#16
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Bingham/B.Jackson/Unicoi/Habanero/Raleigh20/429C/BigDummy/S6 |
#17
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The top-tier GT riders are not at this race, with all due respect to Roglic, Yates etc...
the top 2 guys are on another level and while Sepp is not at the level is very much the equal to Yates, Roglic etc... when he is a good day and has in fact bettered them on many a day. Not saying that he will win, but also not saying that he has no chance. |
#18
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This isn't exactly true, considering his job hasn't been to hang with the top-tier grand tour riders, its been to deliver his team leader to the point where they attack/can follow the attack. Support riders' "finish lines" are generally much earlier in the stage, unless they're trying to win said stage.
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#19
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"But last year’s Tour de France was not won by Vingegaard alone. Wout van Aert was one crucial part to the puzzle, acting as super domestique and often sacrificing his own chances to help his team. Take the famed Hautacam stage of last year’s Tour as an example. Van Aert got himself in the early break of the day and had a chance of taking victory while the general classification battle played out behind him, but he wasn’t thinking of his own success. Instead, he waited for Vingegaard and did a monstrous pull on the front to drop Pogačar and lead Vingegaard to the stage victory. The Danish rider even said it himself after the stage: “I have to thank all my teammates, they’re incredible. You see Wout van Aert dropping Tadej Pogačar in the end, Thanks so much to my teammates, I could never have done this without them.” Last edited by Metz; 08-19-2024 at 06:36 PM. |
#20
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What you're talking about is if he actually helped. That is not up for debate. Of course he did. |
#21
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Sometimes I wonder whether we are treating pro riders as machines that follow and obey orders, to perform flawlessly under any conditions or pressure... or rather as human beings with emotions, ego, self interests, aspirations, fears, joy, vulnerable, has limitations... in other words kinda like us except they can ride much faster, longer and further.
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#22
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#23
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Wout has been a phenomenal teammate who has sacrificed more personal ambition than most riders have in their whole careers. In some situations, I think it's frustrated him when he thought he could have gone for a big win, but was called into supporting teammates instead. That's totally understandable, and I think the fact that he has performed so admirably in the face of this frustration is a testament to his character.
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Instagram - DannAdore Bicycles |
#24
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#25
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Early days.
The climbing bits begin tomorrow. That’s when we’ll start to see what’s what. |
#27
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I'd pick Yates over Almeida (strictly speaking between those 2), this race has very little TT's, Almeida is the better TT'r but I'd give Yates the edge in the climbing department, and this race is all about the climbs.
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#28
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Either way, he definitely plays domestique more than MvdP. MvdP is a lead-out man, which takes skill, but he's not usually blowing himself up on hard stages dragging GC guys around like WvA. Without WvA, Jonas probably doesn't win either Tour. |
#29
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Remco to Red Bull, WvA to QS. Match made in heaven? QS back to classics team |
#30
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they ran seconds apart at suisse with yates taking it but almeida finished a handful of minutes over yates at the tour. picking almeida thinking (guessing) he's in better form and peaking here at the vuelta. i don't know, depends on how you weight the race/win. i'd say on the road they're pretty even, wout has 9x tdf stage wins and a green jeresey
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