Re:
The last mountain stage could well have turned out identical to the stage that lost him the Vuelta in 2015. What happened on the Morcuera almost happened on the Monte Grappa. Also, in 2015 his performances in the hardest mountain stages weren't much worse than the big uniclimb stages.
His trends in performances in '15 and '17 were similar. Naturally he climbed better across the whole GT in '17,
Honestly if the Giro has 2 ITT's and a prologue and Dumoulin goes there with Kelderman and Oomen as support I have a very hard time seeing anyone beating him.
In the Tour he basically might take a minute tops out of Froome in the ITT, so he basically has to match Froome uphill all Tour long, and he can lose all his chances of yellow in one climb. And that's without considering that Froome will focus entirely on the Tour next year, so he won't be as vulnerable as this year.
Big, hard mountain stages aren't necessarily the biggest problem. It's the accumulation of fatigue. Dumoulin matched Quintana and Nibali on the hardest stages and only lost time on the stage to Bormio because of poopgate. Then he missed a split on the stage to Piancavallo, and nearly lost all there. He was on the limit on that climb where the peloton got back together. He faded in the last few days, just like in the Vuelta he lost, though he was decidedly better on the last mountain stage than on Piancavallo, so he recovered a bit.Climbing said:Tom was absolutely stellar in the first part of Giro, but when rough multi climbing started he was in deep trouble multiple times.
If he can improve on the endurance will be very hard to defeat in the future.
Certainly, on general ground, TdF would suit him a lot better than Giro (climbing wise), if it has enough TT that is.
The last mountain stage could well have turned out identical to the stage that lost him the Vuelta in 2015. What happened on the Morcuera almost happened on the Monte Grappa. Also, in 2015 his performances in the hardest mountain stages weren't much worse than the big uniclimb stages.
His trends in performances in '15 and '17 were similar. Naturally he climbed better across the whole GT in '17,
Honestly if the Giro has 2 ITT's and a prologue and Dumoulin goes there with Kelderman and Oomen as support I have a very hard time seeing anyone beating him.
In the Tour he basically might take a minute tops out of Froome in the ITT, so he basically has to match Froome uphill all Tour long, and he can lose all his chances of yellow in one climb. And that's without considering that Froome will focus entirely on the Tour next year, so he won't be as vulnerable as this year.