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The purplish text that becomes underlined when you roll the mouse over it...There doesn't appear to be a link though.
RhD's dream has come true; MSR will be shown from start to finish.
That's a hard pass for me.
The same goes for Il Lombardia, by the way.
I think they kept reading that silly thread with all the family names switched to the German version (Keldermann) and got confused.Nice error in the CN news article about the Tour contenders
"
Wilco Kelderman (Bora-Hansgrohe)
The German, third at last year's Giro, is yet to appear for his new team after that frightening collision with a car at a winter training camp. Kelderman suffered fractured vertebrae in his neck, plus a concussion, but is expected to return in Catalunya next week.
"
Last time I checked poor Wilco was still Dutch
I think they kept reading that silly thread with all the family names switched to the German version (Keldermann) and got confused.
RAI will be rotating commentators during the race, one pair for the fist half of the race and one for the 2nd half.Now, now. Don't get me wrong; I won't be staring intesely at the race for 7 hours (I rarely do that for any race), but just have it on in the background, if something happens, switch my focus over.
Well, I guess they had to find some way to get Movistar a win.
It appears that most of the Spanish races that were postponed will be raced in May. Valencia in April. Here's the changes:
Valencia April 14-18
Asturias April 30 - May 2
Algrave May 5-9
Mallorca May 13-16
Andalucia May 18-22
Murcia May 23
Castilla y Leon July 29
Lovely weather that time of year.It appears that most of the Spanish races that were postponed will be raced in May. Valencia in April. Here's the changes:
Valencia April 14-18
Asturias April 30 - May 2
Algrave May 5-9
Mallorca May 13-16
Andalucia May 18-22
Murcia May 23
Castilla y Leon July 29
Ronan McLaughlin re-gains the Everesting record (6:40.54) in Ireland.
But his most notable climbing performance in a race situation seems to be 13th in the KoM classification in the 2012 Tour of Britain.
What could a real specialist climber do? Or is it more in the realm of the extreme distance cyclist who we don't know so much?
Who would make a record that will really stick and how low might that time be?
IMO what you need is two short, straight climbs towards the opposite of each other so the speed of the descent is converted to free altitude gain and they can go hours faster.Well, Contador has already done it, and Buchmann failed on his attempt. But if a star really targeted it, they would probably be able do it a faster. But this is obviously different to what the pros are used to, so McLaughlin and his body could be better suited to this kind of racing. And he has beaten his first record by nearly 90 minutes over eight months.
I would love to see the Vans do it the same way as this kid and his father:
'I just like riding my bike' The 13-year-old kid who Everested the Kemmelberg
Cyclist chats to Tom Seipp: 13 years old, still at school (obviously), and a bit of a bike riding phenomenonwww.cyclist.co.uk
IMO what you need is two short, straight climbs towards the opposite of each other so the speed of the descent is converted to free altitude gain and they can go hours faster.
Boring.The rules only allow the use of one climb and you have to ascent and descent the same stretch of road.
I did a Bilbao Grand Départ in the Race Design Thread. It ended up with me only having one stage in the Pyrenées after departing the Basque region, in order to snake across the country using ribinou and then down into the Alps and Vosges and, seeing as the Basque stages obviously weren't flat, I couldn't really go all out mountains for six straight days at the start of the race (and even if you try, the péloton will refuse point blank, as we found out in 2020).Drumroll please...Le Grand Départ 2023 is set to happen in beautiful Bilbao. 31 years after they started Le Tour in Donostia.
El Tour 2023 saldrá desde Bilbao
La ciudad dará el banderazo y será el eje del regreso de la ronda gala a Euskadi, donde se celebrarán al menos dos etapaswww.elcorreo.com
Finally the perfect chance to end the race on cobbles.
There's also a third option, IMO: Pyrenees on stage 4 and 5 or 5 and 6, with the first stage being a mid-sized MTF and the second being a Luchon stage with only Aspin and Peyresourde, then up to Mende in the second weekend and an Alpine finale.I did a Bilbao Grand Départ in the Race Design Thread. It ended up with me only having one stage in the Pyrenées after departing the Basque region, in order to snake across the country using ribinou and then down into the Alps and Vosges and, seeing as the Basque stages obviously weren't flat, I couldn't really go all out mountains for six straight days at the start of the race (and even if you try, the péloton will refuse point blank, as we found out in 2020).
Obviously in 1992 that was a very mountain-shy edition save for the obvious 260km Sestrières stage, and they had the theme of going into almost every bordering country with the EU theme that year, but as we've found from a few recent editions starting in the south (2009 Monaco, 2013 Corsica, 2020 Nice) they're liable to do a big loop and end up in the Pyrenees anyway, because I can't see Le Tour only giving a cursory nod to one of its iconic mountain ranges.
The other possibility would be that they go out of Spain up the coast to Bordeaux and inland toward somewhere like Brive or Tulle and then down into the Pyrenées at the end of week 1, to avoid it being too onerous on transfers, but that then likely means the Alps come fairly early and a tame finale unless there's a big transfer after week 1 to somewhere central or northern.
Mende isn't very far from the Alps though, with ASO favouring a mountain finale in recent years it would be difficult to get from Mende on stage 8 or 9 to the Alps on stages 17-20 without a very long stretch of transitional stages. I guess they could maybe get up into the Vosges for stages 14-15 then work their way down to the Alps, hopefully they can put a good length ITT into that second week to break it up a bit if they do, otherwise it's going to get very predictable.There's also a third option, IMO: Pyrenees on stage 4 and 5 or 5 and 6, with the first stage being a mid-sized MTF and the second being a Luchon stage with only Aspin and Peyresourde, then up to Mende in the second weekend and an Alpine finale.