Did you really look at anything? When in good form, Klaebo is one of the best classic skiers over 15km. He showed that last year by winning a few of them, including interval start.python said:as much as i dont like saying it, klaebo will not lose anything to either bolshu nor ustiougov on the hill tomorrow.
looking at his classic distance performances, he was not supposed to win today. he did. grandpa holds the secret ?![]()
did you really examine his classic records 10 years ago, genious ? he won plenty then. as relevant as your ignorance of his THIS YEAR distance record. 'when is good shape' is a red hearing applicable to ANY skier, genius...Vroome.exe said:Did you really look at anything? When in good form, Klaebo is one of the best classic skiers over 15km. He showed that last year by winning a few of them, including interval start.python said:as much as i dont like saying it, klaebo will not lose anything to either bolshu nor ustiougov on the hill tomorrow.
looking at his classic distance performances, he was not supposed to win today. he did. grandpa holds the secret ?![]()
If that is your reasoning, then I suppose you have no reservations about awarding the pursuit stage win to the inseparable duo consisting of Sundby and 'Majka-jam'DenisMenchov said:You can't seriously count the pursuit stage as a win. He only beat Usiugov and wheelsucked him the whole time. His time was nowhere close to being the fastest.
Cance > TheRest said:If that is your reasoning, then I suppose you have no reservations about awarding the pursuit stage win to the inseparable duo consisting of Sundby and 'Majka-jam'DenisMenchov said:You can't seriously count the pursuit stage as a win. He only beat Usiugov and wheelsucked him the whole time. His time was nowhere close to being the fastest.?
BullsFan22 said:I agree with the distances. I've said a number of times that they need to go back to the 'roots' and have the short prologue, a classic sprint (though I think they rarely had them in the tour to begin with, the last one being three years ago and before that in 2012. The first year (2007) I think was a good mixture. Sprinting in the Münich Olympic Stadium, then a 20km skiathlon in Oberstdorf, followed by a 15km individual classic, then sprint in Asiago, with the final two races in Val Di Fiemme, a 30km (!!!) classic mass start and the final climb on the last day. That's a healthy mixture of distances and basically 3 classic and 3 skate races.
2010 was the first year they used the 30-35 km point to point Cortina to Toblach handicap race. I think they need to bring that back next year, especially if the snow conditions are good. If they have two sprints, one of them needs to be classic. They can have the individual race after the sprint be classic.
The bonuses, well, that's been around for a while. I don't think they'll change that.
Max Rockatansky said:2019/2020 will look like this:
Lenzerheide Sprint C
Lenzerheide 15k F mass start
Vaduz Sprint F
Toblach 15k F
Toblach 15k C pursuit
Val di Fiemme 15k mass start
Val di Fiemme 9k Alpe Cermis
Ski Tour 2020 will be a bit different:
Östersund 15k F
Östersund 15k C
Are Sprint F
Storlien-Meraker 38k F mass start
Trondheim Sprint C
Trondheim Skiathlon pursuit
python said:a couple of parting afterthoughts...
btw, agree with john, it was my beef for a long time that sprinting bonuses are disproportionately high compared to distance bonuses. really, a multi-day tour should even out the cost of daring.
1. that klaebo did not hold back today is a fair conclusion. would he be a tad faster if he did not have 1:20 to fall back onto ? perhaps, but his suffering was for everyone to see which leads to my 2nd point...
2. Ustiougov would have won today if the russians had organized even a half-azzed team work yesterday. why is it so ? my guess is b/c unlike most teams, they dont have a head national coach on site to tell everyone what to do. technically, vialbe is the head coach but she sits in russia and onsite you have competing groups of 3-4 national team coaches: kramer, borodavko, perevozikov etc. such mess, was NOT possible in the old times, but that's the way it was...in both classic races btw.
3. why klaebo suffered so much on the hill ? his grandpa probably knows, but i am allowed to speculate..for one, he lacks experience. it is very important indeed. Yet i'd guess equally important was perhaps that he's built is as pure a sprinter as the sport probably had seen. northug was of the same mold and despite tonnes of experience he NEVER did anything remarkable. the proportion of fast twitch muscles during an extended high intensity effort probably causes acidosis in such types quicker than those endowned with slow twitches. sort of cavendish parallel to cycling ?
4. i am very happy for oestberg. she was plain superior despite the valiant efforts of the young russians. she's also a nice, humble young lady i can greatly respect unlike some other norwegian girls. a finnish coach in a swedish paper opined today, that her distance successes are due to ...reduction in the size of her thighs :idea: may be. which bring me to my last point
5. watch out for nepryaeva ! she showed incredible aerobic fitness and plenty of sprint skills. imagine, if like oestberg, she reduced her thighs just a tad ?
many valid points ! also, essentially having 2 leaders from 2 different and competing coaching groups creates objective difficulties when forced to choose the team tactic in a given race.BullsFan22 said:python said:a couple of parting afterthoughts...
btw, agree with john, it was my beef for a long time that sprinting bonuses are disproportionately high compared to distance bonuses. really, a multi-day tour should even out the cost of daring.
1. that klaebo did not hold back today is a fair conclusion. would he be a tad faster if he did not have 1:20 to fall back onto ? perhaps, but his suffering was for everyone to see which leads to my 2nd point...
2. Ustiougov would have won today if the russians had organized even a half-azzed team work yesterday. why is it so ? my guess is b/c unlike most teams, they dont have a head national coach on site to tell everyone what to do. technically, vialbe is the head coach but she sits in russia and onsite you have competing groups of 3-4 national team coaches: kramer, borodavko, perevozikov etc. such mess, was NOT possible in the old times, but that's the way it was...in both classic races btw.
3. why klaebo suffered so much on the hill ? his grandpa probably knows, but i am allowed to speculate..for one, he lacks experience. it is very important indeed. Yet i'd guess equally important was perhaps that he's built is as pure a sprinter as the sport probably had seen. northug was of the same mold and despite tonnes of experience he NEVER did anything remarkable. the proportion of fast twitch muscles during an extended high intensity effort probably causes acidosis in such types quicker than those endowned with slow twitches. sort of cavendish parallel to cycling ?
4. i am very happy for oestberg. she was plain superior despite the valiant efforts of the young russians. she's also a nice, humble young lady i can greatly respect unlike some other norwegian girls. a finnish coach in a swedish paper opined today, that her distance successes are due to ...reduction in the size of her thighs :idea: may be. which bring me to my last point
5. watch out for nepryaeva ! she showed incredible aerobic fitness and plenty of sprint skills. imagine, if like oestberg, she reduced her thighs just a tad ?
Yes, well the problem for the Russians is that, as you said, they have three distinct, well, four distinct training groups, the three that you mentioned and the fourth is coached by Egor Sorin, an assistant to Cramer for the past few years but now he's the coach of another group. So you have potentially four different philosophies and tactics. They had 10 men to start this tour, effectively only one man was a pure sprinter: Retivykh. Everyone else was either an allrounder or distance specialist.
I read that they worked for Bolshunov yesterday, because he was feeling better than Ustiugov and he needed to try and cut down into Klaebo, but more importantly, create a bigger buffer between himself and climbers like Krüger, Roethe, Spitsov, Sundby, Melnichenko...He did that quite well. The issue today was that he simply cannot climb as well as them. He is too big and strong for such a climb, a lot like Northug and guys like Teichmann or Rickardsson. I think he will get on the podium and may even win it in the future, but right now the final climb isn't his thing. The Norwegian guys that passed him weigh half as much as he does. I still thought he'd hold on for third, but the two that passed him were going fast. Oh well, the focus has been on the world's, so he's more or less on the right path. Bottom line is, Ustiugov lost the tour yesterday. Not sure how Klaebo would have skied had the deficit at the start would have been say, 30-40 seconds less, but Ustiugov lost 1:05 (including bonus seconds) yesterday. Today he beat Klaebo by 1:04. No, not saying that it would have been a sprint to the line today, but Ustiugov had one bad day and that cost him. What cost Bolshunov were the two Oberstdorf races. Minimal bonus seconds in the mass start and lost about 30 seconds (including bonuses) to Klaebo in the handicap pursuit. Those seconds would have been very useful today. Hopefully he learns for the future.
The relays will be between these two countries. Nobody has four strong skiers except Russia and Norway. Italy has basically one distance skier and one sprinter. The Finns have Niskanen and maybe Heikkinen, but he shows up maybe once or twice every two years. The Swedes have had only Halfvarsson and that's about it. The Germans these days are happy to have someone break into the top 20 on a given day. The French have a nice team that on paper, has a strong chance for a podium.
The women's relay could be more competitive, surprisingly. Russia, Norway, Sweden, Finland if Parmakoski is on and Niskanen and Kylloenen are healthy. The US has Diggins and Bjornsen. Caldwell is hit or miss in relays. Brennan and Patterson maaaybe.
Indeed. Congrats to Lisa Vittozzi for her first victorySinger01 said:Again the women's biathlon far less predictable than the men's, pursuit set up very nicely.