luckyboy said:a quote from Merckx - 'I didn’t like the Tour of Flanders too much.'
Yeah, he hated it. Climbs are short and there are too many loops which gives weaker riders the chance to recup. No other classic has so many obscure riders in its palmarès.
Tour of Flanders is Paris-Roubaix's "little sister" and will always be.
Also until the mid-eighties there were REAL laps in the finale. Some riders were even outlapped. Very kermess-like.
No big classic would feel the need to adopt one climb, multiple times. That's something for Amstel or the Arrow. Could you imagine Liège-Bastogne finishing in Spa with five loops around it for five ascents on the Haute-Levée or Stockeu? Lol.
Making a finale harder is also stupid, if you ask me. The route of a race should be strengthened at its two-third/three quarters in order to be entertaining. that's what the route looked like (Koppenberg, Kwaremont, Patersberg first, Tenbosse, Kapelmuur, Bosberg then). Finishing with the harder climbs is inviting to wait for it, just like an ever boring Amstel. Though well, Flanders' climbs aren't as hard as Dutch Limburg climbs anyway.
And yeah, true classics don't feel the need to change its course so radically, including the finish. I do regret it about Lombardy though. A "classic" is a classic because year after year it has the same key difficulties which remain in the collective memories.
And don't tell me that this piece of sh*t will become legend in 20 years. The Walloon Arrow course is more than 20 year old and it still sucks more than ever.
And in order to correct some posts here, the Muur was added to Flanders' route in 1934, with the Chapel in 1952.
Cipressa in Milan-Sanremo in 1982. Poggio in 1960.