Yeah but Roglic didn't he had help.Geraint Thomas managed it.
Moments later, Roglic himself came up with a response . “I got a body check from Colbrelli. It wasn't necessary, but it was very stressful with all those narrow streets.'
Yeah but Roglic didn't he had help.Geraint Thomas managed it.
roglic didnt lose that much time, last year pogacar lost time early as well, there is still time to make up...but yeah Kelderman will win this tourWith Roglic, Kruijswijk and Kuss all with big time losses and significant injuries, I wonder what their plan is for the rest of the Tour.
There is no way they can bank on Vingegaard on GC, it's his first ever GT, and he would probably crack completely week 3.
Stage hunting?
For someone that obsessed with Danes you should know Vingegaard rode La Vuelta last year.With Roglic, Kruijswijk and Kuss all with big time losses and significant injuries, I wonder what their plan is for the rest of the Tour.
There is no way they can bank on Vingegaard on GC, it's his first ever GT, and he would probably crack completely week 3.
Stage hunting?
roglic didnt lose that much time, last year pogacar lost time early as well, there is still time to make up...but yeah Kelderman will win this tour
For someone that obsessed with Danes you should know Vingegaard rode La Vuelta last year.
It should be a race.
Not a lame season of Survivor.
Well, anything is better than massive crashes in all 3 stages. I think Kwiatkowski knows very well that they are similar to classics and you usually don't have 100+ racers in the peleton with 10 kms to the finish.Kwiatkowski wanted a prologue. Maybe he was correct.
I don't want gladiator games, I just hope there are other, better solutions than prolongued neutralizations.
The sprint stages aren't at fault per se, but the insane tight routes going into the sprints are.
Where are my wide road sprint finishes in major cities I grew up with when watching the Tour 20+ years ago?
Maybe I'm just angry, have forgotten past races from decades ago & I've been drinking too much this evening (hey, something I've been hyped for since late last year has been ruined now) but check out this one from 1997:
i.e. Cipollini for the win on a straight road, bossing the sprint like he usually did. Compare that to the crash bait narrow twisty GC grinder hell Prudhomme & co serve up these days.
That'll be the test for Primoz and how he recovers. He and Tadej will know after the TT what sort of hills they need to climb. This week was destined to be perilous from the start and the TdF needs to address the inherent risk to cramming that many riders on these roads.I know, I was referring to injuries too, for that very reason![]()
Apologies to those I replied saying that Colbrelli didn't bump.
He did bump into Roglic.
Then again, this happens a lot in races, and it resulted in a crash this time, probably because of overlapping wheels.
I still find it a stretch to call it a bodycheck or whatever. Just unfortunate, and totally in line with how racing for positioning is done by almost everybody in this Tour.
The video shows a rider with a leftward velocity going into the ditch from a straight line position.
roglic didnt lose that much time, last year pogacar lost time early as well, there is still time to make up...but yeah Kelderman will win this tour
It's an apology because I firmly believed (and saw from footage) that Colbrelli didn't make any moves towards Roglic.Sounds like a dreadfully qualified apology fullof excuses for taking a Top Contender basically out of the race.
It's an apology because I firmly believed (and saw from footage) that Colbrelli didn't make any moves towards Roglic.
Then I saw a video that began a bit earlier. You see Colbrelli going left. No bodycheck, but he's going left. Next you see is Colbrelli moving back a bit to the right (probably after contact, and that was what confused me in previous vids), and Roglic crashing with his bike clearly lagging behind (so he touched wheels with someone).
Was Colbrelli's move intentional? Was Colbrelli himself pushed (like in a chain reaction)? Did Roglic go to the right at the same time when Colbrelli moved to the left? Was Roglic taking an avoidable risk riding closely on the wheels and overlapping?
I was (and still am) rooting for Roglic, I feel he still has it to win the Tour. So I wasn't happy to see him crash. But the way he crashed, it seems more than one factor is at play. Not just a 'bad' guy giving a push.