Saxo had a good plan when they sent Kreuziger and Rodgers, but Movistar then tried to put Valverde and the plan was doomed.
DenisMenchov said:Saxo had a good plan when they sent Kreuziger and Rodgers, but Movistar then tried to put Valverde and the plan was doomed.
Boeing said:I say Saxo. for some reason the option of attacking to break or at lease test Valverde and Quitana seemed like the obvious opportunity assuming Movistar were spent with all the work.
I cant call Movistars tactics a fail because in the end they removed the then 2 GC guy for their benefit. however if Movistar's thought was to try and surge Froome into the red with Quintana trying to mix tempo and pace then why didnt they continue that with the lot of them at the front? More guys doing the same would have hurt more riders more often simple.
But alas, not knowing what it is like making decisions after 5 hours in full anaerobic back to back days, one can only assume practical cognitive function was in the red zone as well.
burning said:I think at some point on the valley Jesus, Rogers, Costa and Castroviejo were in the second group. (Feel free to correct me)
Why the f*ck Valverde attacked with Plaza and pulled Froome up to second group?
Why the f*ck Saxo pulled in the valley briefly instead of sending Kreuziger to second group? (If Froome chases him, he wastes energy)
Why the f*ck Movi pulled in last 3 hours instead of sending men ahead and let Froome do the all work?
Dont forget that Froome only put his nose into wind on last 130 km when Quintana attacked on the final climb
They really exploited that situtation perfectly and Porte is gone, time to celebrate![]()
The Hitch said:you like others seem to not understand the concept of teammates attacking.
If you send Quintana/ Costa up the road then the gc leader - Valverde, doesn't waste any energy. The rest of the team stays with him.
If Froome does attack in response then he has to pace the next 70k on his own. While Valverde has a whole team to do so for him. Froome would likely aknowledge this and drop back to the main group, and everything would go back to square 1 only Froome will have wasted energy. Repeat this 3 or 4 times and froome loses more energy.
Valverde meanwhile loses nothing.
So no, those calling for an attack were not asking Movistar to sacrifice the position of their gc leader. Or to waste any energy. They wasted more energy pulling the main group for 3 hours.
The Hitch said:If Movistar sent Rui or Quintana up the road then slowed the train down froome would have risked losing 5 or 6 minutes to Quintana. He would have had to pull or risked losing the entire TDF.
wwabbit said:Wouldn't Saxo Bank will be chasing this move down, since they would want that #1 spot too? Movistar now has a good chance to lock out #2 and #3 on the podium, why would they want to throw that away in what is probably going to be a futile attempt for #1?
wwabbit said:Saxo wants first too, so they would have chased Quintana down.
wwabbit said:And there was no Sky to do the work. If Froome refuses to work, do you really think Contador would be content to simply sit there and watch Quintana go up the road on his own? No, he would be sending Krueziger and Rogers to the front to up the pace.
wwabbit said:Kreuziger and Rogers being already up the road was not the situation Hitch was talking about.
Cimber said:the actual situation in the valley was that Movistar had Costa up the road and Saxo had Kreuziger and Rogers. In my opinion Valverde and Movistar then had a totally tactical meltdown when Valverde decided to pull Froome up to that group.
wwabbit said:And there was no Sky to do the work. If Froome refuses to work, do you really think Contador would be content to simply sit there and watch Quintana go up the road on his own? No, he would be sending Krueziger and Rogers to the front to up the pace.
The Hitch said:If Froome refuses to do the work, Saxo can refuse to do the work and say - we were never going to get 1st anyway.
Or they can try and send a saxo rider up the road and if that rider gets away froome has to do the work.
The Hitch said:Or they can try and send a saxo rider up the road and if that rider gets away froome has to do the work.
From a tactical point of view you are right, but you are forgetting Valverde's lack of love for Alberto here.Cimber said:the actual situation in the valley was that Movistar had Costa up the road and Saxo had Kreuziger and Rogers. In my opinion Valverde and Movistar then had a totally tactical meltdown when Valverde decided to pull Froome up to that group.
The Hitch said:If Froome refuses to do the work, Saxo can refuse to do the work and say - we were never going to get 1st anyway.
Or they can try and send a saxo rider up the road and if that rider gets away froome has to do the work.
del1962 said:If we are talking about in the vally both Porte and Kennaugh where only a minute adrift at that time, so I expect Froome would not work until they where in the group (I don't think he could expect them to work immediately though)