Teams & Riders The Remco Evenepoel is the next Eddy Merckx thread

Page 765 - Get up to date with the latest news, scores & standings from the Cycling News Community.
I don’t think so. I think I’m wasting mine😁

Then, pray tell: why do you post fanatically in this particular thread?

You are absolutely welcome here as are any and all doubters (or even haters).

But then to complain about the posts you disagree with (or as others do, get exasperated by the excited celebration of a young phenom’s achievements by his admirers) truly boggles. Just save yourself the excruciating pain it clearly causes you, and spend your renowned acuity on other threads.

Or are you simply a troll?

Ah.
 
Then, pray tell: why do you post fanatically in this particular thread?

You are absolutely welcome here as are any and all doubters (or even haters).

But then to complain about the posts you disagree with (or as others do, get exasperated by the excited celebration of a young phenom’s achievements by his admirers) truly boggles. Just save yourself the excruciating pain it clearly causes you, and spend your renowned acuity on other threads.

Or are you simply a troll?

Ah.
I almost never write in this thread. I know many posters here lack composure to be able to have fruitful coversation/debate with them so I avoid this thread almost as a rule. I was challenged by @peterfin to share my opinion. Which was I don’t (yet) consider Remco top-league GT contender because he never beat Pog, Vinge or top-shape Rog in a stage race. This is my opinion and I stand by it. I don’t consider it controversial and no evidence was presented to change my mind. The only one who can present evidence is Remco in this years Vuelta or future GTs.

The rest was exaggerated and (intentionally) misinterpreted by the “mob”.
 
I almost never write in this thread. I know many posters here lack composure to be able to have fruitful coversation/debate with them so I avoid this thread almost as a rule. I was challenged by @peterfin to share my opinion. Which was I don’t (yet) consider Remco top-league GT contender because he never beat Pog, Vinge or top-shape Rog in a stage race. This is my opinion and I stand by it. I don’t consider it controversial and no evidence was presented to change my mind. The only one who can present evidence is Remco in this years Vuelta or future GTs.

The rest was exaggerated and (intentionally) misinterpreted by the “mob”.
He won a Grand Tour. Hence, he is a top-league Grand Tour contender. Evidence presented.
 
Oh yeah I remember that race!
3669880-74706528-2560-1440.jpg


I used Lo Port as illustration of who was best, as Rogla won the race definitely there.
 
  • Like
Reactions: bNator
Remco guested the latest WC edition of Watts Occurring, with Luke Row and Geraint Thomas; Didn't reveal anything ground breaking, but pretty nice.
The highlight was probably them calling him Lil'Bastatd.
Afterwards they either joked about Remco joining or downright said it was happening. Pretty sure it was a joke, a joke that is funny because it might happen.

Either way Remco sounded hungry enough and predicted a hard race
Tx. Just listened.

Every time I listen to G, he comes across as such an easy going pleasant guy, not the archetypical image of an intense top sportsman. I really really find him very likable.

Also, worth watching is Remco’s post presser after SS. He too comes across very well, both confident and humble and pretty matter-of-fact. Not surprised the two get along.
 
Last edited:
No it doesn't.
I think it does. Some riders have somewhat 'fluked' a victory by either a) never been close to that level again or b) have raced against a depleted field or just that they in general had super favorable conditions for their victory. I think what comes closest to that recently is Tao in 2020, the last couple of years have shown us that maybe wasn't that big of a fluke we initially thought as he looked really strong in this Giro and Hindley won last year in Italy.

Of the top of my head, I think Sastre in 2008 as well. Maybe Hesjedal 2012. Wiggins 2012 definitely. Horner is a weird case, but he won fair and square against a very strong field. And of course Pereiro in 2006. If we go back a bit further, I recently looked into the Giro 2002 as well, and god knows that was a complete shitshow that Savoldelli somehow ended up winning after multiple favorite got thrown out (Simoni, Garzelli, Casagrande) that at that time was far bigger of a name than Savoldelli.

I know, a GT is a GT, but there's a world of difference between, lets say Vingegaard's 2022 title versus Pereiro in 2006, Tao in 2020 or Savoldelli 2002, even though Savoldelli replicated it in 2005 where it was under far more different and difficult circumstances. At least in my eyes.
 
I think it does. Some riders have somewhat 'fluked' a victory by either a) never been close to that level again or b) have raced against a depleted field or just that they in general had super favorable conditions for their victory. I think what comes closest to that recently is Tao in 2020, the last couple of years have shown us that maybe wasn't that big of a fluke we initially thought as he looked really strong in this Giro and Hindley won last year in Italy.

Of the top of my head, I think Sastre in 2008 as well. Maybe Hesjedal 2012. Wiggins 2012 definitely. Horner is a weird case, but he won fair and square against a very strong field. And of course Pereiro in 2006. If we go back a bit further, I recently looked into the Giro 2002 as well, and god knows that was a complete shitshow that Savoldelli somehow ended up winning after multiple favorite got thrown out (Simoni, Garzelli, Casagrande) that at that time was far bigger of a name than Savoldelli.

I know, a GT is a GT, but there's a world of difference between, lets say Vingegaard's 2022 title versus Pereiro in 2006, Tao in 2020 or Savoldelli 2002, even though Savoldelli replicated it in 2005 where it was under far more different and difficult circumstances. At least in my eyes.
The 'flukes' on your list are too far separated from Remco to make a relevant comparison both in success rate (number of wins) and performance (watt/kg) at any age during their career let alone at age 22. You cannot consider somebody a fluke if you win your first GT at such a young age when you already recorded almost 40 pro wins and showed a few months earlier that you can do 7,3 kg watt/kg for 10 min and 6,5 watt/kg for 27 min. If he is a fluke anyone winning his first GT is per definition a fluke. The base case should be that he did not fluked his GT win.
 
The 'flukes' on your list are too far separated from Remco to make a relevant comparison both in success rate (number of wins) and performance (watt/kg) at any age during their career let alone at age 22. You cannot consider somebody a fluke if you win your first GT at such a young age when you already recorded almost 40 pro wins and showed a few months earlier that you can do 7,3 kg watt/kg for 10 min and 6,5 watt/kg for 27 min. If he is a fluke anyone winning his first GT is per definition a fluke. The base case should be that he did not fluked his GT win.
I literally haven't mentioned Remco though, and no, I definitely do not consider his Vuelta a 'fluke'. I don't know why you reach that conclusion...

There's also a clear distinction between fluke and weak. Take Nibali for example, I think his Vuelta in 2010 was weak. Anton was the strongest rider, crashed out, and then he barely beat Mosquera. Mosquera was great at the time, but Nibali didn't impress me throughout that race.

Nibali was a lot stronger in 2013 Giro and 2014, arguably his two best GT's I think. But the competition was some weak sauce, but I really don't hold it against him since he impressed me in those races contrary to Vuelta 2010.
 
I think it does. Some riders have somewhat 'fluked' a victory by either a) never been close to that level again or b) have raced against a depleted field or just that they in general had super favorable conditions for their victory. I think what comes closest to that recently is Tao in 2020, the last couple of years have shown us that maybe wasn't that big of a fluke we initially thought as he looked really strong in this Giro and Hindley won last year in Italy.

Of the top of my head, I think Sastre in 2008 as well. Maybe Hesjedal 2012. Wiggins 2012 definitely. Horner is a weird case, but he won fair and square against a very strong field. And of course Pereiro in 2006. If we go back a bit further, I recently looked into the Giro 2002 as well, and god knows that was a complete shitshow that Savoldelli somehow ended up winning after multiple favorite got thrown out (Simoni, Garzelli, Casagrande) that at that time was far bigger of a name than Savoldelli.

I know, a GT is a GT, but there's a world of difference between, lets say Vingegaard's 2022 title versus Pereiro in 2006, Tao in 2020 or Savoldelli 2002, even though Savoldelli replicated it in 2005 where it was under far more different and difficult circumstances. At least in my eyes.

Sure, I buy Pereiro and the 2002 Giro was just too bizarre for words but these days, Grand Tours are just too stacked to be able to fluke. Of course every GT winner does not back it up by another but how anyone can sit and think after a dominant win from 22 year old Remco that that would be his only GT win just beggars belief.
 
Sure, I buy Pereiro and the 2002 Giro was just too bizarre for words but these days, Grand Tours are just too stacked to be able to fluke. Of course every GT winner does not back it up by another but how anyone can sit and think after a dominant win from 22 year old Remco that that would be his only GT win just beggars belief.
Yeah well, I have no clue why people would call such a victory a fluke, but I wouldn't call it a dominant one. He was absolutely dominating the field half of the race, but the second half wasn't all that great. Now, how much that comes down to his crash is hard to tell, but if we look at the second half I see a lot more question than answers - a weak route that didn't really make it possible for his opposition to claw enough back time, Roglic crashing and a diminishing performance in the mountains which questions his recovery.
 
Yeah well, I have no clue why people would call such a victory a fluke, but I wouldn't call it a dominant one. He was absolutely dominating the field half of the race, but the second half wasn't all that great. Now, how much that comes down to his crash is hard to tell, but if we look at the second half I see a lot more question than answers - a weak route that didn't really make it possible for his opposition to claw enough back time, Roglic crashing and a diminishing performance in the mountains which questions his recovery.
I recall he looked really strong in the last week. One stage he won (although you can see he was close to the limit following Mas) and the other he looked really comfortable all the way, never had one sign of a problem.
 
bnators take for the most part is really not controversial.

Can't regard Remco as an elite GT GC racer yet. There's only 2 anyway. If we talk about the ones behind, not a scandalous take either. There's 2 things he hasn't proven yet:
1) multi climb high mountain stages. Not his fault, he did't design the Vuelta 22 and certainly not choose to get Covid in the Giro.
2) He can win in a group where everybody has specifically prepared for this, where it's the main goal for all contenders. Impossible to prove that in the Vuelta, there's always a bunch of +1 riders there, where it's the second season goal after the Giro or after the Tour. Winning something when it's your main goal, but the second one for many of the others is not as convincing as winning the Giro or the Tour, where it's the goal for all contenders really. This year it's the +1 for Remco too though, so already a more even playing field than 2022. Still whatever happens, the Vuelta just is not a good GT for definitive answers.

Until that is done, I'm not ready to declare him to be number 3 in the GT world either. Yes he won the Vuelta. I think rather highly of Mas, even higher of Vuelta Mas, he beat him clearly, certainly worth something. But see above. He's below Hindley, Carapaz, Roglic etc. for the moment. Because they simply have proven more. But he has the potential to reach and overtake that group. But yes, he indeed has to prove it. Nobody is putting Ayuso, Rodriguez and Arensman as elite GT riders yet (I hope at least). But they all have the potential to become that. Remco has won a Vuelta, they haven't, he's ahead of them. Logic, everybody will agree. Same logic puts Hindley for example above Remco right now. Giro win and second place, even after a finally slightly disappointing Tour, he's in the group behind the 2 GT superstars. But he'll have to confirm it again in 24. Remco has the potential to be much better, but Arensman has that too. Would Ayuso winning the Vuelta put him ahead of Remco? Not for me, because this year it would be Ayuso who is the guy who has this as season goal nr 1, while Vingegaard, Roglic, Thomas, Remco have it as +1

And no, there's no special rule for Remco, that he has to prove stuff. Even if the whining about poor Remco having to prove things in this thread never stops. Lots of riders have to prove themselves all the time. Roglic before the Giro had lots to prove too, does he still have it? Can he win something other than the Vuelta? Thomas as well, he has to prove that he isn't over the hill yet in every GT he starts by now. Age. This Vuelta too, Roglic has to prove once again that he hasn't lost a step. After all nobody really knows after the Giro, everybody fell asleep at some point in this boredom festival, no clue what he did.... Vinge? Has to prove the ability to ride 2 GTs. It took Froome quite a few tries to finally get the Tour-Vuelta double right. Remco on the other hand doesn't have to prove he is a top classic rider anymore. While nobody seems to know what to make of the course in Glasgow, everybody seems to agree that Remco is one of the riders to watch. More than Pogacar (and no, not because Pogacar has to prove his worth, but because coming from the Tour, even unsure if he should start or not, just doesn't inspire much confidence)

> Remco drops Roglic left, right and center in the Vuelta. A minute here, a minute there. Another minute in the time trial: 'No, it's not fair. :disappointed: Roglic is still recovering from his crash in the Tour. Doesn't count.'
> Remco crashes and loses 48 seconds on Sierra de la Pandera: Huh, crash? Doesn't matter. Crashes are part of the game, nothing to see here.'
> Roglic crashes out of the Vuelta: 'No, this Vuelta doesn't count for Remco. Roglic crashed. :cry:'

> Remco puts three quarters of a minute into Roglic in less than 20 kilometers in the Giro: 'No, not fair. Roglic is still recovering from his Vuelta crash.'
> Remco contracts covid, which forces him to subsequently withdraw from said Giro, but not before winning the second time trial despite illness: 'Huh, illness? Part of the game bro, nothing to see here. This one counts by the way.'

You got most things wrong.
-Remco drops Roglic at the Vuelta. Acknowledging that Roglic's preparation wasn't ideal, that a perfectly prepared Roglic might be stronger. None of us really knows how much it hampered him, but seems likely that without the Tour crash he'd been stronger. That's all. That simple acknowledgment is all it would take. It doesn't take away anything from Remco actually, he can only beat the riders that are there in the form they have. The failure to acknowledge that hurts your credibility though.
-Well, it is part of cycling. And same as for Roglic, while nobody knows for sure how much it hampered him, it seems very likely that it did.
- Actually very few people think that Roglic would have somehow managed to get the time back in the remaining stages.
- Any quotes for that one? Doubt it.
-Again making stuff up.

But the answer seems to be in this sentence here:
Peak Remco is all that should be debated.

It's about peak Remco only. If he is in peak shape it counts. The condition of other riders is irrelevant. Logical, no? Remco is the best, so he wins. His opponents shape doesn't matter. If he doesn't win, can't have been peak. Yes, that's not what Big Doopie meant I guess, but well, in the end for many seems to be how it is. Can't remember ever reading something like "Remco didn't win, rider xyz was just better" here...

You can fabricate all you want, but if you check things I actually said - I specifically said both of these count as special circumstance:

Why deal with opinions when you can just buld strawmen seems to be popular in this thread.
My take is completely different. The entire race I was sure Remco does not stand a chance against those guys (Thomas, Roglic & Tao) when the real mountains come.
Hm, here we disagree. I thought it would be possible that he would lose time. And the Giro. But was far from sure. Losing some time more likely, losing enough to lose rosa.. 50/50.

Anyway, we'll see more in the Vuelta. Even if as I said the Vuelta is not really a good GT for answers.
What will be interesting is how the Giro guys show up. 21+22 it was surprising how many of them failed to deliver in the Vuelta, Almeida only really, Arensman 22 a bit, after doing failing towards teh end of the Giro, he was there in the Vuelta. Landa, Bernal, Carapaz, etc etc, all disappointed in 21-22. Not sure why, maybe getting a second peak simply too much for most riders? Breaks too long, so had to rebuild from scratch, better to keep the condition at a certain level? Tired from the Giro? No clue really. Let's see how they deal with it this time. Roglic did well in 19, so presumably knows how to do it. The rest.. .we'll see.
For Vinge the question of course is how well he recovered from the Tour. He certainly went deep a few times there..
How well have Mas+Carapaz recovered from their crash?
So as usual the result won't really give too many answers, too many riders with question marks.
Biggest question of course is: Will Pello Bilbao start? Because if he is, he wins. Only rider to drop Vingegaard in the Tour in ages (well, kind of dropping him) and undroppable by Remco in a one day race, nobody will beat Bilbao!
 
Last edited:
Evenepoel's dad/manager can't confirm that Remco will be at Soudal-QuickStep next year:

View: https://twitter.com/cyclingtakes/status/1687702140716728320

Reportedly Remco would like to stay, but on the condition that the team can be competitive. And that condition has apparently not yet been met.
Does he have an exit clause in his conract? In my opinion other teams need to offer a lot of money to Evenepoel and the team owners.