I kinda think of Del Toro as Kamala Harris in that he just kind of fell into the leadership role because the primary leader had dropped out
I almost spat my tea out. Juan Ayuso as Joe Biden was not something I expected to read here.
I kinda think of Del Toro as Kamala Harris in that he just kind of fell into the leadership role because the primary leader had dropped out
I didn't get the impression he ran out of fuel, he just miscalculated on how to use it. And so did the team car. I actually blame the team car more because I think he needed more guidance and just didn't get it in a smart way.Not enough confidence, afraid of upsetting the team, mentally exhausted.
Logically you want to negative split such a climb Almeida style. It seems Del Toro wanted to as well. But then he also wanted to follow Carapaz.
I think he just tried to do both in a backwards "logic" resulting in just chasing Carapaz.
Also did he have enough fuel?
Hm, I think UAE had no plan for the B team and whatever they had to cook up on the spot failed spectacularly. (I'm specifically referring to stage 20.)Maybe team B was not supposed to win?
I agree with all the criticism of del Toro but he can bounce back.
Yeah exactly. The strange thing was that he wouldn’t give Carapaz an inch, but he gave Yates a mile. He dug deep to chase down every Carapaz move but just let Yates ride away without regard. Honestly, he rode like a teammate of Yates. He clearly had legs or he wouldn’t have sprinted repeatedly with Carapaz or at the end of the stage. Very odd.Del Toro rode poorly on Finestre.
If you are really afraid of blowing up you don't follow a rampant Caparaz going full Berserk mode right at the start of the climb. That was a brutal pace. Del Toro raced to protect his place against Carapaz, not to defend his pink jersey or to secure a podium placing. That is one of the weirdest strategy I've seen in +25 years of consciously watching cycling.
And he might also end up like Kruijswijk and never get another chance again.He may have around 15 years to do so, and it only took Yates 7.
Bruyneel alone could fix thisUAE is a tactical mess always. I swear in the team cars they're probaly arguing with each other on who is the leader and what to do. They're a mess with too much money.
I think the strategy was to survive Finestre and attack the final finish ascent. Carapaz wanted to drop IDT (or lose the giro) on the Finistère and uae tactically didn’t take WVA seriously enough. Being as UAE had no serious helpers for the Finestre they simply were not strong enough. This is the peril that is a squad with Ayuso on it. Just not enough ‘team’.Del Toro rode poorly on Finestre.
If you are really afraid of blowing up you don't follow a rampant Caparaz going full Berserk mode right at the start of the climb. That was a brutal pace. Del Toro raced to protect his place against Carapaz, not to defend his pink jersey or to secure a podium placing. That is one of the weirdest strategy I've seen in +25 years of consciously watching cycling.
I'm more like:This is me watching del Toro's tactics on Finestre.
View: https://imgur.com/a/RKiThqV
The brilliance of Pogacar bails them out a ton as without him they are rarely close to winning a big race.UAE is a tactical mess always. I swear in the team cars they're probaly arguing with each other on who is the leader and what to do. They're a mess with too much money.
Well, that & the planning on the team bus. Its like he & no-one in the team understood who the guy in yellow was. I can only presume the team meeting went 'everyone support Del boy, Del boy, you just gotta follow Carapaz'IDT looked strong enough at the very end that I'm not buying the "he didn't have strength" on Finestre.
The only believable explanation is bad advice from the team car.
Yeah, that’s crazy. We’ve seen team cars drive right up alongside riders to get them the message (of the team’s plan) loud and clear. That kind of push was especially needed for 21 y.o. Rider with the pressure of a GT win on his shoulders. The DS also needed to hammer in that Simon still had Wout out in front him to pull on the final climb, which Del Toro perhaps couldn’t calculate the importance of that in the midst of fatigue and strain.Baldato says the team car told Isaac Del Toro to chase Yates when his lead grew to over half a minute but he only did it once. He apparently wanted to save energy for the finish. They said the rider made the choice, it was his decision, not the car's.
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Wroeging bij ploegleider UAE Emirates XRG: "We hebben Simon Yates onderschat"
Ploegleider Mauro Gianetti erkende al dat UAE Emirates XRG fouten heeft gemaakt in de twintigste etappe van de Giro d’Italia. Nu doet ook zijn collega Fabio Baldato dat. De Italiaan geeft toe dat ze Simon Yates hebben onderschat en baalt dat hij Isaac Del Toro niet meer heeft aangemoedigd. “We...www.wielerflits.nl
It reads like politely throwing him under a small bus tbh.
Excellent; the king has died, long live the kingThe car made a rookie error by allowing Van Aert to have a ten minute cushion on Finestre for no reason (& zero UAE satellite riders in the breakaway either) and as icing on the disaster-cake Del Toro then proceeded to race flippantly against Carapaz.
All-in-all a mess of epic proportions that has gone down in the annals of cycling history as the day Rabofail was retired (along with "lol Movistar tactics!") and Baldatofail (or whatever people wish to assign UAE's car in terms of moniker) became the new go-to top of the class example not-to-follow in cycling management.
Given the nature of this forum and even moreso social media, I think you’re right. Although many here, including myself, put the onus on the team car. They were either way too laissez-faire in letting Del Toro decide how to ride, or were simply stupid and unable to change plans on the fly. As you’ve pointed out in the past, riders in the middle of a tough race can be so fatigued physically and mentally that’s it’s hard to think as quickly and accurately as they might desire. That’s what the DS is there to do for them.I have an overwhelming feeling of "D if you don't, D if you do" here.
We saw (hindsight) what happened when he didn't, but if he would have followed (jump to) Yates and blown, he would be getting hammered for not riding smarter.
This ^^, plus racers in this era don't learn to race for themselves because they aren't allowed to.As you’ve pointed out in the past, riders in the middle of a tough race can be so fatigued physically and mentally that’s it’s hard to think as quickly and accurately as they might desire. That’s what the DS is there to do for them.