That would be hideous for an Italian race.The Tour de Suisse awards the #rideforgino-Bergpreis as a version of the Cima Coppi from this year onwards, so you could also use English and hashtags.
The Cycling News forum is still looking to add volunteer moderators with. If you're interested in helping keep our discussions on track, send a direct message to
In the meanwhile, please use the Report option if you see a post that doesn't fit within the forum rules.
Thanks!
That would be hideous for an Italian race.The Tour de Suisse awards the #rideforgino-Bergpreis as a version of the Cima Coppi from this year onwards, so you could also use English and hashtags.
It‘s also hideous for a Swiss race, but I wanted to bring this up in some thread. SorryThat would be hideous for an Italian race.
May 16 | Individual Time Trial | Prologue | Varese > Varese | 7 Km |
May 17 | Medium Mountain | Stage 1 | Bergamo > Madonna del Ghisallo | 235 Km |
May 18 | Medium Mountain | Stage 2 | Lovere > Iseo | 167 Km |
May 19 | Plain | Stage 3 | Sirmione > Marina di Massa | 254 Km |
May 20 | Plain | Stage 4 | Firenze (Ponte a Ema) > Viterbo | 234 Km |
May 21 | Plain | Stage 5 | Fiano Romano > Montecassino | 214 Km |
May 22 | Individual Time Trial | Stage 6 | Benevento > Montevergine di Mercogliano | 61 Km |
May 23 | Medium Mountain | Stage 7 | Melfi > Viggiano | 210 Km |
May 24 | Medium Mountain | Stage 8 | Salerno > Ravello (Amalfi) | 160 Km |
May 25 | Rest Day | - | San Benedetto del Tronto | - |
May 26 | Medium Mountain | Stage 9 | San Benedetto del Tronto > Recanati | 226 Km |
May 27 | High Mountain | Stage 10 | Cagli > Cagli | 165 Km |
May 28 | Medium Mountain | Stage 11 | Pergola > Bagno di Romagna | 159 Km |
May 29 | Plain | Stage 12 | Cesena (TechnoGym Village) > Padova | 217 Km |
May 30 | High Mountain | Stage 13 | Conegliano > Sauris | 193 Km |
May 31 | High Mountain | Stage 14 | Tolmezzo > Cividale del Friuli | 191 Km |
June 1 | Rest Day | - | Trento | - |
June 2 | High Mountain | Stage 15 | Trento > Sella Valsugana | 187 Km |
June 3 | Plain | Stage 16 | Riva del Garda > Pavia | 221 Km |
June 4 | Individual Time Trial | Stage 17 | Tortona > Castellania | 67 Km |
June 5 | High Mountain | Stage 18 | Alessandria > Sestriere | 234 Km |
June 6 | High Mountain | Stage 19 | Pinerolo > Cuneo | 251 Km |
June 7 | Medium Mountain | Stage 20 | Torino > Torino | 90 Km |
Love nearly all of it. Thought it brings me to question how hard is too hard, and I lean toward this being solidly too hard.Here you have my wish list for the Giro, @Red Rick. Especially Viggiano deserves a better treatment than in 2014.
Descending Faito that side may be a bit unrealistic, but I'd like to see something new for the area.
Right so since I've been summoned I feel compelled to say something about every stage.Rules
Maglia Rosa: No bonus seconds in the race. When the Trofeo Senza Fine is awarded in Torino, no losers blemish the podium - the winner stands alone.
Maglia Ciclamino: Points are scored on the finish-line only, all stages give the same amount: 25-20-16-14-12-10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1.
Maglia Verde: Climbs are divided in four categories: Cima Coppi, 1st, 2nd & 3rd. Cima Coppi (highest climb): 30-20-15-12-10-8-6-4-2-1. Category 1 climbs: 20-12-8-6-5-4-3-2-1. Category 2 climbs: 10-6-4-3-2-1. Category 3 climbs: 5-3-2-1. The rider first over Montello will wear the jersey for stage 1.
Maglia Azzurra: The Intergiro classification takes the time of the riders at the mid-stage Intergiro sprint. There will also be a separate Intergiro points classification with the same distribution as the regular points competition. The winner of the daily Intergiro sprint will get on the podium after the stage winner. In all three ITTs, the Intergiro sprint is located at the second intermediate time check.
The 15 climbs in stage 9 give no points, but the rider who crosses the top first over most climbs of the day is awarded a special prize. Likewise, there's a special prize for the rider who wins the bonus sprint in Borgo Valsagana (stage 15). There will be no team classification.
May 16 Individual Time Trial Prologue Varese > Varese 7 Km May 17 Medium Mountain Stage 1 Bergamo > Madonna del Ghisallo 235 Km May 18 Medium Mountain Stage 2 Lovere > Iseo 167 Km May 19 Plain Stage 3 Sirmione > Marina di Massa 254 Km May 20 Plain Stage 4 Firenze (Ponte a Ema) > Viterbo 234 Km May 21 Plain Stage 5 Fiano Romano > Montecassino 214 Km May 22 Individual Time Trial Stage 6 Benevento > Montevergine di Mercogliano 61 Km May 23 Medium Mountain Stage 7 Melfi > Viggiano 210 Km May 24 Medium Mountain Stage 8 Salerno > Ravello (Amalfi) 160 Km May 25Rest Day - San Benedetto del Tronto - May 26 Medium Mountain Stage 9 San Benedetto del Tronto > Recanati 226 Km May 27 High Mountain Stage 10 Cagli > Cagli 165 Km May 28 Medium Mountain Stage 11 Pergola > Bagno di Romagna 159 Km May 29 Plain Stage 12 Cesena (TechnoGym Village) > Padova 217 Km May 30 High Mountain Stage 13 Conegliano > Sauris 193 Km May 31 High Mountain Stage 14 Tolmezzo > Cividale del Friuli 191 Km June 1Rest Day - Trento - June 2 High Mountain Stage 15 Trento > Sella Valsugana 187 Km June 3 Plain Stage 16 Riva del Garda > Pavia 221 Km June 4 Individual Time Trial Stage 17 Tortona > Castellania 67 Km June 5 High Mountain Stage 18 Alessandria > Sestriere 234 Km June 6 High Mountain Stage 19 Pinerolo > Cuneo 251 Km June 7 Medium Mountain Stage 20 Torino > Torino 90 Km
Most of the designs were previous stand-alone works, then tweaked a bit and with some additions to add it up to a complete route. Of the individual stages, I think only Recanati and Pinerolo-Cuneo are too much (in addition to the length of the ITTs). I'm satisfied with the pacing of the overall route and I think I managed to show how to make some of the areas work. I definitely hope that if Fauniera returns, it will be the last mountain stage. I don't think it's unrealistic to hope that they'll include Sampeyre as well, so long as they don't do Montoso too.Love nearly all of it. Thought it brings me to question how hard is too hard, and I lean toward this being solidly too hard.
I'm 260 km short of a proper GT (4000 km), and I'm still so soft that I include rest days. I don't know what the total vertical gain is (I don't trust LFR there at all).How much total distance and desnivel does your route have?
Yeah it works great as a wishlist. I agree if you skip Montoso and keep the distance in plausible range Sampeyre-Fauniera can happen like that.Most of the designs were previous stand-alone works, then tweaked a bit and with some additions to add it up to a complete route. Of the individual stages, I think only Recanati and Pinerolo-Cuneo are too much (in addition to the length of the ITTs). I'm satisfied with the pacing of the overall route and I think I managed to show how to make some of the areas work. I definitely hope that if Fauniera returns, it will be the last mountain stage. I don't think it's unrealistic to hope that they'll include Sampeyre as well, so long as they don't do Montoso too.
Despite the success of 2018, I also fear that Fraiteve is more likely than double Sestriere afterwards.
When were the later Zomegnan years?I think the later Zomegnan years received a lot of complaints from teams and riders, so there's a political economy to it. Like, how sponsor-friendly a field can you attract if riders fear that they can't combine it well with many other races? And it'd be bad to raise the bar to a level you can't repeat (or so I thought, until they just decided to make worse routes than previously).
I do suspect though that they lack the eye for good options in less well-known areas. So better to include high mountains that will be cancelled or cross the border (on paper). In the first two weeks I don't have a single climb above 1500 m, but you can still design decisive stages in all of Italy with that in mind.
Mutants is what you have a bag of money for. Or not.But it's the mutants who sell. I don't think RCS will be happy with a lighter version of the 2022 field (minus Nibali). Zomegnan was fired after 2011, but perhaps as much over transfers and whacky/gimmick ideas (as Crostis was perceived to be) than "hardness" alone. I'd much prefer if they avoided the highest mountains, borders and "gimmicks", minimised transfers and made quiet, solid routes for a few years. Less controversy, just racing.
Even if that rider is Adam Hansen?The moment you sell yourself out to the whims of 1 rider
I agree in principle but I don't think that selling yourself to the whims of one (or two) riders, and fans enjoying it, make cycling decline. The Giro and Tour have done it very deliberately for the past 30 years.Mutants is what you have a bag of money for. Or not.
The moment you sell yourself out to the whims of 1 rider is the moment you downgrade your own race. Fans eating up is just speeding up the decline of the sport.
The best I can do is provide the ridewithgps tracks, you can easily download the .gpx files of the stages there: https://ridewithgps.com/collections/2215873Are there any PCM designs for these routes? Would love to play them in PCM. That's a brutal design by the way, Netserk.
Let me guess, you think it's an 8/10?Shame on me for missing so much here. Design! And - click - it's the Netserk design!
From the OP, I know one thing: Tadej Pogacar will win the bike race, mark my words...
I'm going to read it all!
My hope is that as the route has even less emphasis on hard final climbs than 2015 (my most difficult MTF is Sestriere or Madonna del Ghisallo and the hardest last climb for a descent finish is Colli di San Fermo), climbers will have to race at least some of the penultimate climbs.For what it's worth, I actually do think the route might be too hard. I feel like riders would start focusing on conserving energy so much that most of the best and most original designs would simply not get raced properly. But then to be fair, none of us really know how this design would be raced and it's mostly guess work.
But I mean the individual designs...chefs kiss.
Yeah and I really like that. My problem is rather that I question if gc guys will race a medium mountain stage that might see gc action in a more conventional GT, because they still rather conserve energy for the really big stages. This seems like the kind of route where it's all about dealing big blows without having a bad day and that might lead to passive racing on really well designed days. But as I said, that's just a concern I would have in reality. I think such a radically different route would have a lot of consequences none of us are anticipating. In fact it would probably take years for the teams to figure out the right approach for such a race.My hope is that as the route has even less emphasis on hard final climbs than 2015 (my most difficult MTF is Sestriere or Madonna del Ghisallo and the hardest last climb for a descent finish is Colli di San Fermo), climbers will have to race at least some of the penultimate climbs.
Thanks a lot but it says I don't have permission to view it.The best I can do is provide the ridewithgps tracks, you can easily download the .gpx files of the stages there: https://ridewithgps.com/collections/2215873
Let me guess, you think it's an 8/10?