Doubt it, if you can’t drop Thomas or barely drop Almeida in the mountains you any dropping Evenepoel. And Norway he would’ve taken enough time back in the last TT.Rogla would've won anyway.
Doubt it, if you can’t drop Thomas or barely drop Almeida in the mountains you any dropping Evenepoel. And Norway he would’ve taken enough time back in the last TT.Rogla would've won anyway.
Doubt it, if you can’t drop Thomas or barely drop Almeida in the mountains you any dropping Evenepoel. And Norway he would’ve taken enough time back in the last TT.
I think seeing how he will handle the challenge makes for another interesting facet of this coming Tour. Even if Vingegaard was restored to full health and dominates again (which seems unlikely) there are a lot of good stories among his competitors. In addition to Remco, I will be interested in how Pogacar fares after the Giro, and whether Roglic can be back to close to his best form.The thing with Remco is that his peaks are absolutely incredible, argubly higher than Roglic's, but he has massively struggled to string those together over an entire GT. He won the Vuelta once, but those bad days towards the end of the 2nd week don't end well for him if he is racing Vingegaard, Pogacar and Roglic in better shape. He couldn't sustain his level throughout the 2021 Giro, cracked massively in the high mountains of last years Vuelta and some people probably aren't 100% convinced him dropping in the Giro was an early covid symptom.
Now there are plausible explanations for all of those things, but once someone fails to consistently perform in a GT so many times, one starts wondering whether this is just an inherent weakness of him. I don't think anyone of us can say for sure, which is why I think he is such an interesting wildcard going into the Tour. If he can ride like in LBL 2023 for 21 days he might pose a huge problem for Vingegaard and Pogacar both not in perfect condition. But if he has done it for 19 days I will still not be certain he can do it on day 20 as well.
Doubt it, if you can’t drop Thomas or barely drop Almeida in the mountains you any dropping Evenepoel. And Norway he would’ve taken enough time back in the last TT.
Haha, indeed should have been “no way”If he'd gone to Norway, there would have been a problem.
Autocorrect playing tricks on you?
Haha, one should have been “no way”
You'll be giving LS a heart attack ... but you forgot the "other" guy doing the double - G!So with the injuries to Rog and Ving, and Pog exhausted from the Giro, Kuss is the obvious choice.
I thought about @-ing, LS on that post, but why poke the beast?You'll be giving LS a heart attack ... but you forgot the "other" guy doing the double - G!
Doubt it, if you can’t drop Thomas or barely drop Almeida in the mountains you any dropping Evenepoel.
You can have that opinion. Reason why I’m saying that I’m certain Evenepoel would’ve won that is also because Roglic wasn’t that strong. I think he was much stronger in the Vuelta.I don't mean to niggle here but this sort of stance makes it very difficult to appreciate conversations about riders & their form, i.e. you can't rewrite history with any certainties. So Evenepoel got Covid, okay, but Rogla crashed with Tao GH & carried that injury all the way to Rome.
"if if if"
It's impossible to extrapolate future performances with absolute certainty or rewrite previous races with any certainty either. Each race has its own little story & dramas. All we know is these 4 riders on paper have an advantage over the rest. But I mean what the hell, any of them could hit the deck in the first few stages of the Tour, suffer some small physical inconvenience & that's just enough for a top form Vlasov, Hindley or a resurgent Bernal to finish ahead in GC.
Then what? Are we going to hear how that changes everything for future races? I mean this sort of 'versus' conversation can quickly get a bit boring when selective memory takes precedence over the actual details of the race, the riders & their form at that moment.
You can have that opinion. Reason why I’m saying that I’m certain Evenepoel would’ve won that is also because Roglic wasn’t that strong. I think he was much stronger in the Vuelta.
I agree that for GT’s he hasn’t been as good as back then. Maybe in the Giro but we don’t really know.IMO ( & this might not be in accordance with how his fans perceive things but it's how I see it), I think Evenepoel was at his absolute best back in the 2022 Vuelta. In that GT he was able to destroy short steep climbs, longer climbs & ITT's.
He hasn't been as good since either (for whatever reasons).
Evenepoel could only drop Mas once when he won the Vuelta and was overall slower in the mountain stages. Compare that with Rogla in the Vuelta last year.Doubt it, if you can’t drop Thomas or barely drop Almeida in the mountains you any dropping Evenepoel. And Norway he would’ve taken enough time back in the last TT.
But the post was about last years Giro where Roglic looked quite a bit worse than in the Vuelta. Yeah he only dropped Mas once in the 2022 Vuelta, but I think that level would have been perfectly sufficient to win last years Giro, considering the time gap he already had.Evenepoel could only drop Mas once when he won the Vuelta and was overall slower in the mountain stages. Compare that with Rogla in the Vuelta last year.
There are a lot of variables here, so I don’t think it’s super clear cut. But basically the key points are:But the post was about last years Giro where Roglic looked quite a bit worse than in the Vuelta. Yeah he only dropped Mas once in the 2022 Vuelta, but I think that level would have been perfectly sufficient to win last years Giro, considering the time gap he already had.
Now of course this does not take into account whether he would have cracked at altitude or something like that. But assuming he wouldn't have, I'm pretty sure his climbing level is more than good enough to win a race like the Giro last year.
The Mas that was able to follow Pogacar in LombardiaEvenepoel could only drop Mas once when he won the Vuelta and was overall slower in the mountain stages. Compare that with Rogla in the Vuelta last year.
A monument isn't the same as a GT.The Mas that was able to follow Pogacar in Lombardia
Point is that he was at his bestA monument isn't the same as a GT.
I put Hindley above Thomas.I mean, on a peak form comparison a “big 4” simply doesn’t exist. You have Vingegaard > Pogacar >>> Roglic, Evenepoel, Thomas. But maybe the circumstances this year lead to something interesting.