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GC Power Ranking

Page 16 - Get up to date with the latest news, scores & standings from the Cycling News Community.
I did say that I wouldn't stand hard by ranking him second for the Vuelta.

The rest of the post addresses the ranking more nuanced than just focusing on results.

But thanks for making me make that post and then not even taking the time to read it.
I did read your whole post, but I usually focus my disagreement on its highest level. My original post was about where O'Connor ranks (based on abilities), and it seems that your disagreement with that is on the fundamental level of how to do a ranking.
 
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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 agree with you on rating their abilities and not their ranking in GC. But then you also have to take into account context. It was O'Connor's second GT this year. Not a lot of riders are able to finish top 5 both times. While he got time for free in the Vuelta, he did not in the Giro IIRC. My point being that after riding the Giro all out for GC, he was still able to defend his GC in the Vuelta. Check recent results of riders going to the Giro for GC and then check their Vuelta results. Hindley won the Giro and was a complete non-factor in the Vuelta that same year. Comparing his efforts to Skjelmose who made the Vuelta his sole season goal, is not correct imho.

Also, when you are leading the Vuelta with multiple minutes after a breakaway, especially when you are not the favorite to win GC, you will race very differently, compared to when you would be an outsider for the podium or top 5. Basically, O'Connor has focussed the entire Vuelta on defending his lead. Trying to manage his efforts and stretch his lead as far as he could. He was the one that had to react, he was the one that was being attacked, his team was the team that had to set the pace. O'Connor could not just slide along and follow wheels the same way Skjelmose could. O'Connor had to go to the podium ceremony and press conference for the better part of 3 weeks, while Skjelmose only had to go to the podium for the white jersey, but without the press conferences every day.

Perhaps Skjelmose will prove to be the better 3 week GC rider (he's already better at 1 week GC's) but so far this Vuelta doesn't prove that.
 
I agree with you on rating their abilities and not their ranking in GC. But then you also have to take into account context. It was O'Connor's second GT this year. Not a lot of riders are able to finish top 5 both times. While he got time for free in the Vuelta, he did not in the Giro IIRC. My point being that after riding the Giro all out for GC, he was still able to defend his GC in the Vuelta. Check recent results of riders going to the Giro for GC and then check their Vuelta results. Hindley won the Giro and was a complete non-factor in the Vuelta that same year. Comparing his efforts to Skjelmose who made the Vuelta his sole season goal, is not correct imho.

Also, when you are leading the Vuelta with multiple minutes after a breakaway, especially when you are not the favorite to win GC, you will race very differently, compared to when you would be an outsider for the podium or top 5. Basically, O'Connor has focussed the entire Vuelta on defending his lead. Trying to manage his efforts and stretch his lead as far as he could. He was the one that had to react, he was the one that was being attacked, his team was the team that had to set the pace. O'Connor could not just slide along and follow wheels the same way Skjelmose could. O'Connor had to go to the podium ceremony and press conference for the better part of 3 weeks, while Skjelmose only had to go to the podium for the white jersey, but without the press conferences every day.

Perhaps Skjelmose will prove to be the better 3 week GC rider (he's already better at 1 week GC's) but so far this Vuelta doesn't prove that.
So if O'Connor had abandoned the Giro in the first week with no lingering effect, didn't get hampered quite as much by the heat in the first four stages of the Vuelta and subsequently went in no breakaways, but rode for GC in the manner that he did in the Giro, you think he'd have been more likely to beat Skjelmose in GC than not? That's how I interpret your post in my framework.
 
So if O'Connor had abandoned the Giro in the first week with no lingering effect, didn't get hampered quite as much by the heat in the first four stages of the Vuelta and subsequently went in no breakaways, but rode for GC in the manner that he did in the Giro, you think he'd have been more likely to beat Skjelmose in GC than not? That's how I interpret your post in my framework.
If he had not gone to the Giro, and focussed on the Vuelta from the beginning, go for GC, not for breaks, then i would not put any money on Skjelmose finishing ahead. I believe riding the Giro beforehand is a bigger factor than you make it out to be or believe to be. Look at riders like Almeida, Hindley, Carapaz... in recent years, who went for GC in the Giro, and then also went for the Vuelta.
 
If he had not gone to the Giro, and focussed on the Vuelta from the beginning, go for GC, not for breaks, then i would not put any money on Skjelmose finishing ahead. I believe riding the Giro beforehand is a bigger factor than you make it out to be or believe to be. Look at riders like Almeida, Hindley, Carapaz... in recent years, who went for GC in the Giro, and then also went for the Vuelta.
Hindley and Carapaz also failed in their first GT this year, despite not riding the Giro beforehand. So the trend you see is partly down to a general variability in hitting your targets in good form and avoiding bad luck. After succeeding in the Giro, it's more salient when they fail in the Vuelta, even if the underlying chance was the same for both GTs. I think that statistical effect matters as much as the causal impact the Giro prep has on the Vuelta prep.

Some riders are more fragile than others, or vary in motivation and professionalism. Some riders can only get their act together for a single target in a season (looking at you, Thomas). O'Connor did well in that regard this year, but quite poorly the two previous years. Could be down to luck or greater abilities this year. Only the latter should merit a higher ranking.
 
No. Rogla, Eetvelt and Mas were the strongest riders on the stage 4 uphill finish.
Almeida came back on a climb that didn’t suit him to finish third. When we had some on here before the stage stating it didn’t suit his characteristics and if he got dropped he wasn’t coming back, when he started yo-yoing that he will lose some time, and then had enough strength to finish third still. Only way Mas was beating Almeida was if Almeida got sick, and he did.
 
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My ranking would look something like this:

1.Pogacar
2. Vingegaard

While it is a very close contest between the two, I would still rank Vingegaard slightly higher in Grand Tours. However, Pogacar demonstrates exceptional strength in one-week races and maintains peak form throughout the year.

3. Roglic
4. Evenepoel

Similarly, the competition between these two is tight, but Roglic’s experience and achievements place him in third. Over the past six years, Roglic has participated in 12 Grand Tours, winning four and finishing on the podium in eight. He DNF the remaining four. Additionally, Roglic has competed in 13 one-week World Tour races, securing six victories. In contrast, Evenepoel has yet to win a one-week World Tour race, having made eight attempts over the last three years.

5. Yates
6. Almeida

Yates holds the fifth spot in my ranking. Although Almeida is gaining ground, Yates has won two one-week World Tour races over the past two seasons, while Almeida has yet to secure a victory.

7. Ayuso
8. Mas

Mas is the stronger rider in Grand Tours, but Ayuso excels in one-week races. Over the course of his career, Mas has finished in the top five of a one-week World Tour race only three times out of 23 starts, with his best result being fifth place.

9. Landa
10. O'Connor
11. Rodriguez

Landa ranks ninth due to his consistent performance in both Grand Tours and one-week races. As for the tenth spot, it's difficult to decide. Many riders could be considered, but for me, it's between O'Connor and Rodriguez. O'Connor's superior results in Grand Tours give him the edge, but he is also a strong competitor in one-week races.
I really like this ranking, except that I would rank Ayuso behind Mas and put Carapaz in 7th place.
 
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Hindley and Carapaz also failed in their first GT this year, despite not riding the Giro beforehand. So the trend you see is partly down to a general variability in hitting your targets in good form and avoiding bad luck. After succeeding in the Giro, it's more salient when they fail in the Vuelta, even if the underlying chance was the same for both GTs. I think that statistical effect matters as much as the causal impact the Giro prep has on the Vuelta prep.

Some riders are more fragile than others, or vary in motivation and professionalism. Some riders can only get their act together for a single target in a season (looking at you, Thomas). O'Connor did well in that regard this year, but quite poorly the two previous years. Could be down to luck or greater abilities this year. Only the latter should merit a higher ranking.
Even disregarding O'Connor's Vuelta, he still finished 4th in the Giro, which by all accounts still should be rated higher than Skjelmose's 5th spot in the Vuelta.
 
Even disregarding O'Connor's Vuelta, he still finished 4th in the Giro, which by all accounts still should be rated higher than Skjelmose's 5th spot in the Vuelta.
If you disregard O’Connors time gain in the Vuelta, then you are comparing 4th in the Giro with 4th in the Vuelta and it’s not self evident which of them rates higher in terms of power ranking. If Giro was ridden in the same way Vuelta was where the race exploded almost every mountain stage, who knows if BOC still gets 4th… Giro was ridden conservatively by anyone but Pog.
 
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If you disregard O’Connors time gain in the Vuelta, then you are comparing 4th in the Giro with 4th in the Vuelta and it’s not self evident which of them rates higher in terms of power ranking. If Giro was ridden in the same way Vuelta was where the race exploded almost every mountain stage, who knows if BOC still gets 4th… Giro was ridden conservatively by anyone but Pog.
If you wanna play it like that, even without his timegain in the Vuelta, he still finishes in the top 10. And if you want to address the pace in the Vuelta, then surely that tells you something about the effort he had to put in to defend his lead.
 
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If you wanna play it like that, even without his timegain in the Vuelta, he still finishes in the top 10. And if you want to address the pace in the Vuelta, then surely that tells you something about the effort he had to put in to defend his lead.
I don't want to play anything, I'm just pointing out the comparison between Vuelta and the Giro tells you very little about power ranking because Vuelta was ridden way harder than the Giro, which was basically a stalemate for podium spots. I personally rate BOC above Skjelmose in GC power ranking. Yes he gained time because they let him but he also lost more than he would optimally lose had he not gone all-in a couple of times when defending the red jersey...
 
Almeida came back on a climb that didn’t suit him to finish third. When we had some on here before the stage stating it didn’t suit his characteristics and if he got dropped he wasn’t coming back, when he started yo-yoing that he will lose some time, and then had enough strength to finish third still. Only way Mas was beating Almeida was if Almeida got sick, and he did.
Almeida got dropped on the only climb they raced before he got sick, and because the three strongest then stalled and Almeida made it back again, you use that sole result as argument that Almeida was performing better than Mas. I just don't see it. Was Landa also performing better than Mas on that stage (if it could be argued that the climb didn't suit him)?
 
Almeida got dropped on the only climb they raced before he got sick, and because the three strongest then stalled and Almeida made it back again, you use that sole result as argument that Almeida was performing better than Mas. I just don't see it. Was Landa also performing better than Mas on that stage (if it could be argued that the climb didn't suit him)?

Almeida always gets dropped on climbs (at least before TdS of this year) and then makes it back so I think he is a special case in that department.

Should Van Eetvelt not be ranked above him if your logic is applied?
 
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Almeida always gets dropped on climbs (at least before TdS of this year) and then makes it back so I think he is a special case in that department.

Should Van Eetvelt not be ranked above him if your logic is applied?
Yes, with regards to the narrow claim of who performed better on the stage 4 MTF, Van Eetvelt should be ranked above Almeida.
Almeida [...] was performing better than Mas till he got sick on climbs that didn’t suit him.
"Climbs that didn't suit him" = Pico Villuercas.
 
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