I got the vibe he was less concerned with taking time and just knew he would get the win. The chasing riders did stay closer than expected though.Feels weird that my main takeaway from this is that Pogacar was underwhelming.
I got the vibe he was less concerned with taking time and just knew he would get the win. The chasing riders did stay closer than expected though.Feels weird that my main takeaway from this is that Pogacar was underwhelming.
Feels weird that my main takeaway from this is that Pogacar was underwhelming.
They were really slow on the climb so the headwind must’ve been stiff. Probably explains at least some of the negative racingYup, kinda. To me the outcome is maybe not that surprising (I mean a few seconds between top guys at the end) but the fact that Pog attacked and got caught is.
Well Pogacar did get a gap and enough distance that draft didn't matter and he still got brought back by VingegaardThey were really slow on the climb so the headwind must’ve been stiff. Probably explains at least some of the negative racing
@Red Rick you were right. Vingegaard is stronger this year than in the same time of last year at TA.
I definitely think Gaudu has improved.Yes, and whats why we can't give two *** about comparisons like that.
Honestly, Jonas and Pogi didnt seem two levels above everyone as I thought they would. Both were good, but not great today I think (or Gaudu has just improved a lot).
Tomorrow is a classic stage each and every year, and Jonas will try, why not? Same for Gaudu, but this is Pogacar terrain and he will most likely be better uphill, downhill, on the flat and in the sprint, so thats a hard one.
Pogacar.
I think in this year's Tour, we'll see Pogacar being ahead by several minutes on the second rest day, with week 3 being Vingegaard clawing back time
Until you get criticized for doing nothing.Whenever anyone does anything, if they don't win, they get criticised. Always safer to just never do anything.
He has, but how much? Thats hard to tell, but today he seemed pretty much on par with Jonas and Pogi (slightly better than Jonas, slightly worse than Pogi).I definitely think Gaudu has improved.
At the same time, I'm a bit curious that Vingegaard actually pulled Pogacar back, cause you can't blame that on wind. So to me it seems like the gap between a 40 minute climb and a 15 minute climb was even bigger than I expected, although the weather was actually nice today.
It kidna makes me think that if Tirreno last year had had a sunny nice mountain finish on Terminillo or something Pogacar probably doesn't delete everyone like he did on Carpegna.
Easier to do when bonus seconds aren’t in play, especially with those close behind you.Easy win for Pogacar, although I do believe he should be given some wins to other riders. More beneficial if he ever needs help
Don't think Pogacar went into the red on his attack. He's smart, he knows that if two good climbers start relaying behind him on a 7% climb he's at a solid disadvantage and why risk anything given his GC lead? Carpegna is shorter and steeper, definitely more suited for a solo.I definitely think Gaudu has improved.
At the same time, I'm a bit curious that Vingegaard actually pulled Pogacar back, cause you can't blame that on wind. So to me it seems like the gap between a 40 minute climb and a 15 minute climb was even bigger than I expected, although the weather was actually nice today.
It kidna makes me think that if Tirreno last year had had a sunny nice mountain finish on Terminillo or something Pogacar probably doesn't delete everyone like he did on Carpegna.
Don't think Pogacar went into the red on his attack. He's smart, he knows that if two good climbers start relaying behind him on a 7% climb he's at a solid disadvantage and why risk anything given his GC lead? Carpegna is shorter and steeper, definitely more suited for a solo.
That being said, I'm surprised he didn't attack again in the last 3km.
I definitely think Gaudu has improved.
At the same time, I'm a bit curious that Vingegaard actually pulled Pogacar back, cause you can't blame that on wind. So to me it seems like the gap between a 40 minute climb and a 15 minute climb was even bigger than I expected, although the weather was actually nice today.
It kidna makes me think that if Tirreno last year had had a sunny nice mountain finish on Terminillo or something Pogacar probably doesn't delete everyone like he did on Carpegna.
That's how fast we go from "Recovery is Pogacar's strength" to "Vingo's gonna win time in week 3.
I think that PN showed that Pogacar learned a lesson from last year. Don't go all out against Vingo, so the slovenian may be really tough to break in the Tour.
To reduce the group from a size where everyone will attack you to just the two top rivals. And obviously to test if his competitors would ride tempo or look at each others refusing to pull (which has happened in the past). Once he saw that Vingegaard was commited to pull him back and that Gaudu was also ready to take pulls he saw obviously little benefit of making this an ITT contest.So why attacking in the first place? It's obvious you need a very intense effort to distance a top climber like Vingegaard. He attacked hard but simply couldn't keep a superior pace. At some point maybe he slowed down but I don't believe that he was limiting himself during his initial surge. It's not what you do when you want to make a statement against your arch-rival.
To reduce the group from a size where everyone will attack you to just the two top rivals. And obviously to test if his competitors would ride tempo or look at each others refusing to pull (which has happened in the past). Once he saw that Vingegaard was commited to pull him back and that Gaudu was also ready to take pulls he saw obviously little benefit of making this an ITT contest.
Pogi saw that he couldn't make differences to gaudu and vingegaard after the attack, so he waited. If he saw that Vingegaard wouldn't be able to catch him, he wouldn't wait.Just before Pog's attack Vinge already went to the front and set the pace strong enough to discourage any attacks from other riders (except from Gaudu possibly). Pog didn't let him work though and attacked almost immediately. I agree that he probably slowed down at some point seeing that Vinge keeps the distance close but his first attack was intended to do the damage (and it wasn't light), he just couldn't distance the due behind.
Well you asked me why he attacked, I gave you multiple reasons (which he also gave in the interview after). If you're convinced that he only attacked because he wanted to put a minute into them on a 7% climb than fair enough but I don't think him not doing that is saying too much about his current form.Just before Pog's attack Vinge already went to the front and set the pace strong enough to discourage any attacks from other riders (except from Gaudu possibly). Pog didn't let him work though and attacked almost immediately. I agree that he probably slowed down at some point seeing that Vinge keeps the distance close but his first attack was intended to do the damage (and it wasn't light), he just couldn't distance the due behind.
With Jonas willing to work it was going to be 2v1 into a headwind on a 7% climb, in which case Pog would have to kill himself to keep a gap so easing up and waiting for the sprint is probably the better option. And - to me at least - it definitely looked like he eased up so I think from that point he was always going to wait for the sprint.Well Pogacar did get a gap and enough distance that draft didn't matter and he still got brought back by Vingegaard
