Ah, ok. I was talking about Madeleine, anyway.18-Valve. (pithy) said:Croix de Fer
Eshnar said:Ah, ok. I was talking about Madeleine, anyway.
On Croix De Fer someone could move, but the chance is really thin.
Edit: Maybe Nibbles can try on the descent.![]()
Aspin is a flat roadUnkown said:16 isn't too bad as long as Andy or somebody with the ability to get away on the Tourmalet attacks. As soon as the Tourmalet starts there will be not flat roads for the final 100 kms so a climber could possibly get a lot of time on that stage.
Logic-is-your-friend said:Why haven't the final two mountain stage profiles been added to the TDF website yet? Only these three?
http://www.letour.fr/PHOTOS/TDF/2012/1000/PROFIL.gif
http://www.letour.fr/PHOTOS/TDF/2012/1100/PROFIL.gif
http://www.letour.fr/PHOTOS/TDF/2012/1400/PROFIL.gif
Anyone have profiles for those stages?
Yes the probability is higher when you have a better parcours, but I don't want to waste my energy/time criticizing a parcours, when it's nothing I can do about it. I rather focus on the participants and the subplots. That's my point.Eshnar said:I'm sorry you missed it.
The point is whether or not the route is good.
A good route gives more chances to good racing. It can't force it, just like a bad route doesn't prevent a good race.
You're still wasting your time criticizing those who criticize the parcour.cineteq said:Yes the probability is higher when you have a better parcours, but I don't want to waste my energy/time criticizing a parcours, when it's nothing I can do about it. I rather focus on the participants and the subplots. That's my point.
Unkown said:16 isn't too bad as long as Andy or somebody with the ability to get away on the Tourmalet attacks. As soon as the Tourmalet starts there will be not flat roads for the final 100 kms so a climber could possibly get a lot of time on that stage.
Eshnar said:Aspin is a flat road![]()
airstream said:Contador attacked at 4% Etna section.
18-Valve. (pithy) said:Pantani couldn't save the same exact stage last time around, which is all anyone needs to know.![]()
I agree that Grand Colombier is difficult climb. However, in modern era of cycling nothing happens when HC climb is located 40km+ before the finish. You should go back to 60ies or 70ies to see attacks in stages of such type. It is the fault of organizers not riders because riders won't be suicidal and won't waste energy in such kind of stages. To illustrate it watch the highlights of Stage 11 of TDF 2005 when Galibier was 40km before finish. That stage was harder than Colombier stage and there was no action between Armstrong, Basso, Ullrich (Armstrong group had 26 riders at finish). Vino attacked after he lost the race the day before. Take attention how domestiques slowly but surely cut the time gaps after the Galibier. Links are here:Bavarianrider said:If climbers don't use a chance like Grand Colombier, that's their fault. Not the one of the route. The climb is long and difficult enough to totally rip the field appart and eliminate some riders of the GC.
LaFlorecita said:![]()
Uhm... I am quite certain Alberto attacked on a 8% section... I remember that exactly... 4% is like a false flat...
airstream said:No. People didn't learn to ride up 8% with such speed so far. Though, I mean exactly the beginning of the attack because later the road got steeper.
guncha said:I agree that Grand Colombier is difficult climb. However, in modern era of cycling nothing happens when HC climb is located 40km+ before the finish. You should go back to 60ies or 70ies to see attacks in stages of such type. It is the fault of organizers not riders because riders won't be suicidal and won't waste energy in such kind of stages. To illustrate it watch the highlights of Stage 11 of TDF 2005 when Galibier was 40km before finish. That stage was harder than Colombier stage and there was no action between Armstrong, Basso, Ullrich (Armstrong group had 26 riders at finish). Vino attacked after he lost the race the day before. Take attention how domestiques slowly but surely cut the time gaps after the Galibier. Links are here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AvZGHs-OVQA
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TX5ZSef5_JY
P.S. I remember taking vacation to watch this 5 hour stage and I was truly disappointed when nothing happened...
LaFlorecita said:This is the profile... He attacked with 6.8km to go... Which means between km 12 and 13...
airstream said:Such a profile is quite rough in terms of accuracy up to hundreds of meters. Working on 4% and 8% visually differ a lot.
Jan the Man said:Classics stages - 1, 3 (2)
Sprinters stages 2, 4, 5, 6, 13, 15, 21 (7)
Medium Mountain Stages - 7, 8, 14 (3)
Pucheurs/Transition - 12, 19 (2)
High Mountain stages - 10, 11, 16, 17 (4)
ITT - P, 9, 19 (3)
I think it's a relatively balanced route.
I would like at least one of the mountain top finishes to be harder.
But before Colombier there are no other H.C. and 1st cat. climbs. 3rd cat. Richemond won't change anything.18-Valve. (pithy) said:The Colombier stage is better suited to a long-range attack, though. There's not a lot of false flat after the summit.
guncha said:But before Colombier there are no other H.C. and 1st cat. climbs. 3rd cat. Richemond won't change anything.
If Wiggins will struggle on Colombier it will mean he is not top 5 or top 7 contender and will fade later.18-Valve. (pithy) said:It won't but the Colombier alone is steep enough to drop Wiggins, who doesn't descend with the best of them, either. It's a good stage to put him under pressure for sure. Whether they take that opportunity is another matter....
Eshnar said:I could perhaps agree for the balance... but I still don't like it
guncha said:If Wiggins will struggle on Colombier it will mean he is not top 5 or top 7 contender and will fade later.
