- Feb 20, 2012
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Neither of them would do the watts they did then in the current era.Neither Froome nor Contador would be winning any TdFs in the current era.
Neither of them would do the watts they did then in the current era.Neither Froome nor Contador would be winning any TdFs in the current era.
I see no reason to believe either would have been a big threat to the best cyclist we've ever seen and the only one who's been able to beat him. The level in their time was rather crappy compared to today.Neither of them would do the watts they did then in the current era.
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If they put Remco in a room with air conditioning, then Remco could teach Remco to climb.Maybe if they put Remco in a room with AC he could teach Remco how to climb.
@LequackIts getting to the point its time to face the reality boys in terms of climbing.
If it looks like a duck, swims like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then it probably is a duck. Im sorry.
Now that Seixas has won his first mtf, we don´t have to expect much flat itt´s in the tour the next 15 years. Evenepoel won´t have one real chance.I will say this, i do believe Remco will get at least one real chance to win the Tour.
Unfortunately that don't mean he'll be able to take it. I had genuine believe in Jurgen Van Den Broeck for a legit shot at the Tour during 2011. Only for him to crash on stage 9.
I appears Froome was doing everything he can to be as lean as possible. Even things I would not recommend, such as fasted training and drinking only sparkling water and semi starving. And still, there was no apparent performance diminishment.At some point as you drop weight, performance diminishes. I think that point is different for everyone. Or do you think Froome just wanted it more than anyone else in his generation?
The entire glp1 drug revolution has pretty conclusively proven, to me, that discipline is a myth. We are slaves to our hormones and we all have a different cocktail. And even if you have all the discipline in the world, where the body flips over to catabolism may be 6% or 2.5%.
I don't think that has anything to do with professionalism or discipline in his case. They have always thought he needed to weigh more during spring classics.If we speak about Remco concretely, we have seen him leaner and performing well, so his current state is not even up for debate.
Very fair.I agree, Evenepoel is a better rider than Onley and would have better chances. But my point is that if you take Pog and Vingegaard out, then the rest of the bunch is quite similar, and race becomes more open. Factors such as luck, who has a bad day and who doesn’t, who loses time in echelons, who makes a tactical mistakes and who doesn't, who is just lucky, how do team strategies change etc. who benefits from team tactics become much more prominent.
We don’t know what the racing would look like if you took Pog and Vingegaard out. Would it be basically the same—full gas from the bottom to the top? Or would it be different, more open, maybe more tactical, with more stop-and-go attacks, different attackers, and different counterattackers?
But overall, I am in your camp. I think that Evenepoel is capable of winning the Tour. But he is not a dominant rider (like Pog, Froome or Contador), where the question is not if they win the Tour, but when. Evenepoel needs the right circumstances and some luck on his side. Maybe it happens, maybe it doesn’t.
For instance, I would say that Roglič was the best GC rider around 2019-2020—not dominant, just a little bit better than the others—but he wasted his opportunities, or maybe he just wasn’t lucky and his window of opportunity closed. Maybe Evnepoel gets his chance, maybe not.
if he finishes behind tobias halland johanessen and tijmen graat, it means that the problem is not the climb but remco himself...Although the climb itself is much easier so winning the stage or being close is somewhat important for Remco. As for steeper and harder climbs, there he obviously has some work left to do.
Being better tham athletes of decades ago isnt something to give credit for. Sports naturally evolve.I see no reason to believe either would have been a big threat to the best cyclist we've ever seen and the only one who's been able to beat him. The level in their time was rather crappy compared to today.
