Aru will compete on Tour de l'Ain, too bad Pogačar won't be there.
P.S. At least we will get some indication of Aru form.
P.S. At least we will get some indication of Aru form.
Burgos already showed us some indication of his form. He wasn't too spectacular over there.Aru will compete on Tour de l'Ain, too bad Pogačar won't be there.
P.S. At least we will get some indication of Aru form.
Also, he finished 18th at the brutal WC last year. For a light climber, only 21, this kid has tremendous endurance.He actually finished 12th today, just ahead of Van Der Poel. I think that is a great result for Milan San Remo.
Pretty sure he's doing the Dauphiné.Is he riding Dauphine or Lombardia next, does anybody know? For the Tour it'd be best to do Dauphine but I want to see Pogi vs Remco in Lombardia.
I simply didn't expect him to be there. He's not thát explosive.Pretty sure he's doing the Dauphiné.
Does anybody know what happened in the final yesterday? Of all the guys still in the peloton I was kind of expecting him to be able to follow Alaphilippe & van Aert. Legs running empty or bad positioning?
Huh? Sure he is. I assume his legs were a bit drained with the nervous finale.I simply didn't expect him to be there. He's not thát explosive.
Pogacar is really good, and a really great prospects for the hilly classics work, but I don't have him down as matching Alaphilippe, who's probably the most explosive rider in the world on hills like the PoggioHuh? Sure he is. I assume his legs were a bit drained with the nervous finale.
He has beaten Valverde, Poels, Lutsenko, Yates... on uphill sprints, he should certainly have been able to folllow van Aert in theory.Pogacar is really good, and a really great prospects for the hilly classics work, but I don't have him down as matching Alaphilippe, who's probably the most explosive rider in the world on hills like the Poggio
If it were steeper I'd agree.He has beaten Valverde, Poels, Lutsenko, Yates... on uphill sprints, he should certainly have been able to folllow van Aert in theory.
He has beaten Valverde, Poels, Lutsenko, Yates... on uphill sprints, he should certainly have been able to folllow van Aert in theory.
I think your expecting too much from him then. Matching those riders on uphill finishes is another thing to matching explosive big guys accelerating on Poggio. There is a reason why it's almost always classics guys jumping away on pure power at Poggio. Pogacar doesn't have that raw power required for such an effort. Kwiatkowski couldn't even follow them and MVDP didn't even try. It's amazing for Pogi to finish 12th in this race among so many fast and more experienced guys.
Did you see Alaphilippe at the 2017 Worlds? Guy crushed everyone on a 1.5km 6% hill no biggie. He's like a lighter Gilbert. That explosion is basically mutually exclusive with being a GT rider.Big guys like Alaphilippe?
Maybe Pogacar could have done it in rain. He's certainly great in the heat as well, but I still think rain helps him.
Did you see Alaphilippe at the 2017 Worlds? Guy crushed everyone on a 1.5km 6% hill no biggie. He's like a lighter Gilbert. That explosion is basically mutually exclusive with being a GT rider.
He should never be able to. If anything he'd need to move before Alaphilippe.Alaphilippe is in league of his own in this type of accelerations. Not sure how can anyone expect Pogačar to follow him on the Poggio. At least not yet. Pogi did great taking 12th place in his 1st participation in this "sprinter's classic".
Not impressed by Aru on Tour de l'Ain. If Pogačar will be able to keep the pace with the favorites on Critérium du Dauphiné, then likely Pogačar will be ranked above Aru, in the Tour team.
There is a JV leader that would disagree with thatDid you see Alaphilippe at the 2017 Worlds? Guy crushed everyone on a 1.5km 6% hill no biggie. He's like a lighter Gilbert. That explosion is basically mutually exclusive with being a GT rider.