- Apr 12, 2015
- 7,060
- 1,204
- 20,680
The final weekend of Paris-Nice is sure to detonate the fireworks. Never lacking in spectacle, the 2019 Race to the Sun serves its Queen Stage on the penultimate day. Following five intermediate climbs the final haul-up on the Col de Turin is 14.9 kilometres at 7.3%. The route amounts to 181.5 kilometres.
The race begins in Nice and shortly the Côte de Gattières appears. Only 4.5 kilometres at 4.5%, so a gentle opener to stretch the legs. The riders continue to the Côte de Gourdon, a 7.7 kilometres climb at 4.2% with its crest after almost 50 kilometres. Up next is the Côte de Coursegoules. This mountain peaks out at 995 metres, while the ride to the top is 7.8 kilometres at 5%.
Still more than 100 kilometres to go and the race enters a calm phase. On rolling roads the route continues to the Côte de Gillette, which is a hill of 2 kilometres with a 5.6% slope. Following the descent a false flat runs to the foot of the Côte de Pelasque. Almost 27 kilometres remaining and tension is rising.
At 5.7 kilometres and with an average gradient of 6.2%, the Pelasque is the penultimate climb. Straight after the descent the riders tackle the final climb. The Turini Pass has never previously featured in Paris-Nice, possibly because of the elevation (1,607 metres). The high mountains easily turn into a grim and unwelcoming place this early in the season. The ascent is 14.9 kilometres long while its average slope sits at 7.3%. The mountain road is narrow and curvy with a dizzying series of hairpins.
The first three riders on the line win time bonuses of 10, 6 and 4 seconds, while two intermediate sprints (at kilometre 172.5 and kilometre 169.5) come with 3, 2 and 1 seconds. Note: the last bonus sprint is on the early slopes of the Turini pass.
The 7th stage of Paris-Nice starts at 11:25 and the expected finish is around 16:55 – both are local times.
gregrowlerson said:Why was a) LLS battling so hard for bonus seconds, and b) why was Kwiatkowski trying so hard to stop him from taking them? I might be wrong, but I have never thought of LLS having much ability at all on a proper high mountain; I would have thought he had less of a pedigree than Kwiatkowski.
And most definitely much less than Bernal, who should win this race now.
Bearing in mind that Sky have a current 1-2, I think they will try to ride as conservatively as possible for as long as possible. The longer it takes for the race to blow apart, the better chance that Kwiatkowski has of holding onto second place. But not only is this a 14 km climb, but it's a mountain that should see an inconsistency of pace: check out those gradients from 4-7 kms...
If Quintana is feeling good then surely he will try something there. If Yates has good legs then I could see him being a potential allie. Although even if an attack comes this early, I think that Sky will try to keep their team together. Bernal might not leave Kwiatkowski until Quintana is at least half a minute up the road.
Anyway, even if attacks only start in the last 5 kms, I don't see Bernal not overtaking his teammate. I expected bigger gaps after the ITT.
Red Rick said:Groenewegen DNS.
