- Aug 20, 2011
- 985
- 105
- 10,180
37,33 according to PCS. Might come into play today?Has someone cared to work out the time limit? (yes, I'm too lazy do it myself)
37,33 according to PCS. Might come into play today?Has someone cared to work out the time limit? (yes, I'm too lazy do it myself)
Froome '18: 3'00''
Pogačar '21: 3'20''
Landis '06: 5'42''
Andy '11: 2'07''.Thought you meant for just Tour. Froome 2018 would be the obvious comparison to this. Also Andy in 2011.
You conveniently leave out the fact that they both entered the Vuelta that year and injured and were the top 2 riders in the 3rd week, and Contador beat Froome on both Mtn stages, as well as destroying him in the TT. Contador also dropped him in Cataluña and Tirreno in the mountains. Froome out sprinted Contador in the Dauphine Mtn stage, hardly dropped him.
Why tire yourself over a longer period when you can do it with a shorter effort.Quite impressive that he needed far less distance to make his gap than the other two.
Very poor competition if you ask me. Some people were saying that the competition was bad at the Giro. But this one takes the cake!
What happened to Lopez?Lopez & Nibali arrive at ~21mins
37,33 according to PCS. Might come into play today?
Pogi decides enough is enough, and takes yellow. Uran moves into top 3.![]()
Alaphilippe 19 minutes down.
I really don't want to s
Very poor competition if you ask me. Some people were saying that the competition was bad at the Giro. But this one takes the cake!
Despite that performance, I still don't think Pogacar does that to Roglic, and definitely not if Roglic and Jumbo all come on form. Shame really that Roglic crashed cos I do think they would have had a great battle here.
Outside of that, I'm here for Carapaz trying on every mountain stage and gaining no time. Bloody hilarious.
This is to be fair similar to what happened at the 2011 Vuelta, everybody retro-justified it as being a horrible field which helped explain Cobo and Froome's prominence, but you also had Igor Antón who was one of the favourites coming in after crashing out of the lead in 2010, Scarponi who was at that point 2nd in the Giro (later upgraded to winner), Nibali as defending champion, Denis Menchov a two-time former winner of the race (at the time), and Joaquím Rodríguez, a top rider the previous year and in the top positions of the Giro, as well as Carlos Sastre's career swansong, but all of them underperformed massively or were simply not GC condition at that point in their career, leading to a very underwhelming GC mix.I really don't want to s
Very poor competition if you ask me. Some people were saying that the competition was bad at the Giro. But this one takes the cake!
Like Landis's ride, it's a bit oranges to apples, as Pogi was in prime position and no one let him go, he won all his time on pure strength. In that sense only Froome is close. Indurain gained 3'00'' in Luxembourg, I can't think of anything resembling Pogi's dominance.How about Sella's break exploits in the 2008 Giro? He won the Pampeago stage by a million miles - though he wasn't a contender at that point, he certainly became one.
