- Apr 19, 2010
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I like Peter Sagan, he makes me laugh. I like the way he wins bicycle races without breaking a sweat or even breathing hard.

happychappy said:I like Peter Sagan, he makes me laugh. I like the way he wins bicycle races without breaking a sweat or even breathing hard.
Wallace and Gromit said:The age of Evans and Sastre was why I made reference to "not many" GT winners older than Wiggo.
Their performances since, plus Basso's (32 when he won the Giro in 2010) suggest that there's not much likelihood of additional GTs once you've won one in your 30s.
Maybe that was actually your point.
Wiggo wasn't going so badly in the Giro this year, at least uphill and on the flat. It's only since then that he's obviously given up on GTs; he was maybe a kg or two heavier for the Giro than last year's Tour, but his major weight gain - the most overt sign of having given up on GTS - has been since the Giro.
King Boonen said:The mountains in the Tour are perfectly suited to a guy like Wiggins who can grind it out with the best of them, just as they were for Cadel. We've seen what happens when things get steep in the Vuelta and the Giro (although in the Giro the descending didn't help).
martinvickers said:who else was really on mountain form in that tour, bar nibali? Andy and Berti were out, Menchov was..well, Menchov. Frank pinged and Evans was dogging it (not unlike Wiggsy this year, actually!). Quintana.
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The Hitch said:Nibali is no joke. The fact that he lost 6 minutes to Wiggins, and 3 to Froome (4 if you include Froome's puncture) shows just how many lightyears ahead of everyone Sky were.
Nibali is no Schleck. He got 8th in the first ITT. Most other GC contenders would lose more.Von Mises said:Nearly 6 minutes came from time trials, wasnt it?
martinvickers said:I doubt we'll ever see such a 'team' win again, certainly not for several years - especially now other teams feel they finally have a few ideas to deal with the Train.
The Hitch said:
How on earth can you say with a straight face that it took teams till 2013 to come up with ideas on how to "deal with The train".
Sorry if its like telling you that Santa aint real but "The train" was not invented by Dave Bailsford and there is no tactical inginuity to it whatsoever. Its just putting your riders on the front. Been done for decades.
Netserk said:Nibali is no Schleck. He got 8th in the first ITT. Most other GC contenders would lose more.
Says something about Wiggo.
martinvickers said:I doubt we'll ever see such a 'team' win again, certainly not for several years - especially now other teams feel they finally have a few ideas to deal with the Train.
King Boonen said:I can see him doing well back on the track and possibly in the classics if he keeps the weight on. Not sure if he fancies it though. If he's scared descending surely the thought of a crash in Arenberg causes him to mess his bib shorts?
BroDeal said:Yup. Horner is a good bet. Even if he decided to continue full bore, it would take a very special GT route to allow him to win again. A lot of risk for little reward.
The funny thing about the Wiggins situation is that last year he berated the public for being bone idle wnkers who never worked hard for anything in their lives. Now he is telling people that it is too much work to prepare for a grand tour.
The Hitch said:
How on earth can you say with a straight face that it took teams till 2013 to come up with ideas on how to "deal with The train".
Sorry if its like telling you that Santa aint real but "The train" was not invented by Dave Bailsford and there is no tactical inginuity to it whatsoever. Its just putting your riders on the front. Been done for decades.
vedrafjord said:I don't think it's about having ideas to deal with the train, it's brute force and numbers. Nobody got cleverer this year (Movistar especially the opposite of clever in the Tour), Sky's train just got weaker.
Last year they had all their strongest riders bar Uran and Henao in the Tour squad, including a very in form Wiggins.
This year they tried to split between Giro and Tour, Rogers left, and two of their 3 GT leaders had nightmares in their chosen GTs.
You might be right about not seeing its likes for several years to come, but that might be because Froome doesn't need the train like Wiggins did, as he's capable of gaining big chunks of time in the mountains and doesn't have to ride defensively to the same extent.
ToreBear said:He was sick. He started building his fitness slowly again in august 2012. His first training was going hunting for moose.
As in walking in the forest, carrying a gun and shooting. Just looking at results are often misleading.
He seems to be on the mend as his results this summer indicate.
martinvickers said:Hitch, mend your tone, and I'll give you an answer. I've just about reached a limit on the tantrams I feel like tolerating from you. If you want a debate, I'm up for it, but i'm not going to waste my time with hissy fits.
AcademyCC said:Whilst i dont doubt Wiggins cleanliness, I think the amount of effort it takes to win a grand tour(even on drugs) is monumental. That guy has to spend probably 6 months away from his family and live like a monk.
Its very easy to through out a comment like the OP has, backing it up in practice is a little more difficult.
BroDeal said:Funny how pretty much everyone else manages to put in the work to get in GT shape year after year, often for ten years. Then again, they are not bone idle w@ankers.
AcademyCC said:I pretty much agree. Alls i can say is i understand the strain that challenging for a GT puts not only on a person but also his family. Its easy for us to condem him from the start but appreciate what goes on behind the scenes.