I’m saying McNulty the French way from now on. I can’t unhear it. It was already tempting to write it differently.Just watched it back, Langelotti got caught behind a split in the final K, luckily he had a man heroically close it down so he could sprint out of the now swelled-group. None other than the chaotic stylings of young Jan Christen!
You can see him giving it socks in the background dragging half the professional peloton back to his teammate.
I always like to complain about the German commentators saying names wrong, but at least they make an effort sometimes (although sometimes those attempts are questionable). I guess in France it‘s just customary to pronounce everyone in a very French manner, so nobody even expects correct pronunciation. Definitely makes it easier.I’m saying McNulty the French way from now on. I can’t unhear it. It was already tempting to write it differently.
There was an F1 commentator in Italy who pronounced Hamilton as EemiltonIt does make me wonder how non-english commentators butcher the pronunciation of english names in the peloton.
McNulty still got some valuable seconds on the others in GC, which probably was the main thing here, and he should beat Langellotti in the ITT. Langellotti was just super-strong in that finish and hats off to him, rather than it was bad tactics from UAE...Some normal odd tactics by UAE, but chapeau Langelotti.
According to every French commentator,It does make me wonder how non-english commentators butcher the pronunciation of english names in the peloton.
I noticed that too yesterday. Why the hell was Jan Christen pulling for everyone else?Just watched it back, Langelotti got caught behind a split in the final K, luckily he had a man heroically close it down so he could sprint out of the now swelled-group. None other than the chaotic stylings of young Jan Christen!
You can see him giving it socks in the background dragging half the professional peloton back to his teammate.
Magnus Cort has won like this a few times.I can't remember the last time I saw a rider win from that far back.