- Jul 27, 2009
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Libertine Seguros said:A drop of rain IS bad weather when you're up in the altitudes. The Tour seldom has this problem because of time of year, but sure it does a better job when it does have to deal with it.
So what you're saying is, "live with your lot, don't try and better it, the Tour is better than you, deal with it"? Sounds like a recipe for stagnation. A bit like the Tour, come to think of it.
OK, shorter transfers I get. But shorter stages? There was an 83km stage in 2009. A 100km stage this year. By putting in shorter stages, he can put in longer ones. Super-long epic stages are part of what the Giro is. Maybe another ITT to balance it could have helped; but 2011 is the first 'imbalanced' Giro I've seen since 2004 (which was imbalanced in the opposite direction). 2009 and 2010 a GC guy won the points jersey, sure - but if Tyler Farrar hadn't missed the time cut on Zoncolán it could have been a fight. Bennati won it in 2008. 2008!
OK, so TdF comparison... how often do they do Alpe d'Huez? Last year was the first time they'd EVER gone 2 straight years without it. Tourmalet? Every damn year. The Tour route is far more predictable, perhaps owing to fewer great climbs (but if the race is tight and intense, who cares if they're riding to Cam Basque or Courchevel instead of Alpe d'Huez or Plateau de Beille?), Ventoux is close to the only truly 'special' climb that is climbed rarely enough yet is legendary enough to have that effect. The Giro has only climbed the Passo dello Stelvio 6 times EVER. This is the second time Colle delle Finestre has been used - 6 years after the 1st. Zoncolán is being perhaps a little overused - but remember that Angliru was used regularly at first in order to establish its mystique, before a six year layoff. Zoncolán has the mystique now... so we should have a few years off. But don't you think the same applies to Aspin, to Tourmalet, to Aubisque, to Alpe d'Huez, and all the other climbs we see year in year out in France?
Some climbs are overused, some are underused. I don't see why Zomegnan is doing a worse job than Proudhomme in that respect. At least Zomegnan is seeking out and using climbs the Giro has either not used before (Rifugio Gardeccia) or seldom used before (Finestre) - where are the new climbs in the Tour? When was the last time a truly new climb was introduced to the Tour?
The Giro also doesn't try to minimize the impact of the MTFs it does use. The TdF generally has the routes through one of the ranges set up so there won't be much, if any, time gaps for the GC contenders.