mixing up the races. IMO.
Reduce the stage length? Again nonsense - if the stage length is shorter the escape has no more chance of making it - they'll just get caught sooner. The breaks rarely get away because they CAN - they usually get away because the peloton lets them. In smaller races, where you have less powerful riders overall, you see breaks get away in an actual escape, but this is also not that common. Again, IMO.
But reducing the team size? Brilliant. The organizers need to do something. That might do it. Front-end loading a couple of mountains might work, but somehow I doubt it. If that would work, I think we would be seeing it.
I only disagree because it seemed every interview with Horner was 400 watts this and 400 watts that. I don't know if it impacts races, but Horner sure uses his wattage a lot.Magnus said:I think people over estimates HRM and power meters impact on races.
a skiing-style pursuit race isn't really possible in the GTs, no, as you would be going on for four hours between first and last competitors starting, with little motivation for anybody outside the top 10 until you got to the trackstand championships that are the Lanterne Rouge battle. However, in a flattish short stage race like Eneco or the TDU I think it could work if carefully planned. Say laps of a circuit, an appropriate number of laps - probably short, say 30-50km for the TDU and 50-60km for the Eneco, for the riders to set off at. Sprinters are often near the front in these races, but can they afford in such a short distance to wait for their teammates several seconds behind and hope they can reel back the leaders so they can duke out the win or do they go themselves? Do you find a group of sprinters with bonus seconds having to work together to try to pull back the likes of Gerrans and Valverde, who have fewer numbers but both have something to gain from working together?LesDiablesRouges said:Depends how unrealistic/radical you want to get
but they could start the riders based on how much time they are behind on mountain stages
i.e.
1st
then next guy is 52 seconds back he leaves 52 seconds later etc. Lots of logistical issues so the idea is non-starter.
The TT's aren't the problem it's the lack of selection on climbs that's a problem.
I'd love to see a TT with cobbled sections. It could be a bit mad but at least it creates some uneasiness.
One super long mountain queen stage like 270-300km would shake things up.
Bavarianrider said:In general, i think there should be regulations concerning gear boxes. I think today riders have so many gears, that in the mountains they have the right gear to pedal at the same cadence almost all the time. I think this is a reason why we don't see many long attacks anymore. Climbers can't really play out tehir strength when everybody has a zillion gears. If we would limit the amount of gears i think climbers would benefit. So that would be a rule change i would agree to in favor of the climbers.
Powersmeters should be banned , too. No doubt.
+1 Well said, thanks for posting this!Pippo_San said:The root of all evil is again UCI. Even concerning the technological advancements they don't follow a clear path.
They should choose a path: either put complete restrictions in order to make cycling a show, obiouvsly the safest possible, or go full gas on new technologies and let every possible enhancement available, and that would surely be helpful also for the components makers.