Re:
barmaher said:
OK, so now the first few days starts to suck balls.
S1 Short ITT is cool I guess to start a race
S2 Sprint stage is fine usually, but in freaking Liege there are so many opportunities.
S3 Longwy climb is 1km at around 8% or so I think? A few opportunities in the area, but a dollar to doughnuts the stage is like this____________/
S4 Vittel is a sprint stage.
S5 PDBF is a good climb, although it would be nice to see a new one. I have no issues with the timing of this.
S6 Troyes is a sprint stage.
S7 Nuits Saint Georges is a sprint stage. A "globally flat course" no less.
S8 I like the Station des Rousses stage. Looks like a decent climb near the end, and I don't mind the relatively flat bit at the top as it gives us something different.
S9 This stage is great. Really great. Sure there is a chance that it won't be used but this is a work of art in my book. Again, the flat bit at the end could contribute to the chaos.
At this stage the route is going along nicely. I would prefer the PDBF stage to have more climbs, and I hate what they are doing in Liege, but at the same time, this is a nice balanced first week. The problem is, the overall shape of the race starts to deteriorate.
S10 Sprint stage. Meh. As somebody says, this would be a great ITT stage to homage a previous one between these two towns.
S11 Another sprint stage in Pau. Now we will be getting sick of the sprinters.This is the sixth sprint stage. Seven if you could the uphill sprint to the citadel. Ridiculous in my book.
S12 This is a solid mountain stage. Decent length, and hallelujah, I believe we are avoiding Tourmalet!!!
S13 I think this stage will be good. Nicely placed after a tough stage. Avoids the stupid loop around Foix. But are we really leaving the Pyrenees?
S14 This is the same GVA - Sagan uphill sprint we saw last year.
S15 Classic breakaway stage. I don't mind this as there are very few of these in this year's route.
But what the hell? Middle weekend is completely wasted with two OK ish stages. There is no way the Rodez stage will be that interesting. There is very little chance of GC action in Stage 15. Route has gone from above par after the first week to below par.
S16 is a sprint stage. Chance of wind.
S17 is absolutely fine. Not the best mountain stage in the TDF, but not bad.
S18 is dirt. Izoard might work as a MTF finish, but the route before the last climb is not only unlikely to provoke GC attacks, but also they seem to have gone out of their way to avoid going to interesting place.
S19 is a sprinter stage because they couldn't make them wait an extra two days for Paris. Never mind the fact that they could have gone nuts in the southern Alps.
S20 is a ludicrously short ITT. Everyone else has complained about this, so I won't go there again.
S21 parade in Paris. And the sprinters get another go.
I typically tend to be a bit more moderate than others on here when it comes to routes. This route has a lot of potential. But they have made a bollix of it.
I would make the following three changes to the route to make it more interesting.
* Proper hilly stage in Liege.
* Scrap stage 19 and replace it with a proper southern Alps stage. Something with Col d’Allos (16.3 km @ 6.7%), Col des Champs (11.6 km @ 7%), Col de la Cayolle (21 km @ 6.8%) would do nicely.
* Next day (Stage 20) have the ITT of around 40km
Bish bash bosh. A poor route becomes a good route.
Very good write up. The more that I think about this route, the more that I like it.
So okay; 36 kms of ITT is not enough. Not nearly enough. Difficult to rate as high as an 8 just on that basis. But this is still about as many flat kms (assuming that these are flat TT's) as this year, and more than in the disaster that was 2015.
3 MTF's is good. We are seeing a nice recent trend to move away from just MTF's and to include numerous descent finishing stages. Why are the organisers not being applauded for this? It has often been a major claim/reason to the Giro routes being better; the variety in mountain stage finishers. Now the Tour is giving us a great mix, yet everyone is silent.
This route is also not backloaded, and that's great. PBF is a good opening MTF to result in small time gaps; for a stage 5 the design is right. If there were more mountains beforehand then people would complain that they are being wasted because the riders won't attack from far out so early in the Tour.
And we have Mont Du Chat on stage 9. Mont Du Chat! It is perfectly placed in the stage too.
This route gives us some familiar climbs (Galibier most notably, Perysourde), but is not just giving us the same old, same old. There is no Tourmalet and no Alp Du'ez. That's a big positive.
This route in general is not wasting climbs in the way that it has in the past (2009 and 2010 Pyrenees particularly).
Many wish for the final mountain stage to be much harder, but this a) makes the route more backloaded, and b) makes riders more hesitant to attack on the stages prior. Having the Izoard stage being relatively *** can actually work. Being relatively easy for an Alpine stage means that the riders won't fear it, and won't hold back on the stage before. And that stage happens happens to be a fantastic one. It could do with being longer; that is all.
Given that we have the Jura, Voges and Massif Central all in this route, we don't need more than 4 stages in the really big passes. Reduce stage 18 by 30 kms and add that to the beginning of stage 17, and that would be better, creating more of the queen stage/short stage combo which can bring about great racing.
They have tried to do this in the Pyrenees, but have made it far too obvious. Only 100 kms for the Foix stage screams "We want another Formigal!" Every rider will be 100% alert and it is most likely that little will happen. This stage would be better to be at least 130 kms. The stage prior to it is very good though, and at least having such a short stage the following day will not detract from the racing on that MTF.
I don't know why there seems to be an emphasis though on Froome proofing the route (well, Bardet maybe, but if so I hope that Froome beats him by ten minutes still). To make it close? This supposedly helps to popularise their product? The TDF became the world's biggest annual sporting event, whilst Indurain and Armstrong were winning multiple tours by big margins, largely due to ITT. If the 'product' didn't suffer then, why would it now??
And regarding the 9 or so sprint stages: 10-20 years ago it seemed like there was more than that, so this will probably help the GC more, as in that it will make the stages that are GC better raced. It does harm the hilly/classics specialists, but for me the Tour is 95% about GC, so I don't mind that.
I'm giving this a 7.