Dumoulin said that the top of Lussette was too far away from the finish line to try anything.
I so hope Pogacar wins.Jumbo. Arrogance? Stupidity? Clueless? Bernal could have lost minutes today, Mollema said he was shouting at freking Kwiatkowski to slow down. Do they think they are invincible, that they can just ride away whenever they want? Time will tell.
Must have forgotten what it was like racing GTs when Nibali and Quintana ruled.Dumoulin said that the top of Lussette was too far away from the finish line to try anything.
By that logic, everyone should wait for the last big mountain![]()
Dumoulin said that the top of Lussette was too far away from the finish line to try anything.
I so hope Pogacar wins.
Actually scrap that.
You know what a fitting end for the current writing is?
Bauke Mollema
Must have forgotten what it was like racing GTs when Nibali and Quintana ruled.
This so much. I miss the time when Quintana and Nibali attacked on the Col d'Allos in the stage to Pra Loup and everyone on this forum complained about a lack of action. Seriously, if you think the Tour has always been like this in the Skineos era, take a look back at 2013 and 2015.Must have forgotten what it was like racing GTs when Nibali and Quintana ruled.
"You miss 100% of the shots you don't take" - Wayne GretzkyPrecisely.
The effort needed to stay away would have cost more, than the reward is what he is saying.
Yeah, absolutely no doubt...Okay, now that everybody kept their powder dry like desert sand for the weekend, there must be the most spectacular fireworks in the pyrenees coming...
Because every syllable of it is dripping with a sense that THIS is what racing is supposed to be, that mountain stages only exist to be soft-pedalled unless they're summit finishes, and that racing is something that happens only in specific, selected areas chosen ahead of time. That there is nothing to gain from dropping opponents, so you're justified in not trying. They may as well make 90% of the race untimed "liaison" sections like Paris-Dakar.For them and for Ineos, riding the stage like they did today makes sense, they are saving energy for the biggest mountain stages.
It does too for FDJ (because all eyes are on Pinot maintaining shape in week 3 instead of burning his matches early), for Bora (Buchmann recovering from an injury) and for Bahrain (hoping to keep Poels in the race for week 3).
But for a number of other teams, it makes no sense to let all of Ineos and Jumbo get "half a rest day", on what could have put them under pressure.
I honestly don't understand why you take offence of what Kuss said.
Tbf that was stage 17 and this is stage 6. But yes, we do tend to lump all the Sky Tours together when really 2013 and 2015 were far better than 12,16,17,18.This so much. I miss the time when Quintana and Nibali attacked on the Col d'Allos in the stage to Pra Loup and everyone on this forum complained about a lack of action. Seriously, if you think the Tour has always been like this in the Skineos era, take a look back at 2013 and 2015.
More like degraded and no longer able to go boomYeah, absolutely no doubt...
This so much. I miss the time when Quintana and Nibali attacked on the Col d'Allos in the stage to Pra Loup and everyone on this forum complained about a lack of action. Seriously, if you think the Tour has always been like this in the Skineos era, take a look back at 2013 and 2015.
Yeah that was when I was thinking, sure Froomie, enjoy your short time in the spotlight before the Quintana era begins.You were 15 in 2013? Well, when you're young you think the future is going to be bright and there will be endless fun... then when you get older you will look back and miss those warm summer childhood days...![]()
Dumoulin had to rely on "friendlies" like Jungels and Mollema to save his ass in a similar finish at Gran Sasso, or he would have missed out on his only GT win.Dumoulin said that the top of Lussette was too far away from the finish line to try anything.
David Arroyo likes thisThis péloton would have soft-pedalled the Mortirolo in the 2010 Giro to be fresh for Aprica. Then they'd have soft-pedalled Aprica out of fear of the Gavia the next day. Then they'd have soft-pedalled the Gavia because it was further than 10km from the finish and that's apparently too far.
The 40-man uphill sprint at Tonale would have been the bomb, though.