Probably my only good unique CQ pick. Nice to see him punch the air as he crossed the line.Nicolas Vinokurov finished with the chase group, the nepobaby is getting pretty legit.
He won them the ttt 3 days ago?What is the purpose of Joshua Tarling apart from being a nuisance to his teammates?
Vauquelin won them the TT over Trek.He won them the ttt 3 days ago?
He wasn't there to help Vauquelin because he was helping Onley. If you don't like that, take it up with the Ineos directors.Vauquelin won them the TT over Trek.
He wasn’t there to help Vauquelin on the rainy day, and was of no help to Godon who excels in this kind of stage.
We're going down a rabbit hole and you're leading. Columbia doesn't rank in the top ten of wettest spots. Those honors go to Indian regions, Cameroon (African continent), Maui, HI, Kauai, HI-both US....Here's a real comparison: Washington State's Olympic peninsula averages 200-255 inches of rainfall a year. The Olympic Mountain range isn't tall but it's an effective barrier. Poulsbo, Washington is on the East toe of those hills and get 35 inches of rain. Seattle, a mere 20 miles East averages 35 inches of rain and they are at the same elevation. Humbolt County, CA gets 180 inches a year but we regularly trained West of there and seldom got wet after late Spring. You just don't ride on the wettest time of day in the wettest place. Rider's birthplace doesn't determine their ability unless they are exclusively riding there.Interesting Map. Fairly suprising that there are no WT cyclists from Nariño, Valle de Cauca or Santander this year.
I mean, I guess my main earlier point was that there is really no escaping the rain in Colombia. It is, if you believe the rankings, the wettest country in the world -full stop-. As the above map shows, the cycling heartland is closer to the mountains (as with most places, I guess). Where it does usually, but far from always, rain late in the day. Also, mechanics's time is pretty cheap and they are plentyful, the bikes and components are free if you're in the WT, so most pros seem to ride outside often and take advantage of the ample mountain roads and the weather that is often bad, but hardly ever so bad that indoor training looks like a better alternative. And the pretty decent local race calendar, which is full of mountain climbs and descents, is also often hit by bad weather (and I doubt the bad weather protocol has ever been triggered).
Yes, as Squire said, this does not mean that all Colombians are good bad weather riders. But and I guess this would be my second and more applicable point, I would venture that, again, since there is pretty much no escape from the rain in Colombia, contra what some posters seem to assume, most Colombian WT pros are at least pretty used to riding in the rain and the cold.
