Ouch for all those, including me, that have him. Hoping for injury free season and he breaks something in the first race. Won't do his confidence much good either nor his calendar going forward.Dylan van Baarle with broken collar bone.
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Ouch for all those, including me, that have him. Hoping for injury free season and he breaks something in the first race. Won't do his confidence much good either nor his calendar going forward.Dylan van Baarle with broken collar bone.
Absolutely horrible timing for a classics rider to get injured now and miss a few weeks.Dylan van Baarle with broken collar bone.
Courses for the UAE Tour have been announced todayWhen are they announcing the UAE routes?
Last year they did it on the 17th, but the races are starting two days earlier this time around.
Courses for the UAE Tour have been announced today
View: https://x.com/ammattipyoraily/status/1881658005860778109
Sure, these first races really highlight the riders you don't have, but I have for some time now already thought that I probably misjudged Brennan when picking my team (and not picking him). I've realized just how many cheap points he will get chances at with how lacking Visma is in the sprinter department for everything but the biggest races. Brennan doesn't even need to be that good to score many points, probably. And him being quite popular makes it even more dangerous.So maybe leaving Brennan out (too many Vismas already) was a mistake.
Bring on the hilly stuff
Stage 1 is now an uphill sprint to the mosque at sth like 5% average. But yeah, basically the same route as usual.Ok, so the same route as last year, but with a different "climb" on stage 4 to keep the riders from falling asleep.
Stage 1 is now an uphill sprint to the mosque at sth like 5% average. But yeah, basically the same route as usual.
I don't generally disagree with your statement, but tomorrow for example, it can happen, that Visma will try to drop Welsford on the last climb to get a better opportunity for Brennan to win the stage. Of course, they have to decide, which riders they will use to make the race hard (and therefore perhaps sacrifise their own GC).Team tactics won't matter much, I think. What matters is what riders are in shape and motivated to ride for GC. It won't be up to Visma to make the race, so it's not like Graat is going to throw away GC chances he would otherwise have by pulling for Gloag (unless Gloag by some miracle ends up as race leader). They will probably both try to hang on as long as possible.
For most teams in most stage races, team hierarchy doesn't really matter that much for who scores how many GC points. Most teams won't be riding at the front. Which is part of why GC riders are often quite safe and preditctable picks for this game.
It's very good. His Orlen Nations Grand Prix showing (fourth on GC in a race with pretty much only hilly and mid-mountain stages, including a 4.2k at 8.3% MTF where he was fourth behind Rondel, Rolland and Verstrynge) was especially impressive, but his U23 Giro stage win and Avenir third place behind the break weren't exactly on Mareczko-type stages either. There's a reason why Visma describe him as more of a Matthews type...Not that I know a lot about Brennan's climbing level
Absolutely horrible timing for a classics rider to get injured now and miss a few weeks.
Boonen not winning that against Hayman, Stannard and Vanmarcke is too funny.
(this is copium, I also have DVB and the poor guy can't catch any luck this last two years)
Let me explain.We all knew he would be half-decent already. Especially in this weak field. You're not regretting not picking Walls (who's already almost on par with last season) either, are you?
Good catch @DJ Sprtsch & @zigzag wanderer !I suspect that Lorenzo Rota has received the points from Emily Dixon.
They have the same CQ rider number, 21958.
And there are no male riders with 11 points in 2025.
The answer last year when I asked was this:Now that yellow cards are applied meaningfully for the first time (they carried no threat of a suspension last year), their effect on pricing in this game becomes a potential issue. They can lead to riders being suspended for 7, 14 or 30 days : presumably it is the intention of the UCI that that has some impact on the rider's season, therefore by extension on his CQ points. Doping suspensions are not the only ones that have had an impact on prices in the game (Groenewegen, IIRC, was charged at his 2019 price for the 2022 game after a 9 month ban which bridged across two seasons).
If Danny van Poppel picks up a second yellow this week that will have zero effect on his CQ score this year (he wouldn't have been racing anyway), but if Jonej Pogagaard were to pick up a suspension that included the first stage of the Tour de France, that could be quite significant.
Any thoughts @skidmark as to whether there is to be an overall principle on this, or will it be case by case assessment?
I don't think I see suspending someone for a yellow card type violation affecting the CQ game score. The spirit and intent of that rule as Hugo Koblet created it was to eliminate the similar tension that some fans found distasteful, of being incentivized to pick a doper. My sense is that the temperature has gone down on that moral disgust in general post-Armstrong suspension, so that is maybe not as much of a consideration as it was in the early 2010s when this game was formed. Either way, someone being suspended for doping for significant parts of a season can impact this game to a decent degree.
Mancebo won a race again ! (I was corrected at time of comment that he never rode for Kelme*)
Direct link to csv. Just the Identifier plus FullName
I forgot Mancebo was still riding his bike. Kelme cyclists are real lovers of pro cycling. I miss that team...
I present to you Matthew Lloyd 2012.Is this some kind of record for the earliest point of the game where a non-insignificant number of players have gotten a rider into profit?
Of course, it helped that said rider came free of charge.
Yeah I think I mostly am still on board with what netserk quoted me on for last year's thread. I've thought a bit more about it now that the contours of the suspensions are a bit more fleshed out (or are more apparent to me because the violations are actually starting to happen), but generally I hew towards thinking that a ban of 30 days or less should not impact a rider's score, because it's pretty minor. Of course if it's like a prime classics rider getting suspended the day before E3 (and therefore being out for all the main point opportunities in their wheelhouse through Liege) it'd impact the game more maximally, but I'm inclined to shrug at that possibility. You can't cover all scenarios.Now that yellow cards are applied meaningfully for the first time (they carried no threat of a suspension last year), their effect on pricing in this game becomes a potential issue. They can lead to riders being suspended for 7, 14 or 30 days : presumably it is the intention of the UCI that that has some impact on the rider's season, therefore by extension on his CQ points. Doping suspensions are not the only ones that have had an impact on prices in the game (Groenewegen, IIRC, was charged at his 2019 price for the 2022 game after a 9 month ban which bridged across two seasons).
If Danny van Poppel picks up a second yellow this week that will have zero effect on his CQ score this year (he wouldn't have been racing anyway), but if Jonej Pogagaard were to pick up a suspension that included the first stage of the Tour de France, that could be quite significant.
Any thoughts @skidmark as to whether there is to be an overall principle on this, or will it be case by case assessment?
I didn't consider him, but actually he was already quite good last year so could definitely be in for a breakthrough. But like, he's 26 year's old going into his fifth season as a pro, so it wasn't exactly written in the stars that he would suddenly explode this season.Nobody picked Romo, luckily. He was one of my 200-300 guys that I debated putting in my team, but went with Dunbar instead. Hope I won't regret it come the end of the season. Romo really had the right profile for a potential big breakout.