Red Rick
Moderator
Aubisque + Tourmalet then 80km of flat here we goThat weird no real Pyrenees is what we can expect on a route with a Grand Depart in the Basque Country. Get ready for 2023.
Aubisque + Tourmalet then 80km of flat here we goThat weird no real Pyrenees is what we can expect on a route with a Grand Depart in the Basque Country. Get ready for 2023.
Marie-Blanque > PauAubisque + Tourmalet then 80km of flat here we go
More than 10 timesHow many times are they climbing mount Everest?
In the list of the hardest GT stages ever posted here a couple of days ago there was Pamplona '96 that had more than 100 kms of flat or almost flat after Larrau and still is one of the bigger carnage i've ever seen.Aubisque + Tourmalet then 80km of flat here we go
Depends upon how it is raced. The Pau stage in 1986 had the Marie Blanque as the hardest climb. Yet, because they raced the entire day, it was carnage. Lemond gained more than 40 seconds with an attack on an uncategorized climb near the end, but still came in about 5 minutes behind Hinault and DelgadoIn the list of the hardest GT stages ever posted here a couple of days ago there was Pamplona '96 that had more than 100 kms of flat or almost flat after Larrau and still is one of the bigger carnage i've ever seen.
Depending if you have helpers or not. If a race has already exploded, a peleton is decimated and riders have to work on their own then flat sections can be as difficult (and gap-producing) as climbs. It's not a coincidence that Bernal exploded at the start of Covadonga - the flat section killed him.If the stage is very, very hard it doesn't really matter where you put the flat, in front, in the middle or in the back. Your legs won't tolerate flat regardless!!!!
I've heard that Primoz is already learning how to swim.So on the big bridge before Nyborg, I'm seeing on google street view the barriers on the edges are suuuper low and normally the right most lane just isn't used?
Isn't that gonna be a problem where crashes will have a very high likelyhood of riders just being thrown into the sea?
Well, isn't the first week all about the spectacle, anyway?So on the big bridge before Nyborg, I'm seeing on google street view the barriers on the edges are suuuper low and normally the right most lane just isn't used?
Isn't that gonna be a problem where crashes will have a very high likelyhood of riders just being thrown into the sea?
They use the La Flamme Rouge stage profiles in their most recent video.LRCP has full stage profiles of the stages that aren't online
ASO are inspired by Squid Game...Well, isn't the first week all about the spectacle, anyway?
At the top of the bridge, there is 70 metres to the sea, so I would hope that's not a real risk!
ASO has entered the chat.Only realised theres only 4 real maintain stages and all of them are cookie cutter MTF
It's more likely not to, like the Ile-de-Ré stage. It's very exposed to be sure, it's just not > 50 % likely that the wind plays ball. If it does, it would still be won by a sprinter (which is what the discussion was about: number of chances for the sprinters).Stage two is more likely to be a reduced sprint finish.