Road Cycling
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Looks like TJV made a blunder in the early part of a flat stage, last night.
Let Quintana escape in a big group and had to spend the day chasing hard to limit the damage. Still handed back five minutes to Quintana - which puts him in second and Valverde in third.
With two mountain stages still to come, that could still burn Roglic badly. They can again double team him with attacks if they can isolate him.
Have to say - TJV management seem to go to sleep at the wheel occasionally in a way that you don't often see from Ineos. They fucked up at the Giro and they let George get caught out at the TdF.
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@Chris-B said in Vuelta a Espana:
Looks like TJV made a blunder in the early part of a flat stage, last night.
Let Quintana escape in a big group and had to spend the day chasing hard to limit the damage. Still handed back five minutes to Quintana - which puts him in second and Valverde in third.
With two mountain stages still to come, that could still burn Roglic badly. They can again double team him with attacks if they can isolate him.
Have to say - TJV management seem to go to sleep at the wheel occasionally in a way that you don't often see from Ineos. They fucked up at the Giro and they let George get caught out at the TdF.
It was crosswinds again. TLJ need a better weather forecaster.
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Just watched the highlights - one of the fastest ever stages in a Grand Tour.
Movistar completely outsmarted TJV.
The peloton split in two and they had Quintana up the road with support and then on one of the small, later climbs they went to the front of the Roglic group with Soler and Valverde - put the hammer down and blew away Roglic's remaining support riders. Isolated him and then sat up.
Luckily for Roglic, Astana still had some firepower available and they chased the Quintana group (for Lopez) and saved Roglic's ass.
I reckon TJV would be pretty concerned at how their team is fading around Roglic.
Tonight will be massive, with questions as to who's going to turn up with some power in their legs after today's stage.
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@Chris-B said in Vuelta a Espana:
Just watched the highlights - one of the fastest ever stages in a Grand Tour.
Movistar completely outsmarted TJV.
The peloton split in two and they had Quintana up the road with support and then on one of the small, later climbs they went to the front of the Roglic group with Soler and Valverde - put the hammer down and blew away Roglic's remaining support riders. Isolated him and then sat up.
Luckily for Roglic, Astana still had some firepower available and they chased the Quintana group (for Lopez) and saved Roglic's ass.
I reckon TJV would be pretty concerned at how their team is fading around Roglic.
Tonight will be massive, with questions as to who's going to turn up with some power in their legs after today's stage.
Damn. I missed the entire stage. Thanks for the great summary @Chris-B
It would be a shame for Roglic if he fades now and blows his chances. (disclaimer: I am a Roglic fan).
But I guess that makes the race more exciting. -
With only the ceremonial stage into Madrid to go, Roglic holds on reasonably comfortably to win the overall tour.
Some great racing over the final stages - pretty much every stage had surprises and drama.
Second-to-last stage, Roglic and Lopez were involved in a crash - Movistar launched an attack while they were down, which pissed a lot of people off - and especially Astana (for Lopez).
Final stage, Pogacar was the man with the most left - he attacked about 40 km out and built a 90 second+ lead that he never relinquished; supplanting Lopez and Quintana in the process. The remnants of Movistar and Astana wouldn't cooperate properly with one another in a chase and for a while it looked like Valverde might even surrender second place to Pogacar (though I suspect Valverde was always saving a little bit in case Pogacar got really close).
George did some good work for Roglic early in the stage, helping to control Astana's efforts to send men up the road, and eventually was the last TJV man with Roglic, but still fell away when the big attacks came - from Lopez and then Pogacar.
Somewhat disappointing tour for George. He never seemed properly right after that big crash at the end of the first week. I wondered whether he'd got sick, but also wondering whether he was carrying something from that crash - or whether his TdF efforts just caught up with him, as they did for plenty of others.
Amazing tour for the Slovenians - first and third. Pretty amazing that Valverde rides the TdF and still manages second. Slightly disappointed for Lopez, who created a lot of the GC excitement, but eventually attacked himself into the ground and comes away somewhat empty handed (5th).
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Not worth a new thread for the World Champs, but just to note - Patrick Bevin finished 4th in the ITT - two seconds off the podium! Rohan Dennis defended his title - pretty comfortably.
Men's road race goes on Sunday - Bevin probably our best shot in that as well. It looks like a "Peter Sagan" sort of course. Maybe enough climbing to get rid of many of the pure sprinters, but not enough to benefit the climbers. Seven laps around Harrogate at the end, so likely a big bunch finish.
Our team is George, Bevin, Jack Bauer and Dion Smith.
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@mariner4life You'd be worried if you turned up to a poker night and he was sitting at the table!
Wyatt Vogels Crockett is a contender.
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George has pulled out of the road race - replaced by Shane Archibold. Wasn't likely to be his course. Pundits are favouring Julian Alaphilippe.
" Gutted that I won’t be lining up on Sunday in @Yorkshire2019 . I did what I could to recover from the vuelta but 2grand tours, a few recent rounds of antibiotics and a couple of months worth of altitude this season has put me in a bad spot the last few weeks. Wishing the @CyclingNZL team all the best. They are already off to a wicked start. It’s a highlight of the year to pull on the fern and a hard choice to make but looking ahead to a few good opportunities next year to fly the flag. Go kiwi."
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Well, it pissed with rain pretty much throughout - parts of the course were flooded and must have been miserable. Only 46 riders finished the race.
Some guy called Mads Pederson from Denmark won - I'd never heard of him - rides for Trek Segafredo. Outsprinted one of the pre-race favourites in Trentin, and a well-deserved victory.
None of the NZers fired a shot. Bevin was one of the first withdrawals and Jack Bauer was the last man standing - dropped from the peloton with about 80kms still to ride (but, with only about 80 riders still in the race). To give Jack credit, about five minutes later Geraint Thomas was dropped from the peloton.
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@Chris-B said in Vuelta a Espana:
Well, it pissed with rain pretty much throughout - parts of the course were flooded and must have been miserable. Only 46 riders finished the race.
Some guy called Mads Pederson from Denmark won - I'd never heard of him - rides for Trek Segafredo. Outsprinted one of the pre-race favourites in Trentin, and a well-deserved victory.
None of the NZers fired a shot. Bevin was one of the first withdrawals and Jack Bauer was the last man standing - dropped from the peloton with about 80kms still to ride (but, with only about 80 riders still in the race). To give Jack credit, about five minutes later Geraint Thomas was dropped from the peloton.
Bauer punctured.. as seems to be the norm for this world champs a lack of neutral support and nz's position in the convoy means he was waiting ages for a wheel..
..so a great opportunity to so 'fark this!' get in car get to shower! -
just saw this.. so many crashes this world champs but jesus these two are BRUTAL!
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@WillieTheWaiter holy shit! the first looked brutal, the 2nd kinda funny, bet he never saw that coming
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I rode the sportive last weekend; only 145km rather than the 260km odd. Similar conditions. It was quite unpleasant. If I hadn’t driven 4.5 hours to get there I prob would’ve flagged it. It basically hosed down for the full week after I did it.
George’s girlfriend was interviewed on tv yesterday during the race. She’s an artist who now has a lucrative line in painting pros shoes. They look outstanding!
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Just settling in to watch today's stage in the Tour Downunder - and doing a bit of background reading and found this (below)...which is good news.
I'd guess George will have a bit of a second string support team, but still pretty cool for him.
Jumbo-Visma have confirmed that Bennett will lead the Dutch WorldTour team in the Giro d'Italia as Tom Dumoulin, Primož Roglič and Steven Kruijswijk focus on challenging Team Ineos at the Tour de France. Bennett also has his eye on the hilly Tokyo Olympic road race and so knows he has to carefully build his early-season form so he can be at his best in May and then again in early July.
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Can we get the thread title changed here? Road Cycling?
George was interviewed on The Project last night where they made out it was his choice to not ride the TdF in favour of the Olympics. He went to correct them but went with the flow.
Regarding his op, he says he is still having problems but the docs at NZ Cycling say it will take some time to settle down.
That may explain his lack of kick on the final climb up Willunga Hill the other day, or maybe it was just too early in the season for him?