I think Ala is likely, he seemed to deliberately lose a chunk of time yesterday
the final (categorized) climb is ~3k at 10% average. He'll be dropped like a stone there, if it's game on for the stage win (and maybe gc gaps)
If he wants to win green, #14 is (and always was going to be) the decisive stage, where he can potentially make up 50 points
My hope is for a long-range attack from a rider who is just close enough in the GC standings to entice teams to chase.
Probably very short, probably more like a false flat.Not entirely clear form the profile: is the intermediate sprint at the top of a small bump?
Not entirely clear form the profile: is the intermediate sprint at the top of a small bump?
Yeah I remembered this is the Tour as wellI think all the "what will the sprinter teams do" stuff will come to nothing and it will be terribly obvious this stage goes to the break like 10 kilometres in. My only question is, is Alaphilippe far enough back in the gc to be allowed to join it.
He was only 6 seconds slower than Alaphilippe on Côte de la Croix Neuve in 2018. The climb today is ~2.4 km @ 10 %, so definitely easier. It's also with more than 25 km to go. If in a breakaway, how big do you think the gap has to be before it's impossible for Sagan to close it to someone like Ala?
The fight for green should be over indeed. Sagan is climbing better than Bennett but where should he capitalize on? DQS is strong, so they can bring back breaks and Bora lost Mühlberger yesterday. Thats one guy that could drop most of the DQS riders uphill gone for them.