damian13ster said:
I am pretty sure they meant stay in the same group and not stay in same position relative to individual rider in the peleton......
There will always be controversy when you have multiple groups being held steady though. You ever watch Le Mans? Due to the size of the course they have three separate safety cars, and each time the safety car comes out, the pits are buzzing with activity as obviously when the other cars are going slower, you can make a pit stop and lose less, relatively speaking, than if everybody is going at full race pace. But if you just beat one of the safety cars out, you can race round to join the next one, whereas somebody who left the pits just a couple of seconds after you could then stand to lose a minute and a half of track time; getting just in front of a safety car, racing round to the pits and getting back out on track before it could put you two safety cars ahead of somebody who got stopped behind the other one, then because they were going slower didn't get the time to get in and out of the pits before the next one, and suddenly two seconds on track becomes nearly 3 minutes.
It happens every time, and there's always arguments about whether it is fair and what effect it has on the racing, but on a course as big as La Sarthe it's impossible to police the whole track with just one safety car, so they stay that way. Similarly, the race today would have been nigh on impossible to police in an ideal fashion group by group. If a rider stops for a change and is caught by the next group on the road, are they allowed to then attack out of that group to catch the group they were originally in? How do you ensure that the right rider is the one you let go? How many riders constitutes a group, and is simply continuing really attacking out of a group? When a handful continue and a handful stop, do they remain the same group or do they become two separate groups, since it was a voluntary action to stop, the same as those sportscar teams pitting under the safety car and getting stuck behind the next one didn't have to pit, they could have kept going.
If they were going to police it and neutralise it, they should have righted the situation in the valley. They didn't, ergo what is Quintana to do? Voluntarily hand over the lead?