red_flanders said:Of more importance to whom? The sprinter teams simply do not factor in Porte's race to what they are doing. To do so would be foolish, and really quite pointless.
I don't like seeing GC riders lose time to injury or mechanicals either. But that is part of bike racing. The randomness, the painful chances lost. It is part of the drama and the tradition. It's part of what makes the sport great.
There is way, way too much expectation of predictability in stage racing since the advent of the Blue Train and subsequent teams who expend massive effort to control stage racing.
Celebrate the random and the painful. It is what cycling is about.
BigMac said:It is, what did those teams had to gain that was of more importance than Porte losing time today? A 5th place? In any case, that placement was there to be contested once they reached the line.
Was Astana or Tinkoff pulling? No, so you lose the argument. Why the hell should any other team wait for stupid Ritchie Porte?BigMac said:This is where we fundamentally disagree. It's perfectly possible to wait for contenders in certain cases, such as today, and still not have the whole practice of it being an exaggeration. Sprinters' or GC team riding at the front, it produces and unfair outcome either way. I'll have to respect your position though.
Nice trollingJRanton said:kenk09 said:It's quite telling how giddy the Contador fans are that he gained time via mechanical (again).
Not surprising when their hero is a cheat and a complete fraud.
So I have to get my maths right...It's Contador and Aru vs Uran and Porte and all Australians?HiroAntagonist said:I'm more interested in the possibility of a cooperative alliance between Porte and Uran to get back on the good foot...
JRanton said:kenk09 said:It's quite telling how giddy the Contador fans are that he gained time via mechanical (again).
Not surprising when their hero is a cheat and a complete fraud.
HiroAntagonist said:Maybe blaming Porte and his team instead of the rest of the peloton and thier support staff might be more conducive. The timing of the mechanical was unfortunate, but it happens. Dry your tears sensitive souls ;-)
IamIronMan said:So I have to get my maths right...It's Contador and Aru vs Uran and Porte and all Australians?HiroAntagonist said:I'm more interested in the possibility of a cooperative alliance between Porte and Uran to get back on the good foot...
PhiberAwptik said:JRanton said:kenk09 said:It's quite telling how giddy the Contador fans are that he gained time via mechanical (again).
Not surprising when their hero is a cheat and a complete fraud.
Nice Trolling![]()
JRanton said:HiroAntagonist said:Maybe blaming Porte and his team instead of the rest of the peloton and thier support staff might be more conducive. The timing of the mechanical was unfortunate, but it happens. Dry your tears sensitive souls ;-)
It's true that nobody else was to blame for Porte's time loss. Blaming the sprint teams in that situation is ridiculous really. Just an extremely badly timed puncture (I'm not sure you can get a worse time) and it seems Sky and Porte could have handled the situation better. It's worth pointing out that the radios often don't work very well once you get into towns and cities which could explain the confusion.
Winning, say, 5 UCI ranking points for finishing 5th ain't nothing. Winning the Giro points for finishing 10th or 12th ain't nothing either. But, and here's the biggie, there was no guarantee the whole break was going to make it. Say someone attacks and everyone looks around (almost happened) and we're maybe talking about 2nd. Say that guy gets gassed and it's a stage at play. That makes their Giro. Again, all of these guys make way less than Richie Porte but need results (however paltry they may seem to you) all the same. Go ahead and ask Ben Jacques-Maynes if having an extra few bucks wouldn't be nice right about now. Plus, there's no guarantee it even matters to Sky, maybe Richie crashes out it the next stage. So you're asking the sprinters' teams to surrender their chance at a stage or a red jersey, in a split second in a middle of an action packed race, because it might eventually matter more to someone else. You seriously don't get why that's completely bonkers?BigMac said:I'm one of the last persons in this forum whom you will see claiming GC riders to be the be all of the race. I think you misundertood me there or didn't read some of my previous posts. In no way would I be against teams pulling at the front here if it was to have a positive outcome for them, such as wining the stage. It's my perception that at that point teams knew the break was going to take it, or something very unordinary had to happen for them to be catched. It is, what did those teams had to gain that was of more importance than Porte losing time today? A 5th place? In any case, that placement was there to be contested once they reached the line.
JRanton said:PhiberAwptik said:JRanton said:kenk09 said:It's quite telling how giddy the Contador fans are that he gained time via mechanical (again).
Not surprising when their hero is a cheat and a complete fraud.
Nice Trolling![]()
But ultimately true. I could indulge in a little bit of amateur psychology about Contador fans but I won't.
Would also be unwise of you. You are already sounding foolish enough, and surely a hypothetically and highly stereotypical depiction of people you don't even know IRL wouldn't help alter that fact.JRanton said:PhiberAwptik said:JRanton said:kenk09 said:It's quite telling how giddy the Contador fans are that he gained time via mechanical (again).
Not surprising when their hero is a cheat and a complete fraud.
Nice Trolling![]()
But ultimately true. I could indulge in a little bit of amateur psychology about Contador fans but I won't.
Electress said:I'd be surprised if the sprinters' teams even knew Porte was dropped. Why would it be a priority for them at that moment? Meant absolutely nothing to them; they weren't watching him, they were focused on what they were doing and turning around 60 kph of forward momentum somewhat unlikely.
veji11 said:JRanton said:HiroAntagonist said:Maybe blaming Porte and his team instead of the rest of the peloton and thier support staff might be more conducive. The timing of the mechanical was unfortunate, but it happens. Dry your tears sensitive souls ;-)
It's true that nobody else was to blame for Porte's time loss. Blaming the sprint teams in that situation is ridiculous really. Just an extremely badly timed puncture (I'm not sure you can get a worse time) and it seems Sky and Porte could have handled the situation better. It's worth pointing out that the radios often don't work very well once you get into towns and cities which could explain the confusion.
But if he had a teammate with him at all time, he could just have given him his bike or wheel.. Sky blew it and so did Porte : stopping on the left side of the road is just plain stupid, the car is going to drive by without seeing you...
In what parallel universe are sprinters teams to blame? Some of them were desparately trying to catch the breakaway.BigMac said:This is Saint-Amand-Monrond déjà vu, only Porte didn't ever do anything to deserve this, and sprinter's teams are to blame. I bet Contador doesn't find this right himself.
pastronef said:https://twitter.com/philmaertens/status/600705404256055296
help from another team: 2 minutes
What a vile and bitter commentJRanton said:kenk09 said:It's quite telling how giddy the Contador fans are that he gained time via mechanical (again).
Not surprising when their hero is a cheat and a complete fraud.
