Vuelta a Burgos 2023, August 15-19

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Nov 16, 2013
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I believe the official profile is a bit off and the finish of the stage is closer to 750 meters a.s.l than the 800+ on the profile

I think the last climb is something like 2 km at around 5% very roughly.

I think it will be an interesting experiment in pacing and more interesting to me than a pure power focus TTT.

Yeah, 2.1 kms at 4.8% I believe. Then it really is not worse than when the Tour had a TTT finishing on the Côte de Cadoudal in Plumelec (where only the biggest of champions win).
 
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Jul 20, 2019
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Look at the time compared to the distance, it was much more downhill than the profiles indicates. Burgos profiles are notoriously bad. If we were to believe them, Lagunas de Neila has slopes of 125%.

Perfil-et5-Vuelta-a-Burgos-2018-800x296.png

That's a beyond infinite percentage there on that profile. Beyond vertical
 
Sep 20, 2017
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Yeah, 2.1 kms at 4.8% I believe. Then it really is not worse than when the Tour had a TTT finishing on the Côte de Cadoudal in Plumelec (where only the biggest of champions win).
So Ashleigh Moolman is the champion of champions?

As for the actual race, I really wish that a) it was an ITT and not a TTT (although it's understandable given that it's the only chance since Paris-Nice to fine-tune ahead of the Vuelta), and b) that the order of the mountain stages was flipped. Should still be a solid race as per usual although Jumbo look hard to beat. Will be interesting to see if it's all for Roglic or whether they fire people up the road on the Picón Blanco stage.
 
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Feb 20, 2012
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100% is 45 degrees.
Pretty sure they measure distance of the parcours, not hypothetical distance of the parcours had it been flat. At the percentages of cycling climbs, the difference should be neglible, but if we really had a 45 degree slope they'd probably give it the 70 odd percent it should be.
 
Nov 16, 2013
26,686
27,790
28,180
Pretty sure they measure distance of the parcours, not hypothetical distance of the parcours had it been flat. At the percentages of cycling climbs, the difference should be neglible, but if we really had a 45 degree slope they'd probably give it the 70 odd percent it should be.

I also thought that once. But I'm pretty sure this isn't how it is done.