(Alfred) The Hitch gets it right.
What makes Milan Sanremo its reputation as one of the hardest classic races in the calendar is the combination of long straight roads, distance, climbs and - don't forget - technical descents. Moser and Kelly besides Merckx won it in the descent. They were all great descenders. I didn't mention it but Merckx also argue that modern bikes are too light for daring descenders to take risks in the descent of the Poggio. Perhaps !
How such a race finishes up with a sprint is a real mystery to me and sometimes I'm just wondering what would happen if Bordeaux-Paris ever was reinserted into the pro calendar. Sprint, as well?
I agree with DT when he says it's a lot harder to make a difference on any race whatsoever. I remember the 1997 spring very well. Zabel's sprint in Sanremo wasn't the only shock. In Flanders you had some 60 riders in front before the Kapelmuur. In Paris-Roubaix, 11 riders sprinting for the win. In Liège Bastogne, 60 riders in front before the Redoute. All of that seems usual today but was unprecedented back then. Yesterday I was watching a report on Andrei Tchmil on Canvas (Dutch-speaking Belgian channel) and saw his win in Flanders again. 60 riders in front after the Bosberg. If it weren't for his attack with 10km to go, there would have been a sprint.
Food program and training methods? Maybe an element but then I'd argue that Coppi didn't train the same way as Girardengo did (he's known as a revolutionary in that field), Merckx didn't train the same way as Coppi or Kelly as Merckx. It's always been in constant evolution. Yet, the repetition of sprint is very modern. Different nationalities? I don't agree. Coppi and Merckx were racing when cycling was at the peak of its popularity. It was euro-oriented but ALL Europe was cycling, which by far is no longer the case now.
And by the way, I don't agree with the argument of the pre Sanremo calendar being heavier today. Most European pre-Sanremo events existed in the 80's (Laigueglia, Bessèges, Med Tour, Mallorca, ...). In the seventies, riders were still often racing six-days events in winter, in order to keep up.
The Tour of Flanders in Merckx's days had far fewer climbs than it has today, that's for certain. However, several things did not change:
- The climbs are short
- The course is constantly turning, which allows for weaker riders to come back
- It's 40km shorter than Milan Sanremo
In the end, there must be reason if Merckx lost it three times to Eric Leman, who was a brave Flandrian (and a very fast sprinter) but too weak to take the lead in big races. Leman could never have beaten Merckx in Sanremo, no way ! The reason Merckx could win Flanders twice is stormy weather wich exhausted the sprinters. There's a reason he could set a stunning record of 7 wins in Sanremo (and could even win it in hot sunny days).
And besides you had other weird winners like Zandegu, Dolman, Bal, Martens or Lammerts ! Flanders is a nice classic but not that hard !
PS: I do apologise for my poor English in the OP but you'll understand that even if you can speak three languages, the art of translating from one into another is still not easy. I hope it's still understandable.
