Vuelta a España Vuelta a España 2020: Stage 17 (Sequeros > Alto de la Covatilla , 178.2 km)

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he's not that good.
0 results at WT level in his career.
He’s a frequent winner of climbing stages at 2.1 level. It may be that he never improves to be a big WT level contender. But that’s not what I’m asking about. He hasn’t been climbing at the level he has previously demonstrated. This is a Vuelta with a tired and somewhat thin field. He’s been nowhere.
 
To be fair, I feel there may be a cultural aspect to his boring interviews. Pogacar doesn't come across as very charismatic either, but he could be mistaken for the shy kid from a few doors down thanks to his baby face.

The command of English and, in general, Eastern Europeans don’t show their feelings so quickly and so openly... Now, Sagan with his refreshing candidness and unbound jackass-ery (in his younger years) is more of an exemption... LOL And I’m saying it as a huuuuge Sagan fan;)
 
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Bigger gaps today among top 10 contenders than in La Farrapona. I had the impression that the group at the start of the last climb was also smaller today than last Saturday. Perhaps the succession of many short climbs isn't such a bad thing at the end of the race.
 
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I wonder what happened to Woods today?

If he was as strong as on previous MTFs, he could set the higher pace to prepare for Carthy's attack and there could have been bigger gaps on the last mountain.

Yeah, Woods instead of Schelling in the early part of the final climb and it could have been game on.

And this is not meant as disrespect to Schelling who stepped up very well today.

But of course, on one of the few days that Jumbo struggles, the only one left to work is a neo-pro defending a 7th place on GC.
 
I'm fine with the race not being decided only on physics.
I'm fed up with people bending words meanings to fit their agenda.
Roglic has been faster than Carapaz for a few moments, not in global terms. And Sam Bennett has been faster than both Roglic and Carapaz. For a few moments, I mean.
Did you and those riders knew about time bonuses before the race?I'm not getting what are you trying to say...
 
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Bigger gaps today among top 10 contenders than in La Farrapona. I had the impression that the group at the start of the last climb was also smaller today than last Saturday. Perhaps the succession of many short climbs isn't such a bad thing at the end of the race.

I like the lack of road to recover after Garganta, it's "worrying" for the race at some point to see the front drill failed to drop any remaining soul before that.
 
Bigger gaps today among top 10 contenders than in La Farrapona. I had the impression that the group at the start of the last climb was also smaller today than last Saturday. Perhaps the succession of many short climbs isn't such a bad thing at the end of the race.
This has been the best stage design in the Sierra de Béjar for over a decade, to be honest.
 
I couldn’t disagree more with this. For me, the rider of the year is about wins. Then the second most important thing to evaluate is also wins. And the third. Placings, panache etc are just tie breakers.
Then a vote is completely unnecessary, just check the UCI standings.

You can win, while a dozen riders are better. Or you can be the best by far, but get a puncture at the wrong time. You can also win thanks to being in a better team or lose due to being in a crappy team.
 
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Time bonuses impact the race result, which I'm fine with. Time bonuses do not change the physics. Fast is a physics term.
Yes, but then you need to take into account the real time of every rider everytime. Even when they finish together in the peloton. There can be big differences between the first and the last rider in a group when it ends in bunch sprint, but because of the race rules, they all get the same time. That's way the talk about Carapaz being faster despite Roglič winning the race doesn't make sense. It's just nitpicking.
 
I don't have a preference, but when Sky started pushing the pace, you knew they meant business. Jumbo is just controlling for the sake of controlling. They rarely try to set something up.
I think the difference between peak Sky train and peak Jumbo train is that when Sky had Froome in top form, they knew that he was untouchable in the high mountains, totally nuclear. With Jumbo, their train is done to discourage attacks on Roglic, to discourage other teams from exploiting any weakness (or less-than-superhuman-ness) that Roglic might have. Roglic never was as dominating as Froome in the long, high hills. Primoz is a better all-round rider than Froome was (say, for classics, etc.), but not near peak Froome's level as a pure climber.
 
Then a vote is completely unnecessary, just check the UCI standings.

You can win, while a dozen riders are better. Or you can be the best by far, but get a puncture at the wrong time. You can also win thanks to being in a better team or lose due to being in a crappy team.

UCI standings give high value to placings and minor wins. Which like panache and other things should be essentially tie breakers. I don’t see how anyone can reasonably be considered rider of the year without very big wins. Maybe in some very tight year where nobody takes multiple big wins a sprinter might get in the conversation by taking some totally absurd number of smaller wins.