cawright1375 said:
I was more surprised to see that Heinrich Haussler was not selected. That breakaway performance from 2009 showed real guts and talent. Then again, it seems that JV likes to race for 2nd or 4th rather than go for the win.
This is just bizarre.
The team is calibrated to maximise their chances of a stage win. Their best chances of winning a stage are in the TTT, in the flat sprints with Farrar or in the difficult sprints with Hushovd. So most of the team is there to help them get that win. The only rider in the whole team who isn't going to contribute much to the TTT or the sprints is Hesjedal.
Now they do also have a goal of getting one of three riders into the top 10 and in that portion of their goals they are indeed racing for a placing because they simply don't have anyone capable of winning. But they are racing for a GC placing in a very compact, efficient, way. They are taking just three climbers, two of whom will also be helpful in their attempt to win the TTT. All three of the climbers have GT top 10s to their name. Whichever of them is riding best will have the other two as very competent assistants, which is more than a top 10 candidate really needs.
Look at the balance of the team. Its sprints and TTT first, GC distinctly second. Short of abandoning their top 10 ambitions entirely (which is presumably not viable either commercially or in terms of keeping the likes of Vande Velde etc happy), they really couldn't have laid any more emphasis on wins over placings for this Tour.
cawright said:
Such is their faith in the Great Hype Tyler Farrar that we'll see Thor, who has a proven Tour pedigree lead out TF rather than the other way around.
Pedigree isn't the question. The stage of their careers they are at is.
Nobody is favourite to beat Cavendish in any given flat Tour sprint. Nobody. But Farrar is one of a very small number of guys with the top speed to challenge him. Hushovd simply isn't. It doesn't matter how many stages he has won in the past or for that matter who leads out Hushovd, he simply isn't going to finish ahead of the fastest sprinters in the world on a flat finish at this point in his career. He is still strong and capable of sustaining a very high pace for a considerable period, which makes him a potentially excellent lead out, but he does not have the top end speed to be a finisher.
Hushovd does however still have the ability to compete on very tough sprint finishes, and you will almost certainly see Garmin working for him on those stages for the same reason they will be working for Farrar when its easy: Maximising their chances of a win.
cawright said:
And while I'd love to see CVdV do well on GC, I agree with an earlier post that without a lot of good climbers they'll have to rely on other teams.
This just baffles me.
What use exactly does a guy like Vande Velde (assuming he ends up as the leader) have for a fourth climber or a fifth climber in the team? What exactly is it that you think they would do for him? Is it that you think he'll go twice as fast if people get him twice as many bottles?
If you are a contender for the overall win and you will likely need to control the race in the mountains, you have important uses for a whole load of climbers. If you are a top 10 contender whose style is to hold on in the mountains, only your second and third best climbers are of any relevance to you because all you need from them is a bottle and the possibility of a spare wheel. Garmin's second and third best climbers compare very favourably with those of most teams. Chances are that whoever is second best on any given day out of Vande Velde, Danielson and Hesjedal will be with the heads of state a hell of a lot further up the final climb than the last assistant of most other top 10 contenders.
They are actually supporting their GC hopes in a very clever way: Only a third of the team, all but one of them also there for TTT purposes, but of high enough quality to provide all the mountain assistance a fringe GC man requires.