Re: Re:
tobydawq said:
Red Rick said:
Can stages under 140km please die a quick, yet painful death?
Hopefully not.
The problem is the outright assumption that a short mountain stage will automatically be good. We use a few stages like Alpe d'Huez 2011 as examples of why this trend is a positive thing, but at the same time we didn't use stages like the Galibier 2011, Rifugio Gardeccia 2011 and so on similarly as examples of why longer mountain stages are a good thing. Short mountain stages when placed poorly or designed poorly can be crappy, just like longer ones can. The criteria are no different for shorter stages than they are for long ones; examples like Oropa 2016 can show us that a short mountain stage can be pretty useless too. Back in the early 2000s the Vuelta was full of short mountain stages and most of them produced pretty poor racing. I despise the automatic assumption that the short mountain stage will produce good racing that seems to proliferate at the moment, because it ignores a few of the other factors that play into why those stages have succeeded. After all, we just saw a Tour de l'Avenir where they had THREE mountain stages where the TOTAL distance was under 200km. It's supposed to be an endurance sport.
That said, if stage 14 here is the short stage, it is using the short stage in the right way. When you have multiple back-to-back mountain stages, it often results in conservative racing in the first ones because riders are too scared of paying for big efforts the following day. Ways to get around this are to make the earlier stages finish on super tough climbs that would be enough to open a time gap regardless - examples include 2011 Giro with Zoncolán before Rifugio Gardeccia, 2008 Vuelta with Angliru before San Isidro/Fuentes de Invierno, and so on. Examples of getting this wrong include the 2009 Vuelta with the Velefique and Sierra Nevada stages hampered by fear of La Pandera, and the 2015 Vuelta where three progressively tougher mountaintop finishes led to super-conservative racing on both Fuente del Chivo (long, gradual) and Jito d'Escarandí (tough at start and end, easier in the middle, Unipuerto) thanks to the toughest stage being last but the previous climbs not being tough enough to guarantee action in and of themselves. These super steep climbs may be marquee names, but when they're placed at the end of the race, they tend to make things somewhat tame earlier on in the race. Just look at the 2012 Giro with everybody afraid of the big finale with Mortirolo and Stelvio to the point where they neglected to start racing until then. The other option is to entice action on the earlier stage by making the last stage of the mountain bloc a short stage, so that riders are less afraid of the fatigue. This is clearly what the Giro's organisers are aiming at, and it has been, with only one major exception - the 2016 Giro to Andalo, which was sandwiched between a rest day and a flat stage - the only method by which these short mountain stages have reaped the positive reputation they've now got. Val Martello was a freak due to the weather, the sub-140km length made no difference to that stage, just as we shouldn't hold 200km+ Unipuertos like Montecampione 2014 against the long stages, as they're no different to stages like Oropa above - when the stage is completely Unipuerto like that, realistically the length is of little relevance since the stage until that climb will be soft-pedalled anyway.
Now, making the Valdôtain stage the short one in the midst of this three-stage mountain bloc is, however, absolutely the
right use of Short Stage Theory. I am against the proliferation of Short Stage Theory as an alternative to good course design, which seems to be how certain organisers (a certain French family-run organisation springs immediately to mind...) use it, and I also dislike how many fans have seen a few well-orchestrated uses of the short stage as evidence that it is automatically a Good Thing and that longer stages should be consigned to the past for yielding boredom for long periods of hyper-controlled racing (after all, what would that 2010 Giro have been without the 260km transitional stage to L'Aquila?), when stages like the ones mentioned above, along with Bormio 2017, Monte Petrano 2009, Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne 2010 and Peyragudes 2013 all show us that the long mountain stage still has plenty to offer. However, its the overuse of this trope that bothers me most and if Saint-Vincent - Courmayeur is the
only use of Short Stage Theory in the 2019 Giro, it isn't a problem, because they've used it the right way.
Now, three back to back mountain stages on a Thursday, Friday and Saturday with a transitional stage on Sunday may not be the best pacing in the world, and it may result in some tame Cuneo-Pinerolo racing depending of course on the route they go for between the two (part of me is really expecting to see a 2009-esque stage and probably battling only on the Pra Martino because other rumours mean that Sestrières won't be the Cima Coppi which was the only real reason for any action earlier on in the 2009 stage), but seeing as the stage to Nivolet is almost inevitably going to be Unipuerto - there aren't really any comparable obstacles that can be placed before it close enough to be of any importance, so while it may not literally be a Unipuerto stage like Montecampione or Oropa as mentioned above, it will be a stage where nothing of any relevance to the GC happens before the final climb - it makes sense to try to prevent riders from being too frightened to attack until the last 2-3km because of the risk of fatigue in the following day's stage, and making the following stage short is a good way to do that. I also approve of moving the finish down into Courmayeur itself (or rather Entrèves I think, if it's at the Skyway) rather than putting a steep finale on, but this is also going to have to be contingent on the stage being good - they need to include a couple of climbs before San Carlo, otherwise it's a waste of the opportunity provided. Champremier, Pila-Les Fleurs, Saint-Barthélemy, Verrogne and, less likely and smaller, Les Combes, offer a few opportunities to produce a stage that will be short enough to not kill action on Nivolet but tough enough that it's not just 160 fresh riders hitting the base of San Carlo.