- Apr 16, 2009
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Exactly. Why didn't he request a jacket.Damn... lol. He could also have taken a jacket.
BTW, nowadays jackets should be easier to put on. Or at least riders should practice how to put them on in the off season!
Exactly. Why didn't he request a jacket.Damn... lol. He could also have taken a jacket.
No the real difference is Pogacar had 45s more recovery time yesterdayI think the main thing with Pog is his recovery power, he can do those 450W for half an hour every day
Thank you! Finally somebody said it.I always read these kind of replies when van der Poel wins. To name a few:
He deserves a little more credit IMHO. He creates his own luck by being in this position all the time. Some you win, some you lose (Yorkshire....). In the end it is great to see guys attacking and not looking at their powermeter every time.
- He won today because he did not try to hang on yesterday.
- He won the sprint two days ago because Wout closed the gap.
- He won Strade because Ala had cramps and because Wout just finished his trainingsperiod.
- He became WC in cyclocross because Wout had a flat tire.
- He won de Ronde because Wout started the sprint too late.
- He won de Amstel because Ala and Fuglsang made a tactical error.
You could come up with something like this the day after a big Ventoux stage:In the near vicinity, there's no other relevant terrain.
This makes sense. The difference at the finish was again +/- the same gap!No the real difference is Pogacar had 45s more recovery time yesterday
A bit too short loop in the first route (for some races at least), and in the second it's the only selective part. There are many hills that are not much easier, but in return better located. But before a Sault finish it works, granted.You could come up with something like this the day after a big Ventoux stage:
https://www.cronoescalada.com/index.php/tracks/view/697331
You could also have a few laps on this circuit at the end of a hilly/medium mountain stage, the Mur de Monieux followed by an uphill sprint finish in Sault:
https://www.cronoescalada.com/index.php/tracks/view/697342
Sagan 11th on a stage like this today. Quite a progress.
Yes, I did, lol. ThanksI think you got today's stage mixed up with stage 1![]()
Yep, and the bottom line is that when on form MVDP's win rate in every discipline is absolutely ridiculous. Throw out the early fall races last year when he clearly came in overcooked in bizarre season - once he got it back he was winning per usual at T-A, BB, and Flanders - then look back at his hit rate on the road in 2019. Then see him literally win 90% of the cross races he enters and becoming the dominant force on the MTB - both short track and XC. Nobody wins more bike races and nobody comes close to putting on the show he does in pretty much every race he enters. The technical skills, explosiveness and complete "go for broke" attitude. WVA and Pojacar can fight it out for best all-around road cyclist, but MVDP is the best bike racer on the planet by a large margin.Thank you! Finally somebody said it.
It’s ridiculous how Mathieu’s wins get devaluated. The guy is an absolute legend in the making and these detractors come off as haters.
If we went to nitpick every minuscule factor in a stage race or one-day race we can find an excuse for every rider winning a race over the other.
Point is, the guy showed up and beat everyone.
I wonder if the same people will be so quick to back him up if he doesn’t win a race. “He only won cause Mathieu’s form is obviously in decline”. “He only won cause Mathieu started his sprint too soon” “He only won cause Mathieu cannot possibly be in top shape all the way up to Roubaix”.
I’ll wait and see.
Upon looking back this isn't correct, van Aert finished in 48 or 49 seconds, so he either matched Pogacar's last 5k, or he was one or two seconds slower.Van Aert rode the final 5k fastest of the 3 of them. Was 1m45s down, and only 45s at the finish. Pogacar had already passed the 5k mark when they showed him 1m10s chasing. The Dutch/Belgian Eurosport guys were timing it.
Wow, Higuita lost 21 minutes after having been part of the dream quintet with Mathieu, Wout, Bernal and PogiAnd he was third on GC before the stage...
Say what you will but this year's edition of Tirreno-Adriatico have seen some of the most amazing and entertaining road racing in a very long time. MVDP, WVA, Pogacar and Alaphilippe have really lighted things up and there is little or no holding back. Credits also to Ineos although it hasn't paid off... yet.
As for MVDPs ride yesterday it was one of the more nailbiting moments I have seen. When he chumped down a bar with some 7K to go it really started to look worrying and the last 2K looked like it could become a heartbreaking moment.
Pogacar is clearly the strongest overall rider and I give Wout a very small chance of getting the overall victory but I am happy to be wrong on that.
The start of the season bodes exceptionally well for MSR, RVV, PR and LBL. Can't wait!
Zero chance unless Wout does a Pogacar and Pogacar does a Roglic. So you're telling me there's a chance.What, Wout has zero chance of winning this race unless Pogacar does a Roglic.
Zero chance unless Wout does a Pogacar and Pogacar does a Roglic. So you're telling me there's a chance.
I've seen stranger things happenA Roglic as in crashing out of the GC.
He is not going to lose 75 seconds on a 9 km flat TT, if that's what you're alluding to.
I've seen stranger things happen
I knowI haven't...
You know Pogacar was fourth on the flat UAE TT, right?
