Really ?iBanesto wrote:Boom is really, really strong. Really.


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Really ?iBanesto wrote:Boom is really, really strong. Really.
I think in english they say just "cross-winds". That is what I was reading.olmania wrote:Tomorrow can be interesting by the weather : big wind (50-70km/h) and 2° ... a real cold wind !
So i don't know the name in english (when some good flat riders accelerate and play with the wind "coup de bordure" in french) can happen tomorrow
Ok, cross winds.Bear wrote:I think in english they say just "cross-winds". That is what I was reading.olmania wrote:Tomorrow can be interesting by the weather : big wind (50-70km/h) and 2° ... a real cold wind !
So i don't know the name in english (when some good flat riders accelerate and play with the wind "coup de bordure" in french) can happen tomorrow
Three or four minutes seems not realistic to me because a lot of teams would have chased in the main bunch. But Hinault is a pro, he must thought about that. And he points out AC's (maybe) one and only problem, the wind. I am excited to watch today stage.French cycling legend Bernard Hinault had some interesting comments on yesterday's happenings, saying he thought Caisse d'Epargne left their move a little late. Had they gone earlier, they might have had a break of three or four minutes, enough to really make a difference in the GC.
He also pointed out that Contador showed that he has a problem with the wind. “It’s probably his only weak spot. In this respect, his team must learn to protect him because we could find ourselves in the same situation on the Tour, especially in Holland where it could be even more windy. In the first three days, there could be splits any time.”
Maybe that's why they waited so long.“Our team manager Yvon Ledanois knew the finale of the stage perfectly because he came here a few weeks ago to see what the last kilometers looked like. He told us that at 23 kilometers from the finish, as soon as we turned right, the wind could play a very important role and that we had to be in front of the bunch right there,” said Valverde.
Yap, I think so too.I just read the same statement one minute ago. Seems, we are both reading the cn-ticker
This is known as the “race to the sun”, but this year it may be considered “the race of the wind”. The peloton split yesterday, and while most of the peloton was able to finish within 17 seconds of the lead group, 11 riders dropped nearly five minutes, and 47 riders lost over seven minutes. Big name losers include Tom Danielson (Garmin-Transitions), Wouter Weylandt (Quick Step), Oscar Pereiro (Astana), Yaroslav Popovych (RadioShack), Daminao Cunego (Lampre), Christian Vande Velde (Garmin-Transitions) and Christopher Horner (RadioShack).
People ride bad, because they are told by the French teams that Dopers are unbeatable."I think a lot of people still think I’m a bit of a fraud. I know one rider in particular who is adamant that I was on drugs last year at the Tour. I don’t know if that’s a general sentiment. Some don't think that but a lot of the French riders do," he said.
"But now the young riders know that success on the road is an achievable goal. For years we were always told by French teams: 'You'll never do anything at the Tour. How can we possible compete with these guys, they've got another gear.' You actually start believing that crap after a while. I believed that there was no way of getting top ten in the Tour if you didn't take drugs. But then when I saw Christian Vande Velde get fifth in 2008, that Tour changed everything for me."
For me it looked like Sagan was the most clever guy today. At the beginning of the climb, the street was narrow and he was in front. The others like Contador or Valverde were some riders behind. As Sagan attacked. he was many meters in front of the bunch. Maybe the others didn't expect such a attack or the were thinking that this will cost too much energy. Anyway, great job of SaganLuna wrote:And another thing we should not forget. He scored two brilliant wins. Okay. But it played into his cards that nobody in the race really knew him. At his first win he was simply the fastest and best positioned guy to the line. While today, i think it was a little bit of the chasers fault. Riders like Valverde or one of the Sanchez' could have gone with him, but they didn't. Wrong decision. Or maybe purpose. Something like that wouldn't happen again. He will be a marked man now.
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