- Aug 31, 2012
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Tejay will never in his life be able to climb as well as Porte did today (barring team changes).
SeriousSam said:Tejay will never in his life be able to climb as well as Porte did today (barring team changes).
I'm not sure the Giro and Vuelta climbs suit Tejay that much. Today was unusually steep for the Tour and he didn't fare well. If he goes to the Tour togeter with Porte, it might take the pressure off both of them and they could both excel as a result.SlickMongoose said:TJ might be better off targetting the Giro or Vuelta anyway. Leave Porte to be the guy who isn't quite good enough to win the tour.
Vasilis said:I'm not so convined about the bad day of Porte at all. The only one I can actually remember is Tour 2013 stage 9, when the whole team had a collective bad day (except Froome) after their and possibly due to their exertions the previous day. In 2014, he cracked too, but, as it turned out, he fell ill and he never recovered. In the Giro, we never got to see his true potential either.
Maybe he better lead at the Vuelta, as that weather seems to suit him more. He can survive in the cold and wet, but he really performs in warmer and dry weather. In that sense the Vuelta is a much safer choice if the Tour is too big for him.Queens Boulevard said:Richie Porte has raced 9 grand tours. He did finish 7th overall in the 2010 Giro but after that he's finished relatively low in the standings every year since. An unimpressive 19th and 23rd in the last 2 Tours. I agree that on any given day he can look amazing, but he usually offsets that with something that puts him firmly out of contention. He'll also be 31 years old when next year begins, so it's not like he's in his mid 20s or anything. I wouldn't rule out a GT win from Porte. As I said he can be the strongest rider on the road on any given day, great in the Mountains and in the TT. Historically though, banking on Richie to win you a GT is a bad move. For BMC it would be best if they can talk him into leading at the Giro, enjoy the two or three 1 week stage race wins he can bring you and then hope he finally breaks the curse, maybe at 38 he can pull a Horner and crest the top step of a podium at a GT. If they use him as a GT leader at the Giro and then a dom at the Tour next year though, I see him an TJ both being worse for it.
Queens Boulevard said:Richie Porte has raced 9 grand tours. He did finish 7th overall in the 2010 Giro but after that he's finished relatively low in the standings every year since. An unimpressive 19th and 23rd in the last 2 Tours. I agree that on any given day he can look amazing, but he usually offsets that with something that puts him firmly out of contention. He'll also be 31 years old when next year begins, so it's not like he's in his mid 20s or anything. I wouldn't rule out a GT win from Porte. As I said he can be the strongest rider on the road on any given day, great in the Mountains and in the TT. Historically though, banking on Richie to win you a GT is a bad move. For BMC it would be best if they can talk him into leading at the Giro, enjoy the two or three 1 week stage race wins he can bring you and then hope he finally breaks the curse, maybe at 38 he can pull a Horner and crest the top step of a podium at a GT. If they use him as a GT leader at the Giro and then a dom at the Tour next year though, I see him an TJ both being worse for it.
dacooley said:richie didn't surprise me much. one of the best 5-7 climbers in the world had a month and a half no racing period, rested, reloaded, came to the tour with no pressure then he was chilling in grupetto on a few stages and put a great perfomance on la pierre-saint-martin as a result.
Queens Boulevard said:Richie Porte has raced 9 grand tours. He did finish 7th overall in the 2010 Giro but after that he's finished relatively low in the standings every year since. An unimpressive 19th and 23rd in the last 2 Tours. I agree that on any given day he can look amazing, but he usually offsets that with something that puts him firmly out of contention. He'll also be 31 years old when next year begins, so it's not like he's in his mid 20s or anything. I wouldn't rule out a GT win from Porte. As I said he can be the strongest rider on the road on any given day, great in the Mountains and in the TT. Historically though, banking on Richie to win you a GT is a bad move. For BMC it would be best if they can talk him into leading at the Giro, enjoy the two or three 1 week stage race wins he can bring you and then hope he finally breaks the curse, maybe at 38 he can pull a Horner and crest the top step of a podium at a GT. If they use him as a GT leader at the Giro and then a dom at the Tour next year though, I see him an TJ both being worse for it.
He didn't let his crash at Paris-Nice get to him, he still won it the following day.Sasquatch said:Queens Boulevard said:Richie Porte has raced 9 grand tours. He did finish 7th overall in the 2010 Giro but after that he's finished relatively low in the standings every year since. An unimpressive 19th and 23rd in the last 2 Tours. I agree that on any given day he can look amazing, but he usually offsets that with something that puts him firmly out of contention. He'll also be 31 years old when next year begins, so it's not like he's in his mid 20s or anything. I wouldn't rule out a GT win from Porte. As I said he can be the strongest rider on the road on any given day, great in the Mountains and in the TT. Historically though, banking on Richie to win you a GT is a bad move. For BMC it would be best if they can talk him into leading at the Giro, enjoy the two or three 1 week stage race wins he can bring you and then hope he finally breaks the curse, maybe at 38 he can pull a Horner and crest the top step of a podium at a GT. If they use him as a GT leader at the Giro and then a dom at the Tour next year though, I see him an TJ both being worse for it.
You need to put an asterix next to his top 10 in the Giro. It wasn't a special feat. He benefited by a lucky break that the peloton allowed to get up the road. Had he not been in that break he would have finished outside the top 30.
Each time Porte has had a chance to be leader, he has flopped. Nothing will change. He will flop next year and the following years with BMC. He doesn't have the temperament to be a Grand Tour rider. He lets every little thing get to him. He will never win a Grand Tour and I highly doubt he'll podium one. He's too smug as well.
Sasquatch said:Queens Boulevard said:Richie Porte has raced 9 grand tours. He did finish 7th overall in the 2010 Giro but after that he's finished relatively low in the standings every year since. An unimpressive 19th and 23rd in the last 2 Tours. I agree that on any given day he can look amazing, but he usually offsets that with something that puts him firmly out of contention. He'll also be 31 years old when next year begins, so it's not like he's in his mid 20s or anything. I wouldn't rule out a GT win from Porte. As I said he can be the strongest rider on the road on any given day, great in the Mountains and in the TT. Historically though, banking on Richie to win you a GT is a bad move. For BMC it would be best if they can talk him into leading at the Giro, enjoy the two or three 1 week stage race wins he can bring you and then hope he finally breaks the curse, maybe at 38 he can pull a Horner and crest the top step of a podium at a GT. If they use him as a GT leader at the Giro and then a dom at the Tour next year though, I see him an TJ both being worse for it.
You need to put an asterix next to his top 10 in the Giro. It wasn't a special feat. He benefited by a lucky break that the peloton allowed to get up the road. Had he not been in that break he would have finished outside the top 30.
Each time Porte has had a chance to be leader, he has flopped. Nothing will change. He will flop next year and the following years with BMC. He doesn't have the temperament to be a Grand Tour rider. He lets every little thing get to him. He will never win a Grand Tour and I highly doubt he'll podium one. He's too smug as well.
Your argument is he crumbles as soon as something goes wrong. Mine is that PN contradicts that. Your argument had nothing to do with the duration of the race.Sasquatch said:Paris-Nice is a 1 week race. Not a 3 week race. Porte will never be a grand tour contender.
Sasquatch said:Queens Boulevard said:Richie Porte has raced 9 grand tours. He did finish 7th overall in the 2010 Giro but after that he's finished relatively low in the standings every year since. An unimpressive 19th and 23rd in the last 2 Tours. I agree that on any given day he can look amazing, but he usually offsets that with something that puts him firmly out of contention. He'll also be 31 years old when next year begins, so it's not like he's in his mid 20s or anything. I wouldn't rule out a GT win from Porte. As I said he can be the strongest rider on the road on any given day, great in the Mountains and in the TT. Historically though, banking on Richie to win you a GT is a bad move. For BMC it would be best if they can talk him into leading at the Giro, enjoy the two or three 1 week stage race wins he can bring you and then hope he finally breaks the curse, maybe at 38 he can pull a Horner and crest the top step of a podium at a GT. If they use him as a GT leader at the Giro and then a dom at the Tour next year though, I see him an TJ both being worse for it.
You need to put an asterix next to his top 10 in the Giro. It wasn't a special feat. He benefited by a lucky break that the peloton allowed to get up the road. Had he not been in that break he would have finished outside the top 30.
Each time Porte has had a chance to be leader, he has flopped. Nothing will change. He will flop next year and the following years with BMC. He doesn't have the temperament to be a Grand Tour rider. He lets every little thing get to him. He will never win a Grand Tour and I highly doubt he'll podium one. He's too smug as well.
i suspect you just want porte never to become a gt contender.Sasquatch said:Queens Boulevard said:Richie Porte has raced 9 grand tours. He did finish 7th overall in the 2010 Giro but after that he's finished relatively low in the standings every year since. An unimpressive 19th and 23rd in the last 2 Tours. I agree that on any given day he can look amazing, but he usually offsets that with something that puts him firmly out of contention. He'll also be 31 years old when next year begins, so it's not like he's in his mid 20s or anything. I wouldn't rule out a GT win from Porte. As I said he can be the strongest rider on the road on any given day, great in the Mountains and in the TT. Historically though, banking on Richie to win you a GT is a bad move. For BMC it would be best if they can talk him into leading at the Giro, enjoy the two or three 1 week stage race wins he can bring you and then hope he finally breaks the curse, maybe at 38 he can pull a Horner and crest the top step of a podium at a GT. If they use him as a GT leader at the Giro and then a dom at the Tour next year though, I see him an TJ both being worse for it.
You need to put an asterix next to his top 10 in the Giro. It wasn't a special feat. He benefited by a lucky break that the peloton allowed to get up the road. Had he not been in that break he would have finished outside the top 30.
Each time Porte has had a chance to be leader, he has flopped. Nothing will change. He will flop next year and the following years with BMC. He doesn't have the temperament to be a Grand Tour rider. He lets every little thing get to him. He will never win a Grand Tour and I highly doubt he'll podium one. He's too smug as well.
I suspect some people resent the success and influence of Australian riders in elite cycling.dacooley said:i suspect you just want porte never to become a gt contender.Sasquatch said:Queens Boulevard said:Richie Porte has raced 9 grand tours. He did finish 7th overall in the 2010 Giro but after that he's finished relatively low in the standings every year since. An unimpressive 19th and 23rd in the last 2 Tours. I agree that on any given day he can look amazing, but he usually offsets that with something that puts him firmly out of contention. He'll also be 31 years old when next year begins, so it's not like he's in his mid 20s or anything. I wouldn't rule out a GT win from Porte. As I said he can be the strongest rider on the road on any given day, great in the Mountains and in the TT. Historically though, banking on Richie to win you a GT is a bad move. For BMC it would be best if they can talk him into leading at the Giro, enjoy the two or three 1 week stage race wins he can bring you and then hope he finally breaks the curse, maybe at 38 he can pull a Horner and crest the top step of a podium at a GT. If they use him as a GT leader at the Giro and then a dom at the Tour next year though, I see him an TJ both being worse for it.
You need to put an asterix next to his top 10 in the Giro. It wasn't a special feat. He benefited by a lucky break that the peloton allowed to get up the road. Had he not been in that break he would have finished outside the top 30.
Each time Porte has had a chance to be leader, he has flopped. Nothing will change. He will flop next year and the following years with BMC. He doesn't have the temperament to be a Grand Tour rider. He lets every little thing get to him. He will never win a Grand Tour and I highly doubt he'll podium one. He's too smug as well.![]()
movingtarget said:Porte has led a team in a GT twice and failed for varying reasons. So that means he is to be written off completely ? Last year's Tour performance was due mainly to illness. As far as his chances of winning one go, I am in two minds. I am sure he can podium one but less confident he can win one. A change of luck would be the first thing he would need. To avoid illness, time penalties and crashes. Look at Gesink's career. So much promise but constant problems. I think Porte is changing teams at the right time, it was now or never. He will get chances at his new team wherever he goes. 2016 will be a big season for Porte, as he needs to start showing what he can do in a GT, convince his team and his support riders. TJVG after so many years is just starting to do that now. For some riders it's a slow process.
