Sorry Alfalum, i had no idea you were just trolling earlier. But i guess it makes sense now. Yes, Evenepoel is an unproven rider, and the only thing he has proven is that he has no punch.
Oh. My. F'ing. God.
In the Ardennes Quickstep hasn't used the Quickstep method SINCE JUNGELS (those were the dark ages, right?) because... * drumroll * they haven't had anyone but Alaphilippe who could actually ride the final and realistically bring home the bacon. You talk about Almeida as if he's a more proven rider. You have to be kidding me. As a 3 week GT rider, sure. As a 1 week stageracer, as an ITT rider and definitely as a classics rider and 1 day racer, Evenepoel is miles and miles ahead. Unproven you say, he won Classica San Sebastian, does that ring a bell? Druivenkoers, Brussels Cycling Classic, Coppa Bernocci, podium NC, 5th Emilia, and a slew of stagewins in hilly terrain. Poland, Adriatica Ionica, Algarve, Valencia, Burgos...
Also, please explain why Liège is so different from Flanders as to why the tactical concept of "i'm not riding, my teammate is up ahead" (or my teammate is coming back) is suddenly not possible. A tactic that is even used in cyclocross, in mountain stages in a GT, in an echelon stage or whatever, but for some strange and mysterious reason, this concept is not possible in a hilly classic. When Evenepoel won San Sebastian, Mas was his watchdog in the peloton. In Lombardia, Masnada bridged to Pogacar and didn't ride because he had his teammate in the chasing group. In that group, Alaphilippe didn't even have to work either because he had a teammate up ahead. So please enlighten me why this universal concept of teammates not riding against eachother, forcing their rivals to do the work and profiting from it in case the situation would change, is somehow not possible in Liège.
Mind. Blown.