Valv.Piti said:I hope he thinks Ventoux + ITT, not Alps. They probably are the two most crucial stages on paper, even. Best case scenario, he wins on Ventoux with +30 seconds and goes even in the ITT.
Shame said:Valv.Piti said:I hope he thinks Ventoux + ITT, not Alps. They probably are the two most crucial stages on paper, even. Best case scenario, he wins on Ventoux with +30 seconds and goes even in the ITT.
I don't want NQ to win. He had nothing in the Pyrenees.
I think Froome should force NQ to lead, rather than let him follow.
He's looking at fourth, not second right now.
To sit and wait was a mistake in my mind, as many others.
He never could TT before.
Am I to believe he can suddenly TT well?
http://cqranking.com/men/asp/gen/race.asp?raceid=29899Shame said:Valv.Piti said:I hope he thinks Ventoux + ITT, not Alps. They probably are the two most crucial stages on paper, even. Best case scenario, he wins on Ventoux with +30 seconds and goes even in the ITT.
I don't want NQ to win. He had nothing in the Pyrenees.
I think Froome should force NQ to lead, rather than let him follow.
He's looking at fourth, not second right now.
To sit and wait was a mistake in my mind, as many others.
He never could TT before.
Am I to believe he can suddenly TT well?
What's nonsense is to say that the only thing that matters is the a posteriori analysis. A decision is good or bad depending on the info available at the time it was taken.DFA123 said:What nonsense! If he wins the Tour, his strategy has worked perfectly. He will have overturned a deficit to the favourite, without panicking and without making rash decisions. Perhaps the silly gamble would have been making an attack on a pretty gentle climb to try to gain a few seconds and ending up losing a few more, or trying to to descend too hard following another rider and crashing as a result.hrotha said:A happy outcome for Quintana wouldn't make his current strategy right. It's an unnecessary and silly gamble, but of course it can work out in his favour.
And you have no idea whether or not it was a bad decision until you see what his plan is for the entire race. If he is saving energy for a third week assault, or he doesn't want to be in yellow too early and have to defend for two weeks - it was absolutely the right tactic not to try anything yesterday - IF, of course, his tactic ends up winning him the race.hrotha said:What's nonsense is to say that the only thing that matters is the a posteriori analysis. A decision is good or bad depending on the info available at the time it was taken.DFA123 said:What nonsense! If he wins the Tour, his strategy has worked perfectly. He will have overturned a deficit to the favourite, without panicking and without making rash decisions. Perhaps the silly gamble would have been making an attack on a pretty gentle climb to try to gain a few seconds and ending up losing a few more, or trying to to descend too hard following another rider and crashing as a result.hrotha said:A happy outcome for Quintana wouldn't make his current strategy right. It's an unnecessary and silly gamble, but of course it can work out in his favour.
If Nibali had decided to do nothing but follow wheels at the Giro this year, and it so happened that Chaves and Valverde crashed (on top of Kruijswijk) and he won the GC by default, that wouldn't have made vindicated his decision to not try to get back some time where he could.
SeriousSam said:Can't wait for Mont Ventoux, round 2. Could be that we'll finally get an epic duel between two closely matched climbers, by far the best in the world, up an iconic climb on which they have history.
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SeriousSam said:Can't wait for Mont Ventoux, round 2. Could be that we'll finally get an epic duel between two closely matched climbers, by far the best in the world, up an iconic climb on which they have history.
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LOL. It also never ceases to amaze me just how many people think the earth revolves around it's axis just to please them. Meanwhile, four out of the last five Tour winners have been Froome, Froome, Wiggins and Evans; Andy Schleck and Juan Mauricio Soler were perhaps the most attacking Tour riders of the zips and Marco Pantani of the nineties; and Miguel Indurain remains the last man to win back-to-back Tours. Root for whatever you find entertaining, by all means, all sport is but spectacle. But the sporting gods do not care about your entertainment. I mean, Portugal just won the European Championships. And Floyd Mayweather remains the greatest pound-for-pound fighter in the world (and perhaps in history).SeriousSam said:That would be a very unwise missed opportunity and certainly wreck both of their Tour chances, because it would fail to entertain me.
He never could TT before.I don't want NQ to win. He had nothing in the Pyrenees.
I think Froome should force NQ to lead, rather than let him follow.
He's looking at fourth, not second right now.
To sit and wait was a mistake in my mind, as many others.
Now shoo. Jet from this thread.
He's right speaking about time deficit.carton said:Not much (external).sir fly said:Any voice from Quintana and Movi on the rest day.?
SeriousSam said:That would be a very unwise missed opportunity and certainly wreck both of their Tour chances, because it would fail to entertain me.
Yes, Ventoux is often hot and windy, but I'm not sure Quintana fancies those conditions.movingtarget said:SeriousSam said:That would be a very unwise missed opportunity and certainly wreck both of their Tour chances, because it would fail to entertain me.
Whatever happens there will be a shake up of the top 10 for sure. Ventoux is often hot or windy or both and for riders not at their best it will be very difficult. Quintana will have to try something just to see how Froome is going. The organizers were smart. Putting a TT after Ventoux means that non GC riders will ride Ventoux conservatively but for the top 10 it's a big stage and some riders will crack on the the mountain, the TT or both ! Riders like Porte and Quintana have to try something and Froome realizes that he can't sit on a small lead unless he is very confident of gaining big time in the TTs.
sir fly said:He's right speaking about time deficit.carton said:Not much (external).sir fly said:Any voice from Quintana and Movi on the rest day.?
It isn't much, but he's behind.
Froome won't have to pull in "mano a mano".