Tadej Pogacar and Mauro Giannetti

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He also won the Giro di lunigiana, one of the most prestigious races, at the juniors (2016), but not in an overly impressive way. Pogačar was a good junior, but there are good juniors every year.
Exactly, I don't put too much emphasis on junior results; for every dominant junior like Remco who fulfills their promise there are 10 Quinn Simmonses who don't.

What we're seeing today...I mean, ofc I don't believe Pog is riding clean but I equally don't believe everyone else is...so we're seeing a super-responder who has found the sweet spot of training plans, diet and PEDs. Plus ofc natural talent, race smarts and an excellent physiology (big legs, small upper body)
 
Pogacar wasn't hot s*** before the year, he won l'Avenir... He did come out of nowhere - at a young age. If you look at his results before that year.
His first three seasons were far from impressive. He won the Giro di Lunigiana against a mostly local field with few known names. He also won a stage in the Tour de la Paix and the Slovenian ITT against monsters like Cemazar and Primozic.
His first great performance was winning the Tour de l'Avenir, but he had already signed for UAE at that time.
Very similar to Pablo Torres who signed for UAE and suddenly set a new climbing record on the Colle della Finestre in the last stage of the Tour de l'Avenir.
Summary: UAE seems to be able to turn promising, but not exceptional young riders into nearly unbeatable monsters.
 
Guy is impressive, sure.
There is the part in Tyler Hamilton's book, where he comes to Europe for racing the first time. And he thought the European racers "defied the rules of physics and bike racing. For instance they could attack, alone, and hold off a charging peloton for hours.They were like Circus strongmen" .
This year, I am getting theses vibes when watching...