veganrob said:Is it a straighter run in to the finish? Cav to kick a$$ here. He is frustrated and does not take defeat well. He gets even
will10 said:That's no good if Wyss is 40 guys back.
Seriously don't know where all this Kristoff hype comes from. He does like one good sprint a year
Cimber said:Could be a break since SBS wont work to defend the jersey this early. If it ends in a sprint I think Petacchi will take it, though my heart says Cav, and I am sure he is so very eager to win
AussieGoddess said:But HTC, Lampre and the like will reel in the break to get a sprint finish. SBS wont have to do much tomorrow.
I will take Petacchi FTW
Finbouy said:I'm plumbing for a break to stay out here. I think it'll be lead by Fernses/Aqua/Colnago and I think they'll stayout till the end. My thinking is that Petacchi will be wanting a win but unable to get the Lampre Boys on the front all day, Cav will have a go at it but the break will still be 50sec's ahead at the finish thereby a wasted chase back on.
Waterloo Sunrise said:Given the scarcity of sprint finishes, I give this a less than 10% probability.
taiwan said:The false flat towards the end does help the break a little though. The chasers may find they're getting burnt out quicker than they accounted for.
Waterloo Sunrise said:It's normally the other way around - a descent or tail wind helps a tired breakaway by making the stage shorter in time.
A harder finish definately favours chasers.
taiwan said:Pointless for me to engage in an argument here because I don't know from personal experience or anything, but I believed that a descent favoured the bunch, unless it has a lot of corners, a tailwind favoured the break, and a harder course (usually meaning a hilly course) favours the break. Reason being the first situation increases the drafting advantage the bunch has (high speed), while the other two decrease the advantage from drafting.
Waterloo Sunrise said:...As such the rough, 1 minute per 10km break away rule, which is roughly OK on a flat course, becomes far more favourable for chasers on an uphill course, because it simply takes longer to complete, and it is far better to be 1 minute behind with 40 minutes to go than 1 minute behind with 10 minutes to go.
Eyeballs Out said:Too much to ask for some echelons and interesting racing ??
Sylvester said:9 Dario Cataldo (Ita) Quickstep Cycling Team 0:02:21
10 Matteo Carrara (Ita) Vacansoleil-DCM Pro Cycling Team
12 Vasili Kiryienka (Blr) Movistar Team 0:02:30
14 Francesco Masciarelli (Ita) Pro Team Astana 0:02:49
15 John Gadret (Fra) AG2R La Mondiale 0:02:55
16 Steven Kruijswijk (Ned) Rabobank Cycling Team 0:02:56
17 Hubert Dupont (Fra) AG2R La Mondiale 0:02:57
18 Robert Kiserlovski (Cro) Pro Team Astana 0:03:15
21 Thomas Lövkvist (Swe) Sky Procycling 0:03:27
23 Mikel Nieve Ituralde (Spa) Euskaltel-Euskadi 0:04:10
24 Johann Tschopp (Swi) BMC Racing Team 0:04:23
(27 Jan Bakelants (Bel) Omega Pharma-Lotto 0:05:51
28 Domenico Pozzovivo (Ita) Colnago - CSF Inox 0:05:53
29 Kevin Seeldraeyers (Bel) Quickstep Cycling Team 0:06:03)
These guys could realistically take pink from a breakaway on stage 10 or 11 — Saxo would love it. But stage 10 is obviously too much of a sprint stage and stage 11 will probably prove to be too short.
"It falls after the rest day so it's a bit scary. It's a long drag to the finish so it will be exciting racing. I don't think it will be a sprint but maybe a group of 20 or so. It looks really good for Di Luca, assuming he's not riding for GC.
