Re:
Only the Champs Elysees victor's win, actually.
SeriousSam said:Devalues his wins
Only the Champs Elysees victor's win, actually.
SeriousSam said:Devalues his wins
DFA123 said:Strip him of the stage wins so far please.MatParker117 said:Abandoned the tour and heading for Rio, go get the gold Cav.
A track sprinter turning up with no intention, nor the shape, to finish the race, has an unfair advantage over the rest and is distorting the competition.
grumpycabbie said:It might have " something " to do with the fact that as long as Sagan rides TdF, Cavendish even being second has absolutely no chance of bringing green jersey to Paris and the way Sagan is riding this year in 5 years time and Sagan having 10 x green, competition might change to 15 - 18 flat stages withy 500 points for 1st, 400 for 2nd and so on...and intermediate sprints will be abandoned all together, then and maybe only then will Cav be willing to ride full 3 weeks again....Pure and simple, no chance of green and with all the sprinters this year and win in Paris by no means guaranteed in his mind all the effort and a shot at a stage win is worth less than possible olympic gold. Not that I agree with it but he wouldn't be the first nor the last rider doing it.
How on earth is it unfair when Kittel, Coquard and the rest could have done exactly the same thing if they'd chosen to?DFA123 said:Strip him of the stage wins so far please.MatParker117 said:Abandoned the tour and heading for Rio, go get the gold Cav.
A track sprinter turning up with no intention, nor the shape, to finish the race, has an unfair advantage over the rest and is distorting the competition.
True but modern cycling is like this it happens all the time in the giro we need to accept it and move on.SeriousSam said:A tour stage win is devalued if a rider isn't prepared, or even able, to actually complete the entire Tour. All achievements at the Tour derive their value within the context of a rider actually managing to do the 3,000+ km stage race with mountains and all.
Otherwise, they might as well allow the sprinters to sit some stages out and reenter when they feel like it.
DFA123 said:Strip him of the stage wins so far please.MatParker117 said:Abandoned the tour and heading for Rio, go get the gold Cav.
A track sprinter turning up with no intention, nor the shape, to finish the race, has an unfair advantage over the rest and is distorting the competition.
SeriousSam said:A tour stage win is devalued if a rider isn't prepared, or even able, to actually complete the entire Tour. All achievements at the Tour derive their value within the context of a rider actually managing to do the 3,000+ km stage race with mountains and all.
Otherwise, they might as well allow the sprinters to sit some stages out and reenter when they feel like it.
I have to assume this is a tongue in cheek post to wind people up and you actually mean the opposite! Clever.DFA123 said:Strip him of the stage wins so far please.MatParker117 said:Abandoned the tour and heading for Rio, go get the gold Cav.
A track sprinter turning up with no intention, nor the shape, to finish the race, has an unfair advantage over the rest and is distorting the competition.
BigMac said:SeriousSam said:A tour stage win is devalued if a rider isn't prepared, or even able, to actually complete the entire Tour. All achievements at the Tour derive their value within the context of a rider actually managing to do the 3,000+ km stage race with mountains and all.
Otherwise, they might as well allow the sprinters to sit some stages out and reenter when they feel like it.
Doesn't stop people from praising Cipollini.
Walkman said:Red Rick said:There was a decent discussion about this in a Dutch program. Reasons for trains failing are basically
- Everyone has a train
- There's not one train significantly better
- So the peloton doesn't really get stretched
Trains still work in smaller races, but it seems they're a bit done in the TdF. The days of HTC 8km lead outs are over.
They should put one guy behind Kittel to deny Cav his wheel. And also hit the front a bit later, but that's difficult to time these days.
SeriousSam said:Devalues his wins
Red Rick said:Walkman said:Red Rick said:There was a decent discussion about this in a Dutch program. Reasons for trains failing are basically
- Everyone has a train
- There's not one train significantly better
- So the peloton doesn't really get stretched
Trains still work in smaller races, but it seems they're a bit done in the TdF. The days of HTC 8km lead outs are over.
They should put one guy behind Kittel to deny Cav his wheel. And also hit the front a bit later, but that's difficult to time these days.
You could, but you'd give your teammate the worst job in the peloton. And that is without Bouhanni
Nice grapes to watermelons comparison!SeriousSam said:A tour stage win is devalued if a rider isn't prepared, or even able, to actually complete the entire Tour. All achievements at the Tour derive their value within the context of a rider actually managing to do the 3,000+ km stage race with mountains and all.
Otherwise, they might as well allow the sprinters to sit some stages out and reenter when they feel like it.
robin440 said:kittel > cav in qatar