- Feb 20, 2012
- 54,263
- 44,670
- 28,180
Overall this just repeats a few patterns for Evenepoel
1. Disappointing performance on a long and steep climb. Early season he's usually considerably worse on long climbs and on long and steep climbs it's basically always so. He's done one great performance on a 12% average or higher climb and it was 15 minutes.
2. Having a really *** performance the moment something goes wrong. He just doesn't have a B level, he falls through the floor immediately.
3. A more general observation that riders don't perform well outside their more natural skillset really early in the season. This is why you see Evenepoel struggle on long, big climbs in February, or why a guy like Vingegaard may drop a horrendous flat TT in the Tirreno.
His coach was talking about his legs being too muscular, but I more specficially think he just doesn't have a typical cyclists' build with long, legs. He has a sprinter's build with shorter limbs and I really think that hurts more on steep gradients where a pedal stroke becomes less continuous and crank inertial load increases.
I think he just trained more on shorter, more explosive efforts earlier in the season, in part to get more wins in earlier in the season and give his move to Red Bull a boost. But I don't really think that much has changed about him as a rider by going to Red Bull. His ITT is phenomenal, but it was already so at QS, and even as early as 2022 he could compete on punchy climbs on an LBL stage with the likes of Pogacar early in the season in Tirreno.
Aside from that, I don't think he handles disappointment well within a race and he clearly struggles to push through bad legs to push for like a 5th or whatever place. Whether that extends to him blocking completely in races like the TdF 2025 I'm not sure.
1. Disappointing performance on a long and steep climb. Early season he's usually considerably worse on long climbs and on long and steep climbs it's basically always so. He's done one great performance on a 12% average or higher climb and it was 15 minutes.
2. Having a really *** performance the moment something goes wrong. He just doesn't have a B level, he falls through the floor immediately.
3. A more general observation that riders don't perform well outside their more natural skillset really early in the season. This is why you see Evenepoel struggle on long, big climbs in February, or why a guy like Vingegaard may drop a horrendous flat TT in the Tirreno.
His coach was talking about his legs being too muscular, but I more specficially think he just doesn't have a typical cyclists' build with long, legs. He has a sprinter's build with shorter limbs and I really think that hurts more on steep gradients where a pedal stroke becomes less continuous and crank inertial load increases.
I think he just trained more on shorter, more explosive efforts earlier in the season, in part to get more wins in earlier in the season and give his move to Red Bull a boost. But I don't really think that much has changed about him as a rider by going to Red Bull. His ITT is phenomenal, but it was already so at QS, and even as early as 2022 he could compete on punchy climbs on an LBL stage with the likes of Pogacar early in the season in Tirreno.
Aside from that, I don't think he handles disappointment well within a race and he clearly struggles to push through bad legs to push for like a 5th or whatever place. Whether that extends to him blocking completely in races like the TdF 2025 I'm not sure.
