Richie Porte Discussion Thread.

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In which year will Porte win the GT Treble?

  • He will only manage the double

    Votes: 9 100.0%

  • Total voters
    9
Re: Re:

Squire said:
GuyIncognito said:
No TDU, Porte's already puclicly said so even before this year's Tour.
Giro? I doubt Porte would sign for a team that wouldn't promise him Tour leadership, even if it meant taking a bigger pay cut than he already did.
He has also moved to the team with maybe the least amount of competition for Tour leadership. No GC threat, no sprinter.
No respect for

Karikatuur%20Bauke%20Mollema.jpg
 
Porte and Mollema will both ride the Tour. Trying to predict their results just gives me a headache..........or maybe Mollema gladly takes on the Giro leadership ? Who knows ? One thing is clear. Porte's Tour team won't be any better than BMC's, probably worse.

This could possibly be Porte's final contract as it will take him up to the age of almost 36. Somehow I don't see him hanging around too long after that, if at all.
 
Going to be tough next year for Porte but maybe a fresh start with lower expectations will help. To be honest a top 5 GT finish would count as a moral victory. Mollema showed flashes of excellence this year. I could see both in the TdF having an impact. As for motivation post-tour debacle, I really thought he'd do well in the vuelta...was stunned to just see him basically riding around Spain.
 
Mar 11, 2009
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Re:

Bolder said:
Going to be tough next year for Porte but maybe a fresh start with lower expectations will help. To be honest a top 5 GT finish would count as a moral victory.
+1.

Porte wont ever win one but this would be a good result for him, and Trek to be honest.
 
Re:

yaco said:
Think Porte's coach must have given up - Has advised for the last 3 years not to ride the TDU if he is serious about GC at a GT.

There is a saying that goes something like "Madness is doing the same over and over again, expecting a different outcome.". Some time ago I would have felt sorry for Porte, but a high VO2 max doesn't make a good bike rider on its own. He should ride the Giro, but he seems destined to fail at the Tour. Again.
 
Re:

SHAD0W93 said:
Why would riding the TDU effect Porte in the GTs? Is ot because he would still be home and not want to train as hard or a different reason?
Cause it's stupidly early in the season to be in really good shape I guess. Like you train harder in the winter and that'll help you from January till April but when you need the legs to be fresh for a GT you've just done too much already.
 
Re: Re:

Red Rick said:
SHAD0W93 said:
Why would riding the TDU effect Porte in the GTs? Is ot because he would still be home and not want to train as hard or a different reason?
Cause it's stupidly early in the season to be in really good shape I guess. Like you train harder in the winter and that'll help you from January till April but when you need the legs to be fresh for a GT you've just done too much already.

That makes sense. If he does ride it he should just do it for training than instead of going all out trying to win W. Hill like the last 5 years.
 
i don't think anyone is in top shape in January it's just that the Australian riders have their national championships in January and the TDU in the same month as well as the Sun Tour. TDU is the beginning of the international season. Probably doesn't affect Porte too much as the stages are short and the climbs are not hard but Evans did not ride the TDU more than a few times and realized that a later start to the season with less racing in aging legs could pay dividends and it helped him in 2011. The fact that Porte still won the TDS after missing quite a lot of early season racing with sickness showed that he still had time to prepare for the Tour.
 
Mar 14, 2009
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Re: Re:

Simurgh said:
yaco said:
Think Porte's coach must have given up - Has advised for the last 3 years not to ride the TDU if he is serious about GC at a GT.

There is a saying that goes something like "Madness is doing the same over and over again, expecting a different outcome.". Some time ago I would have felt sorry for Porte, but a high VO2 max doesn't make a good bike rider on its own. He should ride the Giro, but he seems destined to fail at the Tour. Again.

ac0c496cae1c3f53705c7f998e022c56.jpg
 
On a positive side he did the Vuelta this season. He should aim for finishing Giro-Vuelta next season, overloading work fatigue and then aim for Giro or TdF GC 2020. If he could only aim for, say, polka dot jersey and/or stages next year, it could get monkey of his back and give him best morale and workload boost that way.
 
Re:

SHAD0W93 said:
Why would riding the TDU effect Porte in the GTs? Is ot because he would still be home and not want to train as hard or a different reason?

Jet lag affects your training for a couple weeks, once coming, then again going back.
If you're a classics rider it's fine, but if you're a stage race GC guy where it's almost entirely about your power/weight numbers, it makes a difference
 
According to the article Porte is riding the TDU, Cadel Evans and the Herald Sun Tour - I would be OK if he rode the latter two but this is a step too far - Anyway he will bring in the crowds and make Trevorrow happy.
 
I think is good if he'll ride more, putting all eggs in the Tour basket is too risky if he crash again.
If he manages to win one of the Australian races, one WT spring race and something more along (stages or another minor stage race) he can also start the Tour with less pressure to get results there.