will10 said:I remember the days when no-one cared....
Seriously, what was anyone expecting??
A lot and at least someone finishing. Ask Cavendish how he is feeling about his day out in the rain.
will10 said:I remember the days when no-one cared....
Seriously, what was anyone expecting??
trevim said:As I said, the pool of climbers is short but come on...Rowe and Cav.
Anderis said:Thomas definetely should be there. He can climb. He was 15th in Dauphine, 3rd in hilly Tour Down Under and 30th in TdF 2 years ago.
CycloAndy said:No need to overreact, they had no form and the course didn't suit them. Geraint Thomas's ride at the tour and Stannard's display at MSR show they are no softies but without a chance, either individually or collectively, they rightfully called it quits. Thomas' lips were blue by the end which shows how tough the conditions were. The other countries coped better because they knew they had a decent chance of victory.
All the pre-race hype was just to keep the media happy. They were hardly going to admit beforehand that they had no chance and didn't believe in Froome's chances.
Waterloo Sunrise said:I know people love to talk about tactics, and how some people are clueless, but this really isn't the race to indulge in that ********* new and original thought.
The race just came down to the 4 strongest guys, with a Valverde fail in to the mix. That was it. Everyone in a group at the bottom, and then the 4 strongest pulled away.
GB were crap because they didn't have the legs and motivation.
will10 said:I remember the days when no-one cared....
Seriously, what was anyone expecting??
That's it, if the last GB riders pulled out on the last two laps when things started to get really hot then we probably wouldn't have this thread. When there's no one left out of a team of 9 with 100km to go it's a totally different story.JRanton said:I think the only slight surprise is that it was even worse than predicted. I had Froome being all alone with 50km to go and then being distanced himself when the action kicked off on the final two laps. I'm not sure anyone imagined them all being sat on the warm and toasty bus with 100km to go.
Waterloo Sunrise said:Errr, Uran may not be the best example for your argument...
JRanton said:He'd had three race days since the Tour after recovering from a fractured pelvis. And no he isn't suited to getting a result in a hilly one day race. Doesn't have any punch on short climbs like pretty much every British rider (Froome included).
The GB performance just highlights the lack of depth that they have in road racing. They only have 15 world tour riders and 3 pro-continental riders. That stacks up extremely badly against the other major cycling nations (Spain, Italy, France, Belgium, Netherlands, Australia).
trevim said:Who was the master mind that chose a bunch of rouleurs / sprinters to the hardest WC of the last decades? I know they don't have a large pool of climbers and puncheurs to choose from but Thomas, Stannard, Cav, Rowe was probably a bit too much. Other than that, choosing Wiggins expecting he rides for Froome, now that's just hilarious.
Jelantik said:maybe it's just a simple as 275km in hard rain wasn't really their cup of tea. Everyone has their weakness. Even Froome can just dream to just finishing it.
will10 said:I remember the days when no-one cared....
Seriously, what was anyone expecting??
sublimit said:Wiggins should never have started once it started raining.![]()
forkboy84 said:It really was a pitiful performance. Wiggins dropping out so early was a surprise to nobody, really the bigger surprise was someone thinking he'd ride for Froome. The questions about the tactics of the British team are absolutely valid, they just cannot race one day events because tactically Team Sky/Team GB (the terms are almost interchangeable) are dismally naive. It's fair to say that the course didn't suit the British riders (especially with Kennaugh at home & JTL withdrawn), but when Luke Rowe is your best choice for a replacement to JTL, that's baffling.
They do not know how to train for the classics, & they don't know how to ride them. Which considering the financial power behind the team, is embarrassing. What works at a GT (& yeah, winning the TDF 2 years in a row is impressive from Sky) does not work at a one day race, trying to control the race from the front right from the off was just against all basic logic. They clearly need outside help to correct the serious issues they have with riding the classics.
B_Ugli said:Well said.
Sky = Lab rats
Uncontrollable race variable = system malfunction
Multiple uncontrollable race variable = system crash
I think that they collectively have "crash ruined season" paranoia. Steve Peters needs to get on the case!
The other thing is I don't get this macho heroic riding on the front they feel they have to do. The only thing that matters is crossing the line first - all they had to do was keep as many riders in the hunt for as long as possible, mark the moves in the finale and let the course and weather do the rest.
Winter training to do list for Sky = Long rides in the wet behind a derny
You got it perfectly right. Adding a virus completes itB_Ugli said:Well said.
Sky = Lab rats
Uncontrollable race variable = system malfunction
Multiple uncontrollable race variable = system crash
Jelantik said:maybe it's just a simple as 275km in hard rain wasn't really their cup of tea. Everyone has their weakness. Even Froome can just dream to just finishing it.