Tour de France 24
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Has anyone ever won the 3 grand tours in the same year?
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@mariner4life No - I was just googling that to see.
Jacques Anquitil won four grand tours in a row, but it was two in 1963 and two in 1964.
Merckx won three in a row, but also across two years.
Have a go Tadej - it's only 3000 odd kms!
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@mariner4life No.
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@Chris-B said in Tour de France 24:
@mariner4life No - I was just googling that to see.
Jacques Anquitil won four grand tours in a row, but it was two in 1963 and two in 1964.
Merckx won three in a row, but also across two years.
Have a go Tadej - it's only 3000 odd kms!
Vuelta was moved in 1995, before that it was basically impossible to do all there in the same year. Merckx for example only entered it once and didn't do the tour that year (but did the vuelta giro double with a three day break in between!)
I think Vingegard is below his best given the injury earlier this season, so he might be stronger in the vuelta and if Pog loses even a little bit from fatigue in his third grand tour of the year that could be the difference. I hope he goes for it though, would be a very cool record to set.
Also hoping Binian Girmay gets the points win. Looks like he just needs to beat the cutoff and his points lead in enough.
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No Olympics, no vuelta it seems. But going for the world champs instead. That's the historic 'triple crown' combination, but a bit surprised that he didn't want to prioritise Olympics, although carapaz (defending olympic champ) was also not selected.
I'd love to have a full 3 week olympic grand tour. A bit tricky with the Olympics only being two weeks, so would have to start early, but would be interesting to see the teams get mixed up and organised into national teams. Although I remember the hype around the British 'dream team' in 2012 with lead by Wiggins, Cav and Froome. They got caught out by an early break that noone else wanted to do any work catching (all the other major teams having someone in the breakaway group), and burned out their team with I think only Cav managing to finish in the peloton.
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There's only a handful of people can realistically win a grand tour. And they tend to be from the same countries.
Can you imagine Roglič working for Pogačar? Van Aert working for Evenopoel? Who would lead for Colombia?
Then you would have Vingegaard with zero protection in the mountains.
There's a reason the Grand Tours are no longer national teams.
At least with the road race there's literally dozens who can potentially win, provided they get a decent balance of climbing and sprinting.
Edit: if they were to do it, it would need to be a week long race. That would at least open the field up.
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i know it's been a few years since he was a force, but i still miss Peter Sagan owning the green jersey with style.
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@Chester-Draws said in Tour de France 24:
There's only a handful of people can realistically win a grand tour. And they tend to be from the same countries.
Can you imagine Roglič working for Pogačar? Van Aert working for Evenopoel? Who would lead for Colombia?
Then you would have Vingegaard with zero protection in the mountains.
There's a reason the Grand Tours are no longer national teams.
At least with the road race there's literally dozens who can potentially win, provided they get a decent balance of climbing and sprinting.
Edit: if they were to do it, it would need to be a week long race. That would at least open the field up.
I think that's what would make it interesting - you have the potential for the strongest teams to fall apart as two leaders battle for gold and the potential for unlikely alliances to pop up. Plus it's a one off, every 4 years so it'll be intriguing even if just from the novelty. Superdomestiques are happy to do the work in the hope that in another few events they'll be the ones being protected, but that all goes out the window when you might be retired by the next event.
I'm not saying it'd be better than the existing events - you're right that it's not a sustainable format. Just fun to see every once in a while.
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@Chris-B said in Tour de France 24:
I'm reading that Finn Fisher-Black is leaving UAE for Bora-Hansgrohe.
Makes sense. A bit like a talented young player who can't make the ABs - UAE is so stacked it's hard for a young rider to get a look in.
Pithie going to redbull as well if rumours are true.. both be on some serious wedge there and good from a supporters perspective to have both our top riders in a super team.. talk of them buying out Remcos contract too
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Didn't get to watch any of this thanks to SBS's shithouse streaming service.