At the end or 5km out?johnymax said:If I'm not mistaken there is a very steep short climb in the end of stage 2.
At the end or 5km out?johnymax said:If I'm not mistaken there is a very steep short climb in the end of stage 2.
Netserk said:Doing the Tour now is the most stupid decision he can possibly make. He can be good, but he won't be at his absolute best, and he would waste his biggest chance to win the Vuelta.
Dazed and Confused said:Nah, he can still be at his best. J-Rod is a 80 day/year rider and competitive pretty much over the distance.
Only question is the severity of the broken/fractured ribs and of course the kind of team Katusha can bring to the tour.
I expect the next week will give us an indication of the plan.
Walkman said:It would not matter if he was a 200 day/year rider.
You need to put some serious effort into improving your form when you have had so much bad luck as J-Rod has had. First he needs to rest and recover, both from his wounds caused by the Ardennes crash and also the wounds caused by the crash in in the Giro.
Then he needs to start doing some heavy lifting to get back on track. And after that, you need time to recover from all the hard training and start getting in top shape. And there is just no enough time to do all that before the Tour imho.
Netserk said:Doing the Tour now is the most stupid decision he can possibly make. He can be good, but he won't be at his absolute best, and he would waste his biggest chance to win the Vuelta.
Dazed and Confused said:I don't agree. It matters a great deal. It indicates a certain baseline form. Contrast with riders operating with narrow peaks.
Valverde is another rider I can think of who might be able to come back in similar circumstances.
I still give it 80% chance he will be at the tour. Note I still don't think he can beat Froome in top form regardless of the Spaniard's form.
Anyway we shall see.
He already won a stage in 2010, so the only thing he could gain would be KOM (I doubt it) and another stage win. Not worth it imo. Being fresh is so important for the Vuelta. If he can get in top form for the Vuelta (and not ride the Tour) I think he could beat Quintana in the GC there. Quintana would have the Giro in his legs and he would ride with Valverde in the Vuelta, who I doubt would let Quintana be sole captain.Arredondo said:I agree most of it. But if he's able to ride the Tour (i don't see it happen), then he doesn't have to race for GC. Why not hunting for stages those three weeks? And targeting something like the mountains jersey? It would be cool to see him wearing that jersey. I opt for this strategy. Just to find joy again on the bike, and not getting that stress again of riding always in front etc.
He has a chance to win the Vuelta, but with the presence of Quintana, he can lose him just as much as he can win it.
Netserk said:He already won a stage in 2010, so the only thing he could gain would be KOM (I doubt it) and another stage win. Not worth it imo. Being fresh is so important for the Vuelta. If he can get in top form for the Vuelta (and not ride the Tour) I think he could beat Quintana in the GC there. Quintana would have the Giro in his legs and he would ride with Valverde in the Vuelta, who I doubt would let Quintana be sole captain.
Arredondo said:Andrew Hood @EuroHoody 1 u
Katusha GM Ekimov confirmed Joaquim Rodriguez returned to training on bike; decision on TdF "soon" in coming days
In my heart i don't hope he will ride it.
therealtimshady said:Emimov says "likely Rodriguez will ride the tour"