Franklin said:But, but, but... so many people say this is impossible... why does Gilbert even try?![]()
There's a difference between trying to win the tour, and seeing how good you are against the best. He's going to try the latter not the former.
Franklin said:But, but, but... so many people say this is impossible... why does Gilbert even try?![]()
Ramira said:There's a difference between trying to win the tour, and seeing how good you are against the best. He's going to try the latter not the former.
Franklin said:Considering the posts here getting top 10 at the Vuelta might be possible in the future and certainly not worth giving up his classics career... As there has never been a classic specialist who won a GT (ok Kelly, doesn't count... uhm Jalabert doesn't count... ohhhh Di Luca doesn't count, ahhhh Valverde also doesn't count).
From your post I might almost think you also claim it's impossible he will ever win a GT?
*I personally find it unlikely, but history seems to show it is possible*
Parrulo said:di luca and piti aren't exactly the best examples out there.
Never ever underestimate the Ster ZLM Toer. And Paris-Corrèze. Don't forget about Paris-Corrèze.Libertine Seguros said:di Luca and Valverde showed much more stage-racing promise in their early careers than Gilbert has
Ramira said:SNIP FOR BREVITY
Libertine Seguros said:The Vuelta was very different back in Kelly's day, Jalabert was a completely changed man, far more than we've seen from Gilbert, and di Luca and Valverde showed much more stage-racing promise in their early careers than Gilbert has (di Luca 2nd in País Vasco 2000 and Tirreno-Adriatico 2002, then winning Brixia in 2004; Valverde was 3rd in the Vuelta in 2003 before he'd won any one-day race bigger than the Klasika Primavera and so was a GC man at least as long as he's been a classics man).
Gilbert might just be able to manage a top 10 here or there if there's a high attrition rate and he changes himself fundamentally, but is that really worth potentially sacrificing his other side for?
El Pistolero said:Yes, and Pozzato showed a lot more classics potential in his early career than Gilbert. Look at them now.
Parrulo said:the vuelta was different when kelly won it.
jaja rode in the 90's and di luca and piti aren't exactly the best examples out there.
Sylvester said:Some guys who made the top 10 of the Tour in (very) recent history:
Andrea Peron
Daniele Nardello
Marcos Serrano
Andrei Kivilev
François Simon
Georg Totschnig
Cyril Dessel
Michael Rogers
Kim Kirchen
Mikel Astarloza
Bradley Wiggins
Christophe Le Mevel
Ryder Hesjedal
Chris Horner
Gilbert would certainly not be the odd one out. However, I can't see him win the Tour in the near future, and I doubt he would sacrifice (at least a part of) his classics campaign for a shot at a 6th place in the Tour or a Vuelta podium.
DenisMenchov said:Has Gillbert dyed his hair?
Ramira said:Yiap, as some form of celebration after winning the Belgian National Championships.
boomcie said:The way I understood it, he dyed it blonde because it would go well with the yellow jersey. For the same reason he bought a yellow watch and put it on immediately after the finish of the first stage.
El Pistolero said:Glad he doesn't ride the Vuelta this year
Sylvester said:Some guys who made the top 10 of the Tour in (very) recent history:
Andrea Peron
Daniele Nardello
Marcos Serrano
Andrei Kivilev
François Simon
Georg Totschnig
Cyril Dessel
Michael Rogers
Kim Kirchen
Mikel Astarloza
Bradley Wiggins
Christophe Le Mevel
Ryder Hesjedal
Chris Horner
Gilbert would certainly not be the odd one out. However, I can't see him win the Tour in the near future, and I doubt he would sacrifice (at least a part of) his classics campaign for a shot at a 6th place in the Tour or a Vuelta podium.
Libertine Seguros said:Kim Kirchen grew up with GTs and not the Ardennes?
Kirchen is a hilly classics rider who turned into a GC rider. But he got to the lower end of the top 10, and that was as a good ITT rider and after several years of good stage racing results that started in his 3rd year as a pro. Gilbert's in his 9th pro season and hasn't done a single thing over the big mountains, and precious little in ITTs. And is much better than Kirchen ever was in the Classics. Why would you sacrifice it for the off-chance of coming 7th or 8th in the Tour (which I still rate as much less likely from Gilbert than it was from Kimmy)?
I'm still resentful of the idea of Alejandro Valverde as a "classics specialist turned GC rider". That's very dismissive of the all-round abilities of the man.
DenisMenchov said:We must give Gilbert a chance at least, Who would have thought that Wiggins can climb???
Gilbert never tried, but maybe he can, I hope so.