Cima Coppi and tons of KoM points on the line, they'll probably still try something.carton said:Also, I doubt a true break will make it. Even a strong one. So Aru,Ciccione and friends might one to save their powder one more day, because tommorow will be raced hard.
They have to. Saturday has a flat start, climbers will have a very hard time to get into the break.Mayomaniac said:Cima Coppi and tons of KoM points on the line, they'll probably still try something.carton said:Also, I doubt a true break will make it. Even a strong one. So Aru,Ciccione and friends might one to save their powder one more day, because tommorow will be raced hard.
I wonder if we'll see some planned bike changes. If the surface is going to be that muddy then something like 32mm tyres, with a bit of tread on (!), could offer quite a big advantage.DNP-Old said:https://imgur.com/a/QmSkziO#Zcv1T9f
O wow.
I'd keep a safety distance with Froome riding on a slippery surfaceNirvana said:In a muddy sterrato riders who climbs on the saddle could do a big difference, I remember Contador saying that his rear wheel slipped every time he tried to go out of the saddle, and this year the road is worse.
If Froome go all out I think only Dumoulin will stay with him.
Edited it a bit just before your post.Mayomaniac said:Cima Coppi and tons of KoM points on the line, they'll probably still try something.carton said:Also, I doubt a true break will make it. Even a strong one. So Aru,Ciccione and friends might one to save their powder one more day, because tommorow will be raced hard.
I rode Finestre as well a couple of years ago, and tbh, didn't find it that much different than just riding a paved road. The difficulty was the 16km at 9% way more than the sterrato. If anything I think the lower half (paved part) suits more punchy climbers, because there are so many tight hairpins, that it's difficult to settle into a rhythm. But it was dry then.Logic-is-your-friend said:Two years ago i did two of those climbs with a motorcycle (Finestre & Sestrière) and i think they would suit a powerclimber/tempoclimber pretty good... but the road we took up the Finestre looked nothing like the pictures posted above... so i'm not sure if we did the same climb.
The same. I will record the whole stage, not enter The Forum till 7pm! - when I start to watch it, read posts simultaneously, skip commercials!, swallow some beers= >great eveningClimbing said:Dumo and Froome to falter a bit, Yates holding fast, Pozzo with the form of his life to deliver fireworks.
All the while I will be working...
That would be a disaster. I'd guess the only option then would be to just go on the main road straight to the Bardonecchia climb - no Finestre nor Sestriere.Climbing said:Not only that, if they can't compact it a bit, they won't just race upon it, unfortunately...
DNP-Old said:The whole stage is going to be insane. I reckon they'll start broadcasting from start to finish?Red Rick said:The first 90 minutes will be 100% insane.
That'd be very coolSafeBet said:I'll be on Finestre tomorrow. I will try to take some pictures to give you an idea of the road. Weather seems all right.
Every contender's team will want someone in the break, which could well make for an easier break formation. Aru will definitely try being in it.Red Rick said:Lopez, Pozzovivo and Froome absolutely have to go for it on the Finestre. They don't really have a choice. So it will happen.
I expect that the fight for the breakaway will be insane, but also that all but the better climbing domestiques will be roasted bringing bad breakaways back, so if the pace is high on the Finestre, the breakaway might be caught way before the top, so by the time the favourites get there, almost no domestiques will be left.