- Feb 27, 2023
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Yes, but Rog says that constantly and sponsors are not interested in paying him million of euros per year.if you know 2 is false you go with 4
Yes, but Rog says that constantly and sponsors are not interested in paying him million of euros per year.if you know 2 is false you go with 4
First time there was, second time there wasn’t. And that second time was his mind saying something was wrong because his body needed readjusting again.afaik , not both in reality
When he spoke his mind, pretty innocuously, about wanting to compete for the win in the 2023 Vuelta to tie the record, that didn’t go over too well.Yes, but Rog says that constantly and sponsors are not interested in paying him million of euros per year.
so a perfect exampleFirst time there was, second time there wasn’t. And that second time was his mind saying something was wrong because his body needed readjusting again.
Well, those were just some American softies who thought one should gift a GT victory. I think he gained more fans than he lost by openly proclaiming he is there to win. In contrast, I think, by bing deceitful, Jonas lost quite a few fans.When he spoke his mind, pretty innocuously, about wanting to compete for the win in the 2023 Vuelta to tie the record, that didn’t go over too well.
I only realise now that Roglic and Vingegaard then proceeded to win the next 2 Vuelta's themselvesWell, those were just some American softies who thought one should gift a GT victory. I think he gained more fans than he lost by openly proclaiming he is there to win. In contrast, I think, by bing deceitful, Jonas lost quite a few fans.
Is that an actual interview? Why not just post or link the interview?Interviewer: Remco, tough race today. You didn’t win. What happened out there?
Remco Evenepoel: In the end, someone else was better. It’s that simple. The strongest rider won today. I didn’t have the legs to make the difference when it mattered.
Interviewer: Was there a specific moment where you realized it wasn’t going to be your day?
Remco Evenepoel: On the final climb. I tried to respond to the acceleration, and I could follow for a few seconds, but I didn’t have that extra punch. That’s usually where I can hurt others. Today, I was the one hurting.
Interviewer: Do you think tactics played a role?
Remco Evenepoel: Tactics are always part of cycling, but no, I won’t hide behind that. The team did a great job positioning me. When the decisive move went, it was about pure legs. And mine weren’t the best.
Interviewer: Were you missing something physically — maybe peak form?
Remco Evenepoel: I felt good coming into the race. Training was solid. But racing is different. Sometimes you’re at 98%, and someone else is at 100%. At this level, that’s enough to lose.
Interviewer: The fans expect you to attack and dominate. Did you hesitate at any point?
Remco Evenepoel: No hesitation. I attacked when I believed it was right. I just couldn’t sustain it. You can’t bluff your way through a final like that. If you don’t have the power, you don’t have it.
Interviewer: Is it frustrating to admit that someone was simply stronger?
Remco Evenepoel: Of course it’s frustrating. I come to win. But I respect the sport. When someone is stronger, you shake their hand and you work harder. Making excuses doesn’t make you faster.
Interviewer: Last question — was there anything at all that might have affected you? Preparation, rest, anything small?
Remco Evenepoel: Honestly… maybe I didn’t sleep perfectly last night. But that’s normal before a big race. I don’t think that was it. The truth is simple: today, another rider was better. And next time, I’ll try to be that rider.
Forum: What a wanker with the constant excuses!!!
I imagine this version is slightly amended with an altered tone if not exactly different words.Is that an actual interview? Why not just post or link the interview?
I think we can all agree that remco needs to either improve his climbing or change his goals. (personally i want him to stick to the plan till after the Tour).
I'm curious though what you all think about the mental part of remco.
I still get the feeling he needs to take a page from Roglic his book and ride more stress-free. More relaxed.
In my opinion he seems to be riding with self-imposed stress. Take Rwanda for example. It was one thing not being able to follow Pogacar on the hardest part of the race. Completely & unnecessary imploding for the next 15 minutes is an entire other thing. Only to then find strenght back in his legs when all was already lost and all that was left was to ride as best as he could. Once he was free, he suddenly become the 2nd best rider in the peloton. Or it is just my own imagination that Remco performs best when he looks relaxed, when his mind is free.
I mean that's an obvious statement, that you perform better when your not feeling under pressure. It just that he seems to build his own pressure paperweight that's constantly pushing down on him when he is not fully certain he can be the best. And when he is released from that he just becomes what he could be.
He needs to focus on the things that he's good at. Time trials, one-day races (monuments, classics, championships) and perhaps some one week stage races that suit him. He can develop his palmares into an all-time great status if he would simply focus on this. (In fact, his palmares currently as it is, is already top class and the envy of many)There are signs that he performs sometimes under unhealthy levels of stress and I think it has more to do of how he views himself than the impact of any outside force. Every move he makes or word he says is scrutinized in the press and on social but I doubt it really impacts him a lot, at least not today anymore. The major issue may be that he has such an unbounded view on what he can achieve, possibly strengthened by his successes as a junior and early results, that anything less is seen as a failure. I think it is part of the winner mentality but it may have reached unhealthy levels for him. When he does hit a limit under stress and strain, he can be set free, get rid of the frustration and perform at his best.
There are signs that confirm this picture when he is not racing. After he crashed in 2020, he spent a lot of time reading books on meditation and personal development. Today he finds piece in doing prayers together with his wife. To me these are signs of a mind that needs rest. I also believe that when he hit that van a year ago, he really faced one of the most depressing periods of his life (as he said) knowing that he is in his prime and had to get his act together to score that transfer to better team simply to have a chance to reach his goals.
I hope he learns something from Roglic' calmness but most likely his mind will be both his strength (winner mentality) and nemesis for his whole career.
I'll not go into that first part, as to not enrage fellow-members. But when it comes to that second sentence, I feel I actually gotta defend Remco here. "Just ride more stress-free" isn't something you just do.I'm curious though what you all think about the mental part of remco.
I still get the feeling he needs to take a page from Roglic his book and ride more stress-free.
I'll not go into that first part, as to not enrage fellow-members. But when it comes to that second sentence, I feel I actually gotta defend Remco here. "Just ride more stress-free" isn't something you just do.
We all have our own inherent character and temper. You can't expect Remco to just flick a switch and turn from the flamboyent, boisterous character he is to the stoic, unperturbed ways of the Roglic. That's just not fair.
Sure it would benefit him to take it down a notch when in front of a camera / microphone. Cut it out with all the gesturing on the bike when things don't go as planned as well, and I'm pretty sure more people would actually grow to like him. But you can't expect him to become a completely different person.
Zones are largely an academic thing. if one rides hard during training one will improve (I am not talking about sprinting, that belongs to the track anyway).
Remco has no race now until Catalunya. That is a full month away.
What are we going to do or talk about in the interim??
Withdrawal symptoms going to hit me hard!!
Talked with him on Discord. First thing he said after Wednesday was that apparently still no one sees that he's overweight for climbing long or hard climbs. He specifically said:To bad there's no Logic anymore. He would give us exciting updates about Remco's weight during this time.
65 kilos strikes again
When he retires in 10 years, someone will suggest that he might have been better off riding uphill at 60kg.
Red Bull is just as laughable. Van Wilder is a minute faster here, lol. 5kg in half an hour of climbing is a 2.30m difference. Wow, who would've thought...
The only constant through all his uphill failures is his weight. Remco usually handles the heat well. CSS, Vuelta, UAE 2023... the only exception was Switzerland 2022 because it was unexpected there.
Talked with him on Discord. First thing he said after Wednesday was that apparently still no one sees that he's overweight for climbing long or hard climbs. He specifically said:
Yeah, whats up with that, he had his account deleted or something?To bad there's no Logic anymore. He would give us exciting updates about Remco's weight during this time.
Tired of the forum. I get it, have thought about it too. If it's not fun anymore, why bother.Yeah, whats up with that, he had his account deleted or something?
So you don't think weight has any influence on how fast you can go on a climb? Interesting takedamn hed have won by one and a half minute if only the fat bastard could skip a meal ( more than two minutes faster than pogis fastest time on that climb ever )
