Uninformed people are batting their eyes and scourging their backs against this heresy.
1.They also don't know how to ride a bike, at speed in a pack.
For all: you and some strong pals warm up a bit. Have them lead you out at 25 mph to a base of a 5-10% hill while you stay seated. You can gap off just a bit and take a spinning acceleration to the back end of the leadout. As you feel the grade toughen you can shift while staying in the saddle to maintain cadence. Keep doing that until you can't push a gear without getting out of the saddle.
Duplicate that exercise at a slower entry speed, staying close to the rider in front of you. Jump out of the saddle and gauge the difference in effort and how far you get up the hill until you are out of gears for bailout.
It's been done for years by riders that know how to do it, particularly riders that have raced high-speed and technical criteriums or fixed gear velodrome racing. A smart, not super-powerful rider once told me: "in a fast crit you can't spin too small a gear out of a corner". Saves tons of energy and allows the output to be even and not peak the pulse rate so soon you cannot adjust. It's also much more stable and aero to stay low while others thrash around you. You'll also be faster on an inside line allowing you to pass more thrashers.
If you don't see improvement; keep trying. If it seems impossible to spin that smoothly: see 1 above.
Or let one of your buddies try it.
This is genuinely hilarious, next-level comedy. We have now reached a point where the Pogi-defence is not only pointing to crits as the holy grail of
"good cycling," but is even implying that crit-tactics are one-to-one transferable to a climb like Combloux. In its own way, this would also somewhat suggest that a rider like Contador, famous for going out of the saddle, especially when attacking, was neither
"smart" nor
"efficient," which is an utterly ridiculous claim to make when Contador produced top-level performances time and again with this approach.
Also, it's next-level gatekeeping and elitism to say that people are uninformed if they
"don't know how to ride a bike, at speed in a pack." Firstly, that has very little relevance in the context of Pogi doing seated attacks in one-versus-one situations against Vingegaard. Secondly, even though I have experience
"riding a bike, at speed in a pack," I would never claim to be more informed than many of the commentators or journalists who do not have this experience but, in return, work professionally in and around the sport every single day.