It’s possible that longer races might actually suit women more; there’s a theory that women are physiologically evolved for long distance trekking, and it’s seen in results of ultra endurance races where the likes of Lael Wilcox can beat a field full of men.Ignoring endurance and length of races, do some women have the w/kg to ride in the world tour? Van Vleuten did 5.8 for half an hour didn't she? And then this is better than some male world tour (or at least pro conti) riders in the u23 equivalent
Kuwait finished a very solid 20 minutes and 29 seconds down to Dygert.
Very good list. Personally, I'd have Lampaert also on the list. I think the ITT suits him. Also I'm not sure about Castroviejo, it doesn't look he has the form. Maybe Van Baarle an Kangert, two lesser names who could surprise. They were strong in Tour of Britain.****: Rohan Dennis
***: Victor Campenaerts, Primoz Roglic
**: Remco Evenepoel, Patrick Bevin, Kasper Asgreen
*: Alexey Lutsenko, Edoardo Affini, Jonathan Castroviejo, Tony Martin
This is what I'm going with for tomorrow. Quite a few still in there who can 'surprise'. Ganna for instance is a very intriguing rider now that he's back on his Pinarello with Team SkyNEOS, but he never practices long ITTs. What about Chad Haga?
It's hard to predict. Dennis is doubtful after the issues with his team, although he might still have prepared well individually. Roglic might be saturated after the Vuelta. Campenaerts might have problems on a wet, technical course. Evenepoel should be too young. Tony Martin is out of shape after his Vuelta crash. A surprise winner is not impossible.
****Roglic, Dennis
***Campenaerts, Evenepoel
**Haga, Asgreen, Durbridge, Lampaert
*Castroviejo, Bevin, Ganna, Küng, Martin, Oliveira
Excluding puddles, I find drizzle more hazardous when it comes to cornering.Missed Owen's ride but warmed to her in the interview afterwards and have become a fan. She will give the Dutch something to think about in the road race on Saturday.
Today was exceptionally wet across large parts of England. Tomorrow there should be drizzle: the half-hearted, but still annoying rain which forms about 50% of British weather
I can't really go along with this. Dennis the favorite over the European champion and the guy who won every ITT he took part in this year while he hasn't raced in the past 10 weeks? Evenepoel at the same foot as Asgreen? No. One star for Martin and Lutsenko? I would give those to Dowsett, Lampaert, Ganna or Küng.****: Rohan Dennis
***: Victor Campenaerts, Primoz Roglic
**: Remco Evenepoel, Patrick Bevin, Kasper Asgreen
*: Alexey Lutsenko, Edoardo Affini, Jonathan Castroviejo, Tony Martin
This is what I'm going with for tomorrow. Quite a few still in there who can 'surprise'. Ganna for instance is a very intriguing rider now that he's back on his Pinarello with Team SkyNEOS, but he never practices long ITTs. What about Chad Haga?
I like this prediction, but I'm usually wrong.****: Nobody
***: Campenaerts, Roglic, Dennis, Evenepoel
**: Bevin, Asgreen, Haga, Oliveira
*: Castroviejo, Martin, Ganna, Dowsett, Küng, Lampaert
I'm giving 4 stars to Mister Nobody. Because i think none of the 4 most expected names, have their stars aligned perfectly. Evenepoel never raced an ITT even remotely this long and the big question mark is his pacing. Dennis has had a craptastic ITT year so far. Maybe it's the bike, but i'm 100% certain the biggest problem is between his ears. In any case, i can't believe we'll see the same Dennis as the one of 2018. Roglic just raced the Vuelta and was about to be beaten by Campenaerts in the big Giro ITT, untill Campenaerts stunned the world with a bikechange from hell. And Campenaerts hasn't raced for 3 months either. I also think this will be too hard and too long for a young big guy like Affini, and i'm not putting too much stock in Lutsenko either against pure ITT'ers over this distance. These aren't the Asian Games.