Re: Re:
The_Cheech said:
Pippo_San said:
In retrospective the entire affair is laughable at best. All motorhome & marginal gains *** and then:
1- Richie punctures and no one's ready to get his wheel changed and no one even cares about the rules
2- Sky even post on Twitter how they went against the rules. Except then they cry for it.
3- Richie crashes. Everyone in the team look at each other for minutes before making the best decision ever: "let's put the dwarf on the bike of a giant!"
4- when it's clear his mind isn't there anymore they make Richie look like a buffoon in a couple of stages before making him retire with the classic lie.
So much for marginal gains.
You guys are brutal on Ritchie.
He is a guy that genuinely felt he had what it took to win a GT. He found out the hard way he doesn't.
There's really nothing wrong with that.
It's the giving up part that I'm confused about. Brailsford ought to be honest with him and demand that he aim, AT THE VERY LEAST, for a stage win and help the others.
He's acting like a rat in a sinking ship.
You are to being brutal as well.
His Giro has been a failure for two reasons.
He had a puncture at nearly the end of the stage and made the mistake of taking a wheel from a mate from a different team for which he was rightly punished.
He was then taken out in a crash that was not his fault and was injured.
All his time loses came because of these two incidents.
He never was exposed due to not being able to match the best with climbing, he didn't even really make the proper mountains to be able to test himself, but he was fine on the climbing he completed. He seened no weaker than Aru, although Aru was certainly more attacking. So this is still an unanswered question
He never had the chance to prove he could last three weeks because he was taken out by a crash, so this is still an unanswered question.
So to me Porte still has the same amount of uncertainty about whether he could do a good GT GC and podium if things go well, they certainly did not this time, partly his fault but mostly not his fault. I am not even a Porte or Sky fan, I really don't care how good he is or isn't, but this Giro proved nothing.
Age and the strength of the team he is at are against him, but if he gets another leadership chance I would not rule out an excellent performance where he challenges for the podium at least.