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Timmy-loves-Rabo said:all season i've been hoping mollema would start at the vuelta.
De conditie is absoluut nog niet 100% (daar is nog wel even voor nodig), maar ik voel me al een tijd lang helemaal fit en ben ook niet meer vermoeid na trainingen. Vanaf volgende week zal ik de training serieus gaan uitbreiden. Ook doe ik op 4 augustus nog mee aan het profcriterium van Surhuisterveen. Wanneer ik mijn rentree zal maken in grotere wedstrijden weet ik nog niet, maar als ik deze stijgende lijn door zet moet ik in september/oktober nog wel enkele wedstrijden kunnen rijden.
Bala Verde said:Mollema got Mononucleosis (as some other CT rabo members, if I remember correctly van Winden, Vermeltfoort - and upon fact checking I was correct; Isn't that an indication of overtraining??) at the start of the season, which basically killed his season, and even worse, halted his progression. He is currently training with the CT team in the Eiffel region. I doubt he will be fit enough to do the Vuelta, let alone be a factor of importance.
From his website:
Alpe d'Huez said:Basso has the talent, but if he's similar to his Giro form, he won't win here. He actually rode well in the first week of the Giro too BroDeal, remember him trying to ride everyone off his wheel in Stages 4 and 5? He doesn't have his acceleration on the climbs like he did in 2005 or so, but if can get any of that back, look out!
Alpe d'Huez said:I still like Sanchez. He's focused his entire season on the Vuelta, and I think the course suits him.
Alpe d'Huez said:Basso has the talent, but if he's similar to his Giro form, he won't win here. He actually rode well in the first week of the Giro too BroDeal, remember him trying to ride everyone off his wheel in Stages 4 and 5? He doesn't have his acceleration on the climbs like he did in 2005 or so, but if can get any of that back, look out!
Alpe d'Huez said:It is a shame a lot of riders ride the Vuelta either to salvage their season (almost always failing), or prepare for the Worlds. Many of whom drop out right before the most difficult days in the middle. This is one of the reasons I like the idea of moving the Vuelta back to April-May. I realize the calendar is crowded at that time, but I think it belongs there and the calendar can be managed. We would still see some riders using it for preparation, but not like the way it is now. Spain is also more beautiful then. Everything is green, and there is snow on the passes. More scenic than brown grass fields and fog. Both Delgado and Olano say in about 2011 or 2012 will move back. I hope they're right.
I do remember him attacking in the 2005 and 2006 Giros. But now that I think about it, he definitely wasn't sprinting ahead the way Contador does. He just had more ability to jump than Levi, or Evans for example. And this year he didn't seem to be able to do that at all, or answer many attacks in the Giro by others.issoisso said:He's never had the acceleration. Think back to his pre-suspension rides. He never attacked even once. He just rode people off his wheel.
That's what I'm thinking, instead of just riding it with the mindset that "well, I blew my chance in the Tour, maybe I can do something in the Vuelta" that some riders seem to take. Making the Vuelta an afterthought, or as we said, just training ground for the World's.Also, it'll be separated enough from the Tour that riders will be able to aim for both.
Alpe d'Huez said:I do remember him attacking in the 2005 and 2006 Giros.
Alpe d'Huez said:But now that I think about it, he definitely wasn't sprinting ahead the way Contador does. He just had more ability to jump than Levi, or Evans for example. And this year he didn't seem to be able to do that at all, or answer many attacks in the Giro by others.
Alpe d'Huez said:As to moving the Vuelta:
That's what I'm thinking, instead of just riding it with the mindset that "well, I blew my chance in the Tour, maybe I can do something in the Vuelta" that some riders seem to take. Making the Vuelta an afterthought, or as we said, just training ground for the World's.
The only thing you won't see much of are riders going for Vuelta-Giro doubles. But that's almost a non-issue to me.
Some other problems with the move are that they'd need to move the Giro up a week. This means the Vuelta would start mid-April, right after LBL. It would also run over the Tour de Romandie and Four Days of Dunkirk. Pais Vasco could possibly be moved to make some room in Spain as well.
This all leaves a void for September. I propose bringing the Coors' Classic back, and holding it the last two weeks in August/Sept up until Labor Day.![]()
Alpe d'Huez said:I do remember him attacking in the 2005 and 2006 Giros. But now that I think about it, he definitely wasn't sprinting ahead the way Contador does. He just had more ability to jump than Levi, or Evans for example. And this year he didn't seem to be able to do that at all, or answer many attacks in the Giro by others.
As to moving the Vuelta:
That's what I'm thinking, instead of just riding it with the mindset that "well, I blew my chance in the Tour, maybe I can do something in the Vuelta" that some riders seem to take. Making the Vuelta an afterthought, or as we said, just training ground for the World's.
The only thing you won't see much of are riders going for Vuelta-Giro doubles. But that's almost a non-issue to me.
Some other problems with the move are that they'd need to move the Giro up a week. This means the Vuelta would start mid-April, right after LBL. It would also run over the Tour de Romandie and Four Days of Dunkirk. Pais Vasco could possibly be moved to make some room in Spain as well.
This all leaves a void for September. I propose bringing the Coors' Classic back, and holding it the last two weeks in August/Sept up until Labor Day.![]()
laurentiu46 said:They could move up the Tour of Portugal to PT status.
Two weeks of racing in August should fill the calendar pretty well.
Besides,the Portuguese have that monster climb Alto da Torre,over 1900m high,and also other hilltop finishes and punchy finales.
Alpe d'Huez said:I do remember him attacking in the 2005 and 2006 Giros. But now that I think about it, he definitely wasn't sprinting ahead the way Contador does. He just had more ability to jump than Levi, or Evans for example. And this year he didn't seem to be able to do that at all, or answer many attacks in the Giro by others.
As to moving the Vuelta:
That's what I'm thinking, instead of just riding it with the mindset that "well, I blew my chance in the Tour, maybe I can do something in the Vuelta" that some riders seem to take. Making the Vuelta an afterthought, or as we said, just training ground for the World's.
The only thing you won't see much of are riders going for Vuelta-Giro doubles. But that's almost a non-issue to me.
Some other problems with the move are that they'd need to move the Giro up a week. This means the Vuelta would start mid-April, right after LBL. It would also run over the Tour de Romandie and Four Days of Dunkirk. Pais Vasco could possibly be moved to make some room in Spain as well.
This all leaves a void for September. I propose bringing the Coors' Classic back, and holding it the last two weeks in August/Sept up until Labor Day.![]()
auscyclefan94 said:You are putting the vuelta over many important races and only 1 or two weeks before the giro. Totally inrealistic.Leave it the way it is.
Too cluttered at the start of the season and not enough races after the tour. I personally don't think it will happen. You will basically have a 6 month gap between the 2010 Vuelta and 2011 vuelta. It would seem very weird.issoisso said:Not unrealistic at all. It's how it was before 1995, and it's how it's going to go back to being. It's going to happen, have no doubt about it. The only question is if Olano and co. can push it up to 2010, or if it's only going ahead in 2011 as planned.
Don't think the Vuelta will overlap the classics. It won't. The classics will be slightly pushed "back" (earlier) to cover that gap between the Milano - San Remo and the Tour of Flanders that has no big races in it except the Critérium International.
As soon as Liége ends, a few days later the Vuelta starts, and the week after the Vuelta finishes, the Giro starts. The Giro goes a bit further into June and after it we have the Dauphiné, Tour de Suisse, Nationals and then the Tour.
Check a pre-1995 calendar if you can find one, and you'll understand what it'll look like![]()
auscyclefan94 said:Too cluttered at the start of the season and not enough races after the tour. I personally don't think it will happen. You will basically have a 6 month gap between the 2010 Vuelta and 2011 vuelta. It would seem very weird.
auscyclefan94 said:Too cluttered at the start of the season and not enough races after the tour. I personally don't think it will happen. You will basically have a 6 month gap between the 2010 Vuelta and 2011 vuelta. It would seem very weird.
thehog said:Good lineup:
Andy Schleck (Saxo Bank), Ivan Basso (Liquigas), Alejandro Valverde and Oscar Pereiro (Caisse d’Epargne), Samuel Sánchez and Igor Anton (Euskaltel-Euskadi), Chris Horner (Astana) Cadel Evans (Silence-Lotto), Tom Danielson and Daniel Martin (Garmin-Slipstream) and Robert Gesink (Rabobank).
thehog said:Good lineup:
Andy Schleck (Saxo Bank), Ivan Basso (Liquigas), Alejandro Valverde and Oscar Pereiro (Caisse d’Epargne), Samuel Sánchez and Igor Anton (Euskaltel-Euskadi), Chris Horner (Astana) Cadel Evans (Silence-Lotto), Tom Danielson and Daniel Martin (Garmin-Slipstream) and Robert Gesink (Rabobank).
Danilot said:Which is quite sad.
Absolutely don't agree that it wouldn't contribute to his legacy. Scoring a podium in the Vuelta or have succes in the combi Worlds-Lombardia would make him so much more diverse. That's why people still talk about Merckx, not because he won 5 TDF's, but because he won them and still was able to win worlds, giro's, all the classics and the vuelta. Or how Pantani won the tour and giro in 1 year.scribe said:re: Contador and the Vuelta.
He has won it and further wins won't contribute to his legacy the way Le Tour would.
Agreed that he wouldn't want to run the Giro or do the classics (LBL, gold race, etc.) prior to the Tour, since that could/would harm his preparation. (If he would ever win both in 1 year that would really make him one of the best ever)To win the tour, you need to prepare specifically for it. It is a fact in razor-thin competitive environment cycling has evolved into.