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Yes, but this won't have a negative effect on his performance, Remco might even get better at Bora. While Mas chose money over performance.@Berniece
In all honesty, if Remco is to join Rogla in the coming years, main motivation likely will be money. It's not like he isn't king at SOQ.
I like the way you reason. Here we have 4 different statements about Roglic:Guys, one myth at a time, shall we? Wheel sucks, doesn't' attack ... Is Rogla still old? Anyway, this bubble some of you are living in here will eventually burst too.
This is on how it must have been at Visma at the end, on and on about Jonas and Pogi. And now we see that it's still about Rogla too. Rest assured.
Almeida would have beat Mas and was ahead of him, Adam was disappointing.Same domestiques with whom Mas wiped the floor at this Vuelta?
Too young.
What does any of this even mean?All in all i am glad we had this discussion, challenge accepted. To beat Pogi and Jonas (and Remco) in future GTs, as in the end what else is Rogla going to do? Rogla is mostly still not eligible for beating any serious age related record, so there goes the age advantage. Considering Rogla being in his peak years, in between 34 and around 38, numbers rather consistent with starting his career 10 years late.
As long as Rogla keeps beating them it doesn't really matter on who has Rogla at first, second, third or fourth position. Lets not forget, people having Rogla at fourth would likely be the first one to pop-up in Rogličes thread, would Rogla crash at the Vuelta 2024.
No one knows what it means, but it's provocativeWhat does any of this even mean?
@CyclistAbi you know very well, Roglic can compete against the numbers Pogacar produced in the Tour. Nevertheless, like i said, i was impressed with roglic in this Vuelta.IMHO this doesn't leave all that much to interpretation.
Easy there tiger.
Agree on this. Pretty accurate.That bring us to the logical conclusion :
1) Pogacar
2) Vingegaard (maybe 1 because of poor preparation)
3) Remco
4) Roglic (will age :'( )- stronger unipuerto climber than Remco but lesser ITT
This is far more difficult to tell IMO. I'm a bit disappointed by the level of GC riders behind the big 4. And it certainly doesn't help that far too many of them end up being domestiques for the big 4.5) Almeida
6) Ayuso (I believe)
7) Mas/A.Yates
8) Carapaz/Landa and many others ...
Yes, but this won't have a negative effect on his performance, Remco might even get better at Bora. While Mas chose money over performance.
I like the way you reason. Here we have 4 different statements about Roglic:
1. Roglic wheel sucks
2. Roglic doesn't attack
3. Roglic is old
4. Roglic is below Jonas and Pogi in power ranking.
And since the first 3 statements (which you selected) are myths, 4th statement (which also you selected) must be a myth also? In fact - the 3 statements being myths prove that 4th statement is a myth?
Huh?
What does any of this even mean?
That top 10 looks something like this:
1. Paco Mancebo
2. Óscar Sevilla
3. Luis Ángel Maté
4. Jakob Fuglsang
5. Chris Froome
6. Geraint Thomas
7. Robert Gesink
8. Thomas De Gendt
9. Michael Woods
10. Steven Kruijswijk
@CyclistAbi you know very well, Roglic can compete against the numbers Pogacar produced in the Tour.
Nevertheless, like i said, i was impressed with roglic in this Vuelta.
You have good taste, no wonder you are a Rogla fan.
How would you rank the performances of the GC riders in the Vuelta? I don't see the case for putting O'Connor ahead of Carapaz, Skjelmose and Gaudu when it comes to overall strength and consistency.I definitely don't agree with that.
I would not give it to Tiberi, Gall, Gee or Lipowitz. Jorgenson also probably not.How would you rank the performances of the GC riders in the Vuelta? I don't see the case for putting O'Connor ahead of Carapaz, Skjelmose and Gaudu when it comes to overall strength and consistency.
As the circumstances differed so much, I'm not even sure if he was better in the Giro or the Vuelta.
Riders who are definitely better GC riders than O'Connor: Pogi, Vingegaard, Rogla, Evenepoel, A. Yates, Almeida, Landa, Mas, Carapaz, Jorgenson, Rodríguez, Ayuso. Riders who on balance probably ranks above O'Connor: Martinez, Kuss, Hindley, Gaudu, Thomas, Tiberi, Skjelmose, S. Yates, Gall, Gee, Lipowitz.
Are there any in the first category you rank below O'Connor? How many from the second category?
So O'Connor would rank as ~20th. Very much in line with my more firm opinion:I would not give it to Tiberi, Gall, Gee or Lipowitz. Jorgenson also probably not.
EDIT: I won't budge on Jorgenson. I see only race program/circumstances/results in O'Connor's favour. Performances (over the whole season) are miles apart.O'Connor doesn’t make the top-15, maybe not even top-20.
Those are guys I'd definitely place below him. He's clearly in that group where many re close together. And I'm a bit unsure how much credit go give riders for one good GT in 2023 or a tendency to collapse. Like I would never pick Gaudu over O'Connor but I'm fine chucking them in the same tier.So O'Connor would rank as ~20th. Very much in line with my more firm opinion:
Tiberi better now than O’Connor? I agree Tiberi’s ceiling is higher than O’Connor but O’Connor finished the Giro ahead of Tiberi and just come off the Vuelta podium.How would you rank the performances of the GC riders in the Vuelta? I don't see the case for putting O'Connor ahead of Carapaz, Skjelmose and Gaudu when it comes to overall strength and consistency.
As the circumstances differed so much, I'm not even sure if he was better in the Giro or the Vuelta.
Riders who are definitely better GC riders than O'Connor: Pogi, Vingegaard, Rogla, Evenepoel, A. Yates, Almeida, Landa, Mas, Carapaz, Jorgenson, Rodríguez, Ayuso. Riders who on balance probably ranks above O'Connor: Martinez, Kuss, Hindley, Gaudu, Thomas, Tiberi, Skjelmose, S. Yates, Gall, Gee, Lipowitz.
Are there any in the first category you rank below O'Connor? How many from the second category?
Tiberi better now than O’Connor? I agree Tiberi’s ceiling is higher than O’Connor but O’Connor finished the Giro ahead of Tiberi and just come off the Vuelta podium.
In a GT i don’t see how one can rate Lipowitz, Gee or Skjelmose ahead of him based upon results.
How would you rank the performances of the GC riders in the Vuelta? I don't see the case for putting O'Connor ahead of Carapaz, Skjelmose and Gaudu when it comes to overall strength and consistency.
As the circumstances differed so much, I'm not even sure if he was better in the Giro or the Vuelta.
Riders who are definitely better GC riders than O'Connor: Pogi, Vingegaard, Rogla, Evenepoel, A. Yates, Almeida, Landa, Mas, Carapaz, Jorgenson, Rodríguez, Ayuso. Riders who on balance probably ranks above O'Connor: Martinez, Kuss, Hindley, Gaudu, Thomas, Tiberi, Skjelmose, S. Yates, Gall, Gee, Lipowitz.
Are there any in the first category you rank below O'Connor? How many from the second category?
Then we simply talk about two wildly different things. My power ranking is based on my estimate of their abilities as they have shown them.I would rank him second.
Then we simply talk about two wildly different things. My power ranking is based on my estimate of their abilities as they have shown them.
Would Evenepoel even have made your top-10 last year?
Going over the details doesn't make sense if your ranking is of results and mine is of abilities.Maybe third or fourth, I can admit that. But please also read the rest of the post where I go more into detail with the names you listed.
Going over the details doesn't make sense if your ranking is of results and mine is of abilities.