THIBAUT PINOT - 2017 RECAP
Now that '17 is in the books for Thibaut Pinot, let's look back at what I would argue was his best pro season to date.
January 29: GP La Marseillaise. For his first race of the season, Tibopino sets a crazy pace in the hills, dropping the sprinters and helping Arthur Vichot for the win. 9th place.
Days later, at the Volta a Comunitat Valenciana, Pinot is sick, rakes up another top-10 in the TTT (although he is too weak to finish with the rest of the team). He soldiers on and finishes the race in 106th position.
Couch, blankets, and a few hot teas with honey later, on February 15, Thibaut places 7th in the opening stage of La Ruta del Sol. The following day, he scores his first win of the season by dropping Landa and the red-hot Valverde in the final kilometers, catching Alberto Contador with 300 meters to go, and launching a ferocious sprint. To date, his greatest win: against top competition, no one let him go like at Champeix '15.
March 4th, and a first for Tibopino: La Strade Bianche. For the first but not the last time of the year, portugal11's predictions prove to be wrong

. TP jumps in the BOD, resists, earning a well-deserved top-10 and much acclaim on this forum (and not just from me

).
Tirreno Adriatico left me with mixed emotions. After a strong opening TTT (3rd), team FDJ got carried away in the queen stage finishing atop Il Terminillo. Reichenbach launched a massive acceleration with 7 km to go that didn't drop anyone, Thibaut went wild for another kilometer, then took a breather and got countered, finishing 9th and losing time on his main rivals. Fortunately, Pinot bounced back the following day, when only Sagan could deny him the murito finish win in Fermo. In the end, Thibaut finished a career best 3rd of a stage race that he could have won.
One month later, it's time for Thibaut's last build-up race before Il Giro. 3,2,5,2,1.
Although he loses the overall to Geraint Toofast by a few seconds, the World takes notice: he's strong, he's mean, and he's ready.
Il Giro: 4th in the Etna stage, 6th at Peschici, and a brilliant 2nd place finish at the Blockhaus. Week 1 over, and Tibopino is Il Grandissimo. lenric' is getting his lawyer busy trying to find a way out (He made me do it, I don't remember, someone hacked my computer

). Then the stage 10 ITT: Pinot gains a little time on Quintana, loses a little to Zakarin, but loses a lot to Nibali and a lot more to Dumourain. After three meh stages, 5th and 3rd in the week-end. After rest day, everybody but Thibaut took a lot of time on a crappy Dumoulin in the Stelvio stage. Bummer. But the rest of week-3 was magic, with Tibopino on the offensive. Attacks and win on stage 20.
Stage 21? Thibaut beat Zakarin

. His 4th place at 1'17" is the closest that a Frenchman has been since Jalabert won the Vuelta.
Thibaut was beat up, his French ITT was bad, his TdF was bad: only one top-10. He DNF. FDJ was way too greedy, so was Movistar, you don't set up your guys to fail. Marc Madiot, I love you, but you F'ed-up.
Thibaut rested, came back, good in San Sebastian, before a win that he wanted at the Tour de l'Ain. Where he won his first pro-race. And that gesture to the kid is my best moment of the year. Paving the way. What a class act.
Fall in Italy: nice build-up with no goals, just please the fans, and back to Italy. 8th in Emilia, 2nd at the Tre Valli, 8th in Milano-Torino, and today: going for broke. Fearless. It didn't pay off. Yes, Champions win. And he does. Champions attack too: inflict pain. Il Grandissimo made a lot of guys suffer at the '17 GDL.
Stats:
4 wins
34 top-10th
In 77 race days
Where do we go from now?
L'Equipe21 is broadcasting many races, so the TdF is not the only thing anymore for sponsors. FDJ can get a lot of exposure. It has been written many times before: Giro-Vuelta is the way to go to build him up.
On a technical level, in '17 Thibaut became more explosive at the expense of his ITT skills. Fine tuning is required. Tibopino is reaching his prime. He;s not intimidated anymore. Descending? Correct me if I'm wrong but he kept the gap to the other guys even when Nibali took off. Like in '15 BTW. You can slice it and dice it all you want, but give Tibopino credit: he's one of the best riders in the World. He's mean. He's hungry.
If it's true that good things happen to good people, I'm looking forward to next year's recap.