- Jan 20, 2010
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darwin553 said:He is a smart man our Richie - he will be there when Froome needs him for the big one.
Are we talking about the same Richie? I mean all doping questions aside he's not the sharpest tool in the shed.
darwin553 said:He is a smart man our Richie - he will be there when Froome needs him for the big one.
Dear Wiggo said:I'm not sure if people of your persuasion post this way (circumspectly, rather than talking plainly) but it feels very familiar.
Anyway, I realise you are probably posting in this fashion to some extent due to your position on things and how most (?) posters respond to it, but talking plainly is far more conducive to ongoing discussion than this cloak and dagger, insinuation style which really just has the effect of making it look like you don't actually know the answer to the question you are asking and are stalling for time or something.
stutue said:I thought it was pretty clear inference. Looked like he nearly cracked in last years tour therefore taking it easier in early season.
Jeez.
stutue said:I thought it was pretty clear inference. Looked like he nearly cracked in last years tour therefore taking it easier in early season.
Interesting that you say 'people of my persuasion'. You ( and let me be quite clear, I mean you singular) are desperate to polarise, aren't you.
Its no wonder the handful of threads involving Sky turn so adversarial.
Night Rider said:Are we talking about the same Richie? I mean all doping questions aside he's not the sharpest tool in the shed.
Gloin22 said:If anyone thinks he won't be in the same shape as he was in Tour 2013 - comes July - they are deluded.
roundabout said:Okay I am deluded. That he is taking so much time to get over a bit of gastro is a bit concerning.
Well, unless it was more than gastro.
Ripper said:Unless there are some serious complications, gastro type bugs should not take this long to recover from. Richie's been 'bad' for a while now ... really not a good year since the TdU.
Ripper said:Unless there are some serious complications, gastro type bugs should not take this long to recover from. Richie's been 'bad' for a while now ... really not a good year since the TdU.
DirtyWorks said:Which, only intensifies Sky's strange decision to shun Wiggins. I get why Wiggo's not their best choice, but that seems to suggest management is unable to maintain any discipline at all.
Froome was so sick he couldn't ride L-B-L and then a couple of days later destroyed a WT field. Racing hours as prep for a grand tour is so 2001. Based on this, Richie's got PLENTY of time to suddenly return to super-domestique form.
And again, as abnormal as so many other things done by the Sky team.
Night Rider said:Are we talking about the same Richie? I mean all doping questions aside he's not the sharpest tool in the shed.
BYOP88 said:Poor little Richie, maybe he's caught badzilla![]()
Moose McKnuckles said:Porte is bagging blood. Has to be. Otherwise, he's not going to the TdF with that kind of "form".
Maybe he'll pull a Andreas Kloden from back in the day. Ride like crap in June, then fly in July. From Fiat to Ferrari in 20 days.
Moose McKnuckles said:Porte is bagging blood. Has to be. Otherwise, he's not going to the TdF with that kind of "form".
Maybe he'll pull a Andreas Kloden from back in the day. Ride like crap in June, then fly in July. From Fiat to Ferrari in 20 days.
On top of that Team Sky also saw Richie Porte crack earlier than they would have liked, although Nicolas Portal was quick to play down the significance of the Australian’s performance.
“I don’t know about Richie,” Portal told Cyclingnews.
“We heard on the radio that he didn’t feel good but we’re disappointed for him as we know he has been good in the last few weeks. Maybe it’s something to do with the hot weather but let's wait and see but sometimes in sport this happens.”
“Two years ago nobody knew who he was, did they? I remember talking to Bobby Julich who was studying the TrainingPeaks [power files] and he could see that Chris had a massive engine and huge capability. Now he’s just connecting the dots. That’s just how it is.
“People who don’t actually have any affiliation with professional cycling – the ‘Twitter Heroes’ – go on about him. They think, ‘How has this guy come out from nowhere?’ Well, cycling is an apprenticeship sort of thing: you don’t just become a superstar… unless you’re Peter Sagan or someone like that. With time, Froomey has developed into possibly the next big GC rider of his generation.”
gooner said:Forgive me if it has been posted already. Porte talking about the leaders he has rode with Contador, Froome and Wiggins.
http://www.ridemedia.com.au/tour-de-france/comments-from-porte-about-wiggins-and-froome/
“The year I rode with Alberto – in the Giro that he won before having the title taken off him – there wasn’t much I had to do for him. The only thing I could do in that race was choose who was going to police the breakaway, that’s essentially all we had to do… and then control it. On the climbs, [Alberto] didn’t need any help… we couldn’t help him.
“There were times when Alberto punctured and I stopped to help him but then I got blown away by him straight away. That was just him; he’d catch up with me and then race straight past. And I’d be like, ‘Okay, that was pointless even stopping…’
Hey,those times are long gone,Richie looks like is back to TDF 2013 level.the sceptic said:I thought the reason Porte couldnt help was because he could barely keep up on the flat..
MBotero said:Hey,those times are long gone,Richie looks like is back to TDF 2013 level.
Porte drifted back from the main group with Spanish team-mate David López around 8.1 kilometres remaining and closed the stage 10-27 minutes behind Froome.
“You need to wait until the end of the week to see where we are at instead of after every single hour and every single race,” Brailsford said. “[That finish] was not a true reflection of where he’s at.”
Brailsford faith in the Australian 29-year-old runs so deep that he said that next year he could offer the leadership role again.
“Oh yeah, I believe in Riche Porte 100%. He’s a fantastic climber, he gets time trialling right. With the right parcours and the right race, then I think he can win a Grand Tour,” explained Brailsford.
“He’s very close. Once he gets [his rhythm] back he’s definitely a force to reckon with.”
