- Oct 21, 2012
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I said the next few years. Apart from Vingo, they have no one on the horizon who will be competitive?VLAB has dominated the GT's for the last 5 years.
I said the next few years. Apart from Vingo, they have no one on the horizon who will be competitive?VLAB has dominated the GT's for the last 5 years.
True.VLAB has dominated the GT's for the last 5 years.
Maybe Nordhagen.I said the next few years. Apart from Vingo, they have no one on the horizon who will be competitive?
AgreedA month at calpe in January and a month at Teide in February, 2 months hard training, no girlfriend, no wife, no kids, no friends, no beers, no late evenings, lots of efforts, you show up to your first big goal and you try nothing, do nothing , shrug your shoulders, wait for a sprint that you will lose. I hate modern classics riders.
Stuff happens.He ended up putting his pedal into the helmet of the crasher at 45km to stay upright. Didn't see movement from that dude afterward...Mathieu was very lucky at that point although he was clearly the overwhelming power today.
Küng has broken his thigh, that's his spring (and probably more) done. Whoever at Tudor was in charge of the tubes for today almost literally has blood on their hands, if two of your three leaders slide out on the cobbles with no other riders involved it's not an accident.Do we know how the DNFs are for tomorrow? Philipsen, Brennan etc
And a nice post-race apology to the Tudor rider for the accidental contact. Several here didn't think he was so dominant, though. IMO, after winning a string of cyclocross titles including WC and taking a little time to train for this; the effort was totally dominant.Stuff happens.
Most guys would have gone down. I’m all about it, great move on his part.
He dominated the race. Fair to say there were no other elite riders on form or in the race, so I guess it’s fair to ask how dominant a ride it was. For whatever that’s worth, which I’d argue…isn’t a lot. He stomped the guys who showed up, easily. As expected. He’s a great rider. Pretty boring race, TBH. No suspense other than the crashing.And a nice post-race apology to the Tudor rider for the accidental contact. Several here didn't think he was so dominant, though. IMO, after winning a string of cyclocross titles including WC and taking a little time to train for this; the effort was totally dominant.
Wet, cool weather and the number of crashes added to a constant re-acceleration interval race. Adding in the hills it seemed to have more demanding situations than any one day effort this season. And he finished solo. Any other rider put in that kind of a race this year? Anyone?
yeah, really sad for Küng, but that setup was obviously not the right one for slippery conditions.Küng has broken his thigh, that's his spring (and probably more) done. Whoever at Tudor was in charge of the tubes for today almost literally has blood on their hands, if two of your three leaders slide out on the cobbles with no other riders involved it's not an accident.
Both, but more luck than skill.You saw luck there and not insane skill and reaction time?
That really sucks!Küng has broken his thigh, that's his spring (and probably more) done. Whoever at Tudor was in charge of the tubes for today almost literally has blood on their hands, if two of your thrre leaders slide out on the cobbles with no other riders involved it's not an accident.
By being awesome. Skill matters.How did VDP avoid getting dumped by that crash right in front of him?
