I thought he drifted straight back. Seems like that’s on the guys behind himVan Aert unintentionally causing the crash by sitting up.
The whole peloton was moving left to right so much I’m surprised the crashes didn’t come until the end. I wasn’t surprised some guys went downChaos.
He also isn't all that great on flat finishes.Kooij looked a bit underdone as he got the most perfect lead-out from Van Aert and just got the bickies - De Lie often loses the wheel in bunch sprints which gives him an impossible task at the finish.
I agree, Van Aert maintains his line as compared to the white line on the road, but the barriers funnel slightly squeezing those over his right shoulder. Not WVAs fault. We really need to look at the placement of barriers at sprint finishes.I thought he drifted straight back. Seems like that’s on the guys behind him
The problem was not that he moved, but that he coasted where riders behind him were sprinting, and his placement meant that they could only pass him on one side, but I think the rider who crashed saw him too late to get on the other side of him.I agree, Van Aert maintains his line as compared to the white line on the road, but the barriers funnel slightly squeezing those over his right shoulder. Not WVAs fault. We really need to look at the placement of barriers at sprint finishes.
They crashed because once again the race organisers couldn't be bothered to put the barriers in a straight *** line.The problem was not that he moved, but that he coasted where riders behind him were sprinting, and his placement meant that they could only pass him on one side, but I think the rider who crashed saw him too late to get on the other side of him.
But doesn’t the lead out guy do that at every sprint finish, meaning upcoming riders need to be aware there is going to one guy going slower than the rest in the final 50-100 meters?The problem was not that he moved, but that he coasted where riders behind him were sprinting, and his placement meant that they could only pass him on one side, but I think the rider who crashed saw him too late to get on the other side of him.
Yeah I said it here before that they all better have these big yellow barriers like in Flandres. I've tried to move them in Leuven at the Worlds, in the Scheldeprijs and at the Primus classic. Rock solid. What I can see here in Murcia with a lot of people at these finishes, maybe they lean forward with some rows to see better and they move in some places. Not so good for staying in 1 line, I assume they put it like that before the race, like we all expect.They crashed because once again the race organisers couldn't be bothered to put the barriers in a straight *** line.
Honestly m8, we all learn in kindergarten how to draw a *** straight line. The fact that the UCI still hasn't implemented a rule about this means they just don't give a bloody testicle about rider's safety.
Often riders can pass those on both sides in the closing meters.But doesn’t the lead out guy do that at every sprint finish, meaning upcoming riders need to be aware there is going to one guy going slower than the rest in the final 50-100 meters?
Good point—in this instance it squeezed the rider behind toward the railing.Often riders can pass those on both sides in the closing meters.
The reason it was close is that actually the leadout wasn't that great... yeah, the final part was, but before that Kooij had to do a little too much on his own, which cost him some energy.Kooij looked a bit underdone as he got the most perfect lead-out from Van Aert and just got the bickies - De Lie often loses the wheel in bunch sprints which gives him an impossible task at the finish.