Giro d’Italia 2018 Stage 4 Preview: Catania -> Caltagirone

Rest day recap

The wind was strong for the final stage in Israel but much to my disappoint, it was pretty much a tailwind for the majority of the way home. We did get a couple of splits on a short section but the bulk of the peloton arrived together. As predicted, it was rinse and repeat, with Viviani showing that he is the strongest sprinter here, coming round a swerving Bennett to take the win. The Irishman was beaten by Modolo for second place but he held on for third.

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Let’s take a look at what is in store for the riders tomorrow on their return to Italy.

The Route

A leg sapping stage made worse by tough Sicilian roads.

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This is just a typical day out at the Giro: 3000m+ of climbing but only two Cat-4 KOM ascents, classic. There is no real prolonged periods of flat land with the road constantly going up or down, especially in the final 2/3rds of the stage.

We could see some early attacks from stage hopefuls but they’re unlikely to stick, unless the morning break makes it all the way but with BMC wanting as much exposure as possible at the moment then it has less chance than normal.

The decisive part of the day is the final 16kms and what it holds for the riders.

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Like always I’ve made profile that you can view here.

The final 16kms kicks off with the uncategorised climb of San Bartolomeo, which averages a fairly steady 3.7% gradient for almost 8kms.

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It’s an interesting one as the gradient isn’t too severe but given the length of it, if a team decides to take up the pace and go full gas then we could see the peloton split. Bear in mind the amount of climbing they will have done before this point, but again, it all just depends on how fast and aggressively it is raced.

Once over the top they will have just over 7kms to go on rolling terrain which might present a chance for an opportunist to attack before the finale. The peloton will also have to contend with some narrow roads (like the following image), taken at roughly 3km to go.

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I wonder if we’ll see a rider attack and their team try to block the road/chase? If we don’t get any action on the run-in then it will all come down to the final kick up to the line.

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At an average of 8% for 900m it will entice both climbers and puncheurs, with lots of riders possibly fancying their chances at stage glory.

It must not be a popular Strava segment though as there only 77 people who’ve had an attempt at it, but interestingly, a few of them are here. Pinot, Preidler and Roy all “reccied” the stage on the 4th of April, just a couple of days after Geniez and Montaguti had a look at it. Pinot actually holds the KOM with a time of 2’40, whereas everyone else listed there took it a bit more leisurely. Will we see the Frenchman give it a go tomorrow?

Contenders

Given the various different ways this stage could pan out then there are a whole host of riders who *might* have a chance but I’m not going to name 20+ people here, nobody’s got time for that! So instead, I’ll focus on just three guys who could go well.

I’ll give an honourable mention to #GoOnCalves first though who could conceivably take the leader’s jersey with a stage win and a gap to Dennis. Anyway,

Alexandre Geniez.

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I had to choose one of the guy’s who have had a look at the climb before and Geniez is the perfect mix of not being a real GC threat but is solid and strong enough to go well. Although I think his team-mate (Montaguti) might try an early attack. Geniez started the season in flying form winning the GP Marseillaise before taking the overall title in La Provence. Since then he has been a bit quiet results wise but his form has slowly been building in the Tour of the Alps. He surprised me, and a lot of other people, with his win in Tre Valli Varesine towards the backend of last year where he won a very reduced sprint against Pinot. That day Geniez sprung out of the chasing pack to bridge across to the two leaders (Pinot and Nibali) on the last ramps of the final climb. Combining that with his sprint win in Marseillaise but also his breakaway wins in the Vuelta and you get a well-rounded rider. I still think it will be hard for him to beat everyone if he arrives with the peloton at the foot of the climb so he might have to anticipate the action and attack beforehand, but you never know!

Pello Bilbao.

If you’ve read this blog over the past couple of years then you will know I’m a big fan of the Spaniard since his sprightly days at Caja Rural. His debut season at Astana last year didn’t get off to the best of starts but a 4th place on a breakaway stage at the Giro was a sign of things to come. In the Vuelta towards the end of the year he was phenomenal and instrumental in helping Lopez secure a couple of stage wins but also pacing Aru when he was in difficulty. This season we’ve seen a much more consistent rider who’s taken solid GC placings in Valenciana and Itzulia before he recently won the opening stage in the Alps. His opening TT here was a bit of a surprise but given the punchy route we had then maybe it wasn’t too much of a shock, it did indicate that he is in good form though. Tomorrow’s 1km finish looks great for him and with Astana no doubt having plenty of numbers in the front group on the run in, will we see them constantly attacking or trying to set it up for the sprint on the climb? Bilbao has a good shot either way and like Goncalves, he too has a chance of taking the leader’s jersey with a win and a gap to the others.

Carlos Betancur.

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I haven’t seen the Colombian this motivated for a race in a while, he seems to have his head in the right place again. In 2017 he was domestique deluxe for Quintana at the Tour before being given the opportunity to chase stages in the Vuelta. That unfortunately didn’t go to plan as he crashed on the 7th stage while with the main group of favourites. He’s came back this season though and has had solid results in GP Indurain and Amorebieta but it was his opening prologue that really caught my eye. Like Bilbao he’s not exactly a great TT rider, in fact he’s a pretty terrible one, but his form must have been good on the punchy course to get himself round in 10th place. This type of finish we have tomorrow would be bread and butter for the Betancur that finished 5th on GC at this race back in 2013 or dominated Paris Nice in 2014. Is he at that level again? I’m not sure, but tomorrow will certainly be an acid test for him. I think I can speak for the majority of the cycling public in saying that we would all love to see Bananito back at his best!

Prediction

I kind of spoiled this on my Twitter but yeah, Pello Bilbao to win the stage!

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He looks in great form at the moment and with the Astana team as strong as they are they should be able to control proceedings in the finale. Just up to them whether Bilbao attacks early and they block the road on the narrow sections, or to keep it together and watch him fly up the final climb.

Betting

I did tweet out I was backing Bilbao when odds came out yesterday but the price has long since gone but I still would take him at what he is now.

1pt EW Bilbao @ 28/1 with Bet365 (would take 25/1 lowest)

1pt EW Betancur @ 40/1 with various bookmakers, Betfred are paying 4 places. (would take 33/1 lowest)

0.5pt EW Geniez @ 100/1 with Bet365 (Would take 80/1, maybe 66/1 at a push)

**Update – Added 1pt EW Goncalves @ 25/1.

Thanks as always for reading! Who do you think will win tomorrow and how will the stage pan out? Anyway,

Those were My Two Spokes Worth.

 

 

Giro d’Italia 2018 Stage 3 Preview; Be’er Sheva -> Eilat

Today’s Recap

The early morning break eventually went but were never given too big an advantage and we ultimately saw them brought back before the only categorised climb of the day. Barbin sprung out of the peloton and was duly rewarded with the jersey on the podium at the end of the stage. More interestingly though, we saw Dennis and Campenaerts both attempt to go for the intermediate sprint point not long after, with the BMC man coming out on top and consequently moving into the GC lead.

Things then calmed down before an incredibly hectic and nervous finale on a tricky finish followed. It looked as if Bennett was in the perfect position but he was caught napping by Mareczko who launched early, hoping to take advantage of the slight tailwind finish. One rider who wasn’t napping though was Viviani and he instantly latched onto the Wilier rider’s wheel, before sling shotting around him with ease, taking the win comfortably in the end.

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Rinse and repeat tomorrow? Let’s have a look at what is in store for them.

The Route

A more rolling day but still flat by Giro standards.

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It is however the longest stage of the race and with the peloton travelling through the arid Negev desert, some riders might really struggle in the hot conditions. Interestingly enough, the intermediate sprints both come within the first 80kms of the day: I wonder if Campenaerts wants to try to go for the Maglia Rosa?

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If you thought today’s finish was tricky, then tomorrow is ridiculous.

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Plenty of roundabouts for the riders to deal with, including 6 from 6km to 2km out. Thankfully they continue straight forward through them all but it will keep things stretched. It is once we get inside 2km to go that things get really wild, in typical Giro fashion. The riders will be forced to slow right down as they complete a 180 around a roundabout on what looks like narrow roads.

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I say looks like as the above image is the best we can get as the street view stops just before it. Rather annoying!

The road then bends round to the right just before 1km to go but this is coupled with the road narrowing down to just one lane.

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A nasty unmarked (on the profile anyway) mini roundabout comes with 750m or so to go. Again they just go straight, but it looks quite tight and the riders can’t ride directly over it, meaning they will have to swerve around it. Once again, stringing things out even more.

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The final turn then awaits with 300m to go.

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Once again the road narrows down to one-lane but the corner doesn’t seem as tight as I thought it would be. Nonetheless, it isn’t exactly an easy finish!

Will it end in a sprint though?

Weather Watch

That of course all depends on one thing: the wind.

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Source: Windfinder

The above is the forecast for Grofit which is roughly 50kms from home. As you can see, it is set to be a scorching afternoon but a very windy one too. A strong wind from the north (meaning mainly some sort of tailwind) throughout the day will see the peloton fly over the 229km.

As the road twists and turns through the desert some areas will be more crosswind but at the moment the majority of the day seems to be tailwind. However, the wind direction changed for today’s stage so the same could happen for tomorrow. I for one would like to see some crosswinds (shock) but there will be plenty of riders who won’t.

We’ll be in for some nervous racing throughout the day as all the GC contenders won’t be able to skip a beat in fear of getting shelled out the back.

Can anyone stop Viviani?

After what we saw today, it will be hard!

Even with him being terribly positioned at 700m to go, he still managed to find the right wheel and get back into the mix. He was then the most alert to latch onto Mareczko’s flyer and from there it was plain sailing. His kick was stronger than anyone else and he gained on everyone as they approached the line. This is a finish that should suit a team controlling it from 3kms out and QuickStep have a squad capable of doing just that.

Mareczko, Bennett and Bonfiazio were all lively but they’ll need to start their sprint ahead of Viviani as it will be hard to come round him. With that said, given the possible headwind finish, they might just have to do it that way!

The opportunists?

With a tricky finish and a potentially depleted bunch, there is a chance we could see a late attack stick tomorrow. Pick a name out of the hat time but there are three I want to mention, and you’ll probably see them mentioned countless times over the next few weeks as well!

Matej Mohoric.

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Everyone’s favourite top-tube descender, Mohoric loves to throw the spanner into the works, always trying an audacious move. We saw in Croatia that on Stage 2 he attacked in the last lap on a tricky circuit but was caught at the flamme rouge. If we get a hectic stage tomorrow and Bonifazio isn’t present in the lead group but Pozzovivo is safe, Mohoric might be given the chance to go for his own result. One of the best bike handlers in the peloton, he’ll take those tricky roundabouts with ease!

Jose Goncalves.

Mr #GoOnCalves is a rider I have fond memories of backing a lot at the Vuelta when he burst onto the scene back in 2015. I’m getting the same vibe from him just now, with the Portugese rider seemingly in tip-top form. He made a half-hearted dig today, Katusha actually looked pretty lively, and I think we might see something similar tomorrow. A very punchy rider, if he can time his attack perfectly in the closing kilometres it will be tough for a small group to bring him back.

Tim Wellens.

Is he going for GC, is he not, who knows? Lotto Fixall normally ride very strongly in the wind and with a very experienced team I would be surprised not to see the majority of their squad make any split. We’ve seen in the past how attacking a rider Wellens is and in the finale he has the abilities to do something similar to what Tony Martin hs done in the past. He’s had his best season to date so far and a stage win in a Grand Tour would help top it off. The one concern with him is the heat as he sometimes struggles in hot conditions.

Prediction

I’m hoping the wind plays ball and we get a drama filled, echelon-fuelled day. However, I still think we will probably see the same rider raise his arms aloft at the end of the stage. QuickStep are the masters in windy conditions and they should be able to protect Viviani well enough.

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Betting

No way am I backing a sprinter so small stakes on the three opportunists listed above for patter.

0.125pt WIN on them all.

Mohoric @ 300/1

Goncalves @ 400/1

Wellens @ 400/1

(All with Bet365)

You probably will get better prices on the Exchanges later/tomorrow morning!

Thanks as always for reading. Who do you think will win? Will the weather play a big part in the day? Or will everything stay together for a sprint? Anyway,

Those were My Two Spokes Worth.

 

 

Giro d’Italia 2018 Stage 2 Preview: Haifa -> Tel Aviv

Today’s Recap

We had some drama before the first rider even rolled down the ramp, with Froome, Lopez and Siutsou all falling on their recon of the course. The latter unfortunately had to abandon.

Dennis was the first big hitter out and he blitzed the course as expected, finishing over 30 seconds ahead of Cavagna who was his nearest early challenger. However, we saw surprisingly strong times from Conti then Goncalves which highlighted just how punchy the route was and that Dennis’ time may not have been as unbeatable as it first seemed. Campenaerts flew out the blocks, leading Dennis by 1 second at the intermediate time but he faded ever so slightly and came home fractions behind the BMC rider. It looked as if Dennis was going to be in the leader’s jersey tomorrow but the reigning Giro champion had other ideas and Dumoulin won by a “comfortable” 2 seconds in the end.

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Will he manage to hold onto the jersey for the whole race? Personally I think it would be wise for Sunweb to relinquish it to save some strength over a few stages, it will be tough for them to control things every day. They shouldn’t have to worry about it too much tomorrow as they should get some help from the sprinter’s teams as the fast men look set to have their chance at stage glory.

Let’s have a look at what is in store for them.

The Route

An almost pancake flat day in the saddle with one small Cat-4 to reward someone in the break with the KOM jersey at the end of the stage.

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As for the finish itself, the run-in zig-zags through Tel Aviv, taking many sharp 90-degree turns.

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Thankfully for the riders none of them are too close to the other, with the last right turn taking place at roughly 800m to go.

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It doesn’t look like an overly difficult turn either, with the riders being able to take it from the far left lane, making it a sweeping turn more than anything else. Nonetheless, it will no doubt string things out for the run to the line. You don’t want to be too far back as it might be difficult to make up places.

So a straightforward sprint stage then…

Well, it all depends on how the wind shapes up. The final 60km of the day hug the coast line and with exposed roads, there is a chance that some crosswinds cause echelons.

Weather Watch

It won’t be as warm as it was today and the riders will be cooled by a breeze coming off the sea.

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Source: Windfinder

The above is the forecast for Gaash which comes with roughly 30km to go. As you can see, there is a stiff breeze in the morning coming off of the coast and blowing right across the riders. It does die down a bit throughout the day and doesn’t look strong enough to create echelons but these things can change in an instant. Furthermore, when you consider how nervous everyone will be knowing about the potential for echelons, then that will make the racing faster which will consequently increase the chances for splits.

Nonetheless, I doubt we’ll see any splits, the wind needs to be 5-10km/h stronger. Although I hope we do, as we all know, I do love an echelon!

Sprinters

Elia Viviani.

The best sprinter on paper, Viviani has a team that is almost fully dedicated to him and there will be a lot of pressure for him to deliver. His 2018 started with a bang, taking 6 wins from January to March which included the overall title in Abu Dhabi. Since then though his racing schedule has been pretty light only returning to the action in Romandie where his performances were less than inspiring. With a strong team that should dominate the finale, they will hope to string things out in the closing kilometres, with Viviani calling upon his trusted lead-out man Sabatini. If he is as fast as he was at the start of the year then it will be hard for most to beat him.

Sam Bennett.

Viviani’s likeliest challenger, the Irishman hasn’t had a great year so far as he’s been hampered by illness or injury. He took a handful of podium places in the sprints at this race last year, after spending the first couple of stages once again overcoming illness. His only recent race was Eschborn Frankfurt where he finished in 7th place, a result which doesn’t look great on paper but he messed up the finish so it could have been so much better. Bora have a compact but strong lead-out, including the under-rated last man Selig and will hope to challenge Quick Step on the run in. It wouldn’t surprise me to see Bennett take the win.

Danny Van Poppel.

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He won his very first race this season with the opening stage of Valenciana but since then he has failed to raise his arms again. Van Poppel on his day can match some of the very best and he would hope to pick up one win this Giro. His lead-out is pretty short but that is very similar to what we’ve seen from Jumbo all season: they try to take over the head of the peloton in the final 2kms or less. It is a strategy that is very hit or miss so it is hard to tell what we’ll get from Van Poppel tomorrow.

Those three are the strongest sprinters here but there will be others looking to spoil the party.

Modolo – A hit or miss sprinter, he seems to find himself on the deck more often than not as of late. Nonetheless, he’s won two stages at this race in the past and can’t be discounted. Van Asbroeck and Docker will hope to provide support.

Mareczko – The King of the .1 and .HC race, the Wilier sprinter is only 24 but he already has 35 wins to his name. Rather amazingly though, he only has one win on European soil back in 2016 at the Coppi e Bartali. He gets incredibly aero, similar to Ewan, but his only good results against the big riders have been when he has followed the right wheel. Can he manage to actually come around someone?

Bonifazio – I rate the Italian as he is a bit of daredevil sprinter, willing to take some risks in the closing kilometre. Like Modolo, he is very hot and cold but on his day he has a great turn of speed. I wonder if we’ll see Mohoric give him a one kilometre lead-out again?

Guardini – Mr Langkawi will want to topple Mr Taihu Lake in the battle of the Italian Pro Conti teams. Guardini surprised most with his 2nd place on the opening day in Abu Dhabi, he took a few scalps that stage. However, he has since been a bit meh, but Bardiani have been going well as of late so there will be confidence in the team. Could easily podium or come 12th.

Venturini – The French pocket rocket has shown flashes of speed throughout this season but his lead-out isn’t great and he’ll most likely be surfing wheels. He would prefer a trickier finish.

Debuscherre – Long forgotten as an actual sprinter, Jens will be rolling back the clock here as Lotto Fix-All’s fast man. They actually have a powerful train and we could see them fighting for position at the end of the day. Does he have the zip in his legs to compete nowadays?

Prediction

It will most likely be a Viviani v Bennett showdown but the opening day of actual road racing can often throw up a surprise.

Nonetheless, I think we’ll actually see Bennett take his first Grand Tour stage win here.

Towards Zero Race Melbourne

I liked what I saw from him in Frankfurt (aside from the last 500m) and with Selig delivering him to the perfect position, he has the speed to match Viviani, who himself will come home second. Behind, I think we might see Bonifazio sprint onto the podium.

As I’ve said though, this is the first open road stage of the Giro so anything could happen, it’s a shame Postelberger isn’t here!

Betting

3pts WIN Bennett @ 16/5 on the BF Exchange (Would take the 11/4 with Bet365)

1pt EW Bonifazio @ 16/1 with Bet365

 

Thanks as always for reading. Who do you think is going to win tomorrow? Could we see a shock result? Anyway,

Those were My Two Spokes Worth.

 

 

Giro d’Italia 2018 Stage 1 Preview: Jerusalem -> Jerusalem (ITT)

Giro d’Italia 2018 Stage 1 Preview: Jerusalem -> Jerusalem (ITT)

No recap to mess around with today, straight into the action it is.

The Route

Once down the start ramp the riders will face 9.7km of rolling, twisting roads through the old heart of Jerusalem.

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The course is of a similar length to what the riders faced back in 2016 when the race started in Apeldoorn, but the parcours here is certainly more rolling.

GiroS1RouteMapFurthermore, the course is fairly technical. There are some long straights and sweeping turns where the riders can put the power down but conversely, there are plenty of sharp corners that they will have to accelerate back up to speed again from. It’s not just a pure power effort, good bike handling and technique is essential.

You can watch the video above to get an idea of the nature of the course. I would recommend 0.5x speed for a better look at it!

Also, as is always tradition I have made a Strava/Veloviewer profile of the TT that you can view here.

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The road rises from the gun with roughly 500m at 4% before the road dips down. A 1.7km climb at 3.7% awaits, and it might seem like a drag for on their TT rigs but I imagine most will stay in their aero tuck and grind their way up it.

A few more ramps of 400m at 5% come later on in the circuit before the road kicks up towards the line. We’ll no doubt see the riders abandon any seated position here as they sprint out of the saddle, trying to save every millisecond.

A One-Horse Race?

Rohan Dennis starts as odds on favourite with the bookmakers and given his incredible record in short TTs (not prologues) it is understandable as to why. So far this season he has taken home his national title along with the pan-flat efforts in Abu Dhabi and Tirreno. Last week in Romandie he finished 4th in a prologue that didn’t really suit him before following that up with an impressive showing in the mountain TT. The rolling course and its length looks ideal for him but the technical nature might be his undoing. Don’t get me wrong, Dennis is a great bike rider but I think it will be hard for him to constantly get back up to speed through some of the tighter turns and the changes of rhythm that the hills bring. Nonetheless, it is still hard to see past him for the win but I just don’t think he will have it as easy as some might think.

Contenders

Tom Dumoulin.

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A rolling TT like this should be bread and butter for the current World Champion but given his lack of racing it is hard to tell exactly where he is at in terms of form. Interestingly, the average length of Dumoulin’s 14 TT wins throughout his career is 24.8km so he does seem to perform better over longer distances. However, he has won his fair share of shorter stages, including the aforementioned TT opener in Apeldoorn. I wouldn’t be surprised to see him win it, but I also wouldn’t be surprised to see him a little off the pace and finish 5-8 seconds down on whoever wins it.

Jos Van Emden.

He’s always Dumoulin’s rival when it comes to the Dutch national TT but unlike his compatriot, Van Emden certainly prefers the course to be shorter. An incredibly consistent rider against the clock on anything under 12km, I’m amazed to see he has only won three time trials in the past three years with no win so far this season. In fact, his last TT victory was at this race on the final day in 2017, an almost 30km long effort which completely contradicts what I’ve said above! There just always seems to be something that goes wrong for him, whether that be bad weather or he just happens to take a wrong turn. I don’t think the rolling course is ideal for him either but you never know. One thing he does have to his advantage is that he has prepared specifically for this effort over the past month or so.

Victor Campenaerts.

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The European Champion moved teams in the Winter from a good TT bike to a slightly worse one and his results haven’t been great as a result. A 2nd place to Thomas in Algarve was a solid effort but since then he failed to impress in Tirreno. However, a 5th place in a prologue that didn’t suit him too well in Romandie recently highlights that he is going in the right direction. He’s so keen to get some race practice on his TT bike that he was the only madman to ride his aero rig on the mountain TT!

Team Sky TT Dominance

We’ve seen in the past few years Sky go well in TTs but since the Tour last year they have really upped their game. On the opening TT in Düsseldorf they managed to place 4 guys in the top 8, with Thomas taking the win. Later in that race Kwiatkowski and Froome finished 2nd and 3rd respectively.

This year they have had: 4 of the first 11 in Andalucia with De La Cruz winning; 4 in the first 10 in Algarve with Thomas winning; 6 in the first 13 in Tirreno but no winner; and 4 in the first 12 in the Romandie prologue but again with no win.

One thing is clear, they are incredibly consistent in the discipline.

I could feasibly argue that any of Kiryienka, Froome, De La Cruz or Poels will make the podium tomorrow or possibly even better and I would be surprised not to see them all in the top 15.

Given the nature of the course and the need to get back up to speed quickly I think the punchy De La Cruz is their best chance.

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He won the TT in Andalucia and followed that up with 12th (Paris Nice) and 7th (Itzulia). Not only a strong climber, his bike handling skills are very good and we’ve seen in the past him take some risks on descents. If he shows the same vigour tomorrow then he has a good chance of causing an upset. It is all just a matter of if he gets off the leash to do so!

Prediction

With all that said though, it is a TT that is the perfect length for the best 8-14km TT rider in the World.

Rohan Dennis to take home the win.

Tirreno-Adriatico 2018, stage 7: Dennis TT

Betting

It really should be a no bet day but I’m going to have a flutter on DLC for an interest.

0.25pt WIN De La Cruz @ 80/1 with Coral/Lads (Would take down to 50s)

1pt De La Cruz Top 3 @ 8/1 with Bet365 (Would take 6/1 lowest)

 

Thanks as always for reading! Who do you think will win tomorrow? Could we see a surprise? Anyway,

Those were My Two Spokes Worth.

 

Giro d’Italia 2018 GC Preview: The Fight for Pink

Giro d’Italia 2018 GC Preview: The Fight for Pink

My favourite Grand Tour (and I hope your’s too) starts this Friday in Israel for its 101st edition. In 2017 we saw Tom Dumoulin avoid a toilet scare to take the overall win, his maiden Grand Tour success. If it wasn’t for the two minutes he lost to the eventual podium finishers Quintana and Nibali on that famous day, then his lead at the end of the race would have been more commanding/comfortable.

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Dumoulin is here to defend his title but with so few race days to his name so far this year, does he have the form to do so?

Key Stages

As I’ll be doing daily stage previews I’m not going to go into anything too in depth here about each stage, instead, I’ll just highlight the stages where we might see some GC action or time gaps.

Stage 1.

Although the opening TT is only 9.7km long, I would expect to see some time gaps between the stronger TT GC riders compared to the purer climbers. The slightly rolling course should in theory mean that the gaps are smaller but in a similar length of TT back in the 2016 Giro, Dumoulin took 30 seconds out of Chaves. Nothing too crazy, but it still will give some an uphill battle from the start.

Stage 6.

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The first mountain top finish of the race sees the peloton climb Mt Etna for the second year in a row, but this season they approach the peak from a different side. At an average of 6.5% for 15kms, it isn’t too tough by Giro standards but it will be a rude awakening for anyone hoping to save themself during the first week. Let’s just hope we don’t get a headwind like last year.

Stages 8 & 9.

I’m grouping these two together because they’re very similar with both having mountain finishes but neither of them are that difficult gradient wise. Both have lesser average gradients than Etna but on Stage 9 the final 4km of the climb does average north of 8% with ramps much steeper than that. They also do climb a Cat-1 climb just before the final climb as well. If we haven’t seen much action before that day then it could be a good stage for a “lesser” GC threat to sneak away and take a win or with the double ascent, it could be our first GC showdown. It all depends on how it is raced.

Stage 14.

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I hope you’ve got this one booked off work, it is the infamous Zoncolan day! I’m sure the riders would have hoped for a nice easy day in the saddle before tackling one of the toughest climbs in the sport. Instead, the organisers have cruelly added in several short but steep climbs to test the legs before the final ascent. Monte Zoncolan averages 11.9% for just over 10kms, need I say more?

Stage 15.

With yesterday’s efforts already in their legs the riders will have to face what I would call a typical Giro stage: lots of Cat-2 climbs packed into the last 50kms. The sawtooth profile looks perfect for a classic Astana a la 2015 raid, but if everyone expects it, can it still happen?

Stage 16.

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After the last rest day comes arguably one of the more important GC stages with a mainly flat 34km ITT. Riders often react differently after a rest day so we might see some surprising results but expect the likes of Froome and Dumoulin to put some big time into their rivals here.

Stage 18.

What everyone would have wanted before the Zoncolan, instead they get it before Pratonevoso. Pretty much a flat day out aside from a few hills here and there, this is all about the final ascent. At an average of 6.9% for 13.9kms, we could see some of the climbers who lost time on the TT set their sights on gaining it back here.

Stage 19.

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Cima Coppi day as the riders tackle the famous Finestre with its many kilometres of gravel roads. Expect plenty of Italians to be in the break hoping to crest it first but depending on the GC situation, we could see a full-out war here. Will anyone be bold enough for a long-range attack on the Finestre? With the 7kms at 9% average final climb of Jafferau someones title bid might come of the rails here.

Stage 20.

The last day for any GC action to happen and it is a stage back loaded with climbs: three cat-1 ascents in the last 85kms to be exact. From that 85km to go mark the road only goes up or down, with very little flat valley road in between to offer respite. This should be a cracker, it is just a shame we don’t have Nibali here to try something crazy. A last roll of the dice for those wanting to improve their overall position.

A Two-Horse Race?

According to the bookmakers there are two riders who head the order: Dumoulin and Froome.

Tom Dumoulin.

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Last year’s winner, he’s been lightly raced so far this season with only 12 days under his belt so far with his latest appearance at Liege being the only race he’s competed in for a month. It didn’t seem to go too badly for him though as he finished a respectable 15th place – not a bad way to blow off the cobwebs. It is hard to judge where his form is at though given his little racing but he wouldn’t be coming to the race if he wasn’t prepared  for it. Sunweb must have a plan and I wonder if they hope he can ride himself into the race to be stronger in the final week. It’s a bold strategy with a few important stages coming in the first half of the race but it is one we’ve seen work well in the past for plenty of riders. His team is ok but there will be a lot of pressure on Oomen to stay with him as long possible, something I think the youngster is capable of. Dumoulin managed perfectly fine without Kelderman last year after he crashed out so some added help here will be pleasing for him. However, the only reason he managed well last year without Kelderman is that the first of the longer TTs came on stage 10 so he held a commanding 2:23 lead over second-placed Quintana after that day, meaning he could ride more conservatively and rely on other riders protecting their own positions. With the TT coming later in the race this year, I’m intrigued to see what effect that has on everything.

Chris Froome.

 

Let’s get round to the elephant in the room then…He’s here and as much as I don’t think he should be, I’m just going to have to get over it like everyone else.

Going for an historic 3 GT titles in a row with only Merckx holding all three in the same order before. This will be the Brit’s first participation at the Giro since he was DQ’d back in 2010 for holding onto a motorbike to help get up the Mortirolo climb – he has certainly came a long way from then. From his season so far it is hard to judge exactly where he is as he hasn’t exactly lit up the races he has attended, although that did change a bit at the Tour of the Alps when we saw him spin up the washing machine cadence a few times to no avail. If this was 2016 I would say he has no chance, but we saw last year that no real results before a big race doesn’t mean he won’t deliver: an underwhelming 4th at the Dauphiné was followed up with a win at the Tour. Not bad, bearing in mind he most definitely had one eye on the Vuelta and was undercooked a bit for the race. This year he just happened to finish 4th at the Tour of the Alps – will something similar happen?

The Three Waiting in Line

Just behind the two at the head of the market, the bookmakers have three other riders who are all priced under 10/1: Lopez, Pinot and Aru.

Miguel Angel Lopez.

I’m a big fan of Superman, so much so that I boldly backed him for GC at his first Grand Tour (the Vuelta) last season. He didn’t win, but he managed a very respectable 8th place and picked up two stage wins along the way. So far this year he has produced some strong showings in Oman, Abu Dhabi and the Alps finishing on the GC podium at each of those races. Astana are flying here and they bring a stupidly strong squad with them that is very reminiscent of their 2015 armada, I hope we see some fireworks in the last week. Lopez should be able to match and in theory go better than Dumoulin/Froome in the high mountains but he will lose a good chunk of time in the TT. Can he claw enough of it back? My one concern with him is that he only had 40 race days last year due to him missing the first 5 months of the season after a crash. This season he has already competed on 25 days so he will pass all of last year’s total before the end of the race. Will fatigue catch up with him?

Thibaut Pinot.

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The winner of the recent Tour of the Alps, the Frenchman looked strong in the race managing to close down a lot of attacks once he was isolated. Once thought of as a decent GC TT rider, he had an absolute mare of an effort against the clock last year which cost him a podium place – he will need to improve on that this season if he wants to go better. He’s one of those riders that I would love to see go well but he always seems to just have one bad day which costs him a great result. If he has gotten over that then he is a real danger for the title. Interestingly enough, you have to go back to 2013 for the last time someone won both the ToTA (was called Trentino then) and the Giro: that rider was Nibali. Can he break the duck?

Fabio Aru.

The UAE rider has had a bit of a stinker this season so far with his 6th place on GC at the recent Tour of the Alps his best performance. None of that matters though as Aru is only ever really good in the Grand Tours and it is impossible to predict when he’ll go well outside them. For example, he has 9 pro wins to his name of which 7 have been at a Grand Tour, including the overall title at the Vuelta in 2015. He hasn’t seemed the same rider since he burst onto the scene in 2014 and 2015 and I just can’t help but think he will struggle here as well. He just lacks the consistency. One day he will be flying then the following day he will needlessly lose time. This is the Giro though and things can change so I wouldn’t be surprised to see him even take the lead of the race at some point but no matter how good he is, the TT will be his undoing.

The Outsiders

Domenico Pozzovivo.

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The Italian rider seems to have found a new lease of life with Bahrain and has had a very consistent start to his year, with three top 15s in a row on GC at WT level stage races. He then followed that up with a lively performance in the Alps before a solid 5th place in Liege. The one thing that impressed me most in the Alps, aside from his climbing, was his descending. This is a guy who had a very serious crash at this race back in 2015 while on a descent but he seems to be over that and riding without fear. Like a few others the TT will probably let him down but he should put on a show over the three weeks. A dark horse for the podium if others falter.

Esteban Chaves.

After a terrible 2017 compared to his incredible 2016, the Colombian can blame some personal issues for that, he still hasn’t returned to anywhere near his best so far this season with a win in the Herald Sun Tour his best result. Apart from that, he has been very poor. He is a classy bike rider so he could turn it around, it just depends on where his mind is at. He has been over in Colombia training at home which will certainly have helped – after he did that in 2015 he came and blew the Vuelta away in the opening week. I’m sure everyone watching the sport will just want to see him smiling again! I can’t see him competing for the title or even the podium here.

Simon Yates.

I do think his team-mate has a chance though as an outside podium shot. Yates has finished 6th and 7th at the Vuelta and the Tour in the past but this is his first attempt at the Giro. An attacking rider, he has performed well so far this year in Paris Nice and Catalunya taking stage wins at both races and finishing with a strong GC position too. I always forget that Yates was a former trackie and product of the British Cycling academy so his ability often surprises me. Like Pozzovivo, I think he will be there waiting for others to falter.

George Bennett – He’s came on a lot of the past few years and is a strong top 10 candidate but despite a good showing in the Alps, I just can’t see him competing for a podium place or even top 5.

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Rohan Dennis – This is a big year for him in terms of his GC plan. He looked lean and strong in Romandie but does he have the consistency for three weeks? I’ll wait and see.

Wout Poels – Do Sky have a plan B? If so, I imagine it would be either the Dutchman or De La Cruz but given Poels’ previous performance in GTs then he is the safer option. Had a blistering start to the year but was halted due to a crash in Paris Nice. Has he recovered enough from that injury? It will be interesting to see if Sky to keep someone else high on GC or will they do the usual and let the mountain goats rest over the first week and lose time.

Louis Meintjes – We’ll see him in his usual position, collecting tickets at the back of the pack as riders fall back. I’ll be shocked if we see him attack more than two times throughout the race. Nonetheless he’s consistent so 9th place awaits him.

Tim Wellens – Will he go for GC or not? If so he could be like the Jungels surprise from 2016. Capable of a top 10, it just depends on his weight or ambition.

Davide Formolo – Lively in Liege, he should be another rider that will finish in or around the fringes of the top 10.

Michael Woods – Does he go for GC or target stage wins or another competition? Time is against the Canadian but a second place in Liege shows he has good legs at the moment.

Prediction

Tough one to call, as are all Grand Tours due to the length of them and the fact that anything can happen over the three weeks. However, I think the TT will be very decisive and I just can’t see anyone pulling off a successful raid in the final week to disrupt anything too much, it will need either Froome or Dumoulin to crack.

Therefore, it pains me to say it, but Froome to win.

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Even though Sky have had terrible luck at this race in the past I think that will change this year. They bring an incredibly strong mountain squad with them to protect Froome and control the race as much as they can. Froome will match Dumoulin closely in the TT and he will go better in the high mountains than him. I also think they’ll keep Poels relatively close in contention to counter any craziness from Astana or to give them a second option if Froome falters.

Dumoulin will still take home second with Yates a surprising third.

Buy Me A Beer (Coffee)

After floating the idea around on Twitter of charging for tips or previews and getting inconclusive results back, I’ve decided that I’m most happy with just keeping everything free at the moment. However, this means that throughout the Giro I am going to be selling my soul by shamelessly promoting the “Buy Me A Beer” donation link on my blog. So if you want to support me and the countless hours that I put into doing research and writing the blogs themself (not only for the Giro but the rest of the season), then I would be over the moon if you were able to Buy Me A Beer (I’ll probably use it for coffee) through the following link https://www.paypal.me/JamieHaughey/3.50 .

Thanks!

Betting

As for antepost bets for the Giro, I’m not a massive fan of betting on GC outright due to the unpredictability of a three-week race. I am tempted to break that rule by backing Yates but I’ll leave it. However, I am interested in backing Poels for a top 10 finish.

3pts Poels Top 10 @ 2/1 with William Hill. (Would take 6/4 elsewhere).

As for anything else, I tweeted out that I was backing Ruben Fernandez for KOM at 200/1. That price quickly disappeared but I still think he is value at his current price. Movistar bring a team without a GC leader so will be on the hunt for stages and other competitions so I think the gifted climber and former Tour de l’Avenir winner is worth a punt.

0.25pt EW Fernandez for KOM @ 200/1 with Bet365 (Would still take the 80/1 available now)

Also, William Hill have some interesting group betting for the race and Yates has caught my eye in the group below.

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2pts WIN Yates @ 5/2.

That’s everything for just now and I’ll be back tomorrow with a stage 1 preview.

Thanks as always for reading! Who do you think is going to take home the crown come the end of the month? Anyway,

Those were My Two Spokes Worth.

 

 

 

Tour de Romandie 2018 Stage 5 Preview; Mont-sur-Rolle -> Genève

Today’s Recap

A strong break got away but they were never given more than two and a half minutes and on the final climb we saw some GC attacks. They weren’t really fireworks though as Roglic managed to follow Bernal with relative ease, more a few sparklers instead. A regrouping on the descent saw Costa, Porte and Fuglsang join the duo but when the pace stalled the latter attacked and he was not seen again by the rest of the bunch.

Fuglsang held on for the win, a just reward for a good Spring campaign by him.

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Behind Roglic produced an impressive sprint to finish second and all but secure his GC win, with Bernal rounding out the podium. Let’s have a look at what is in store for the riders tomorrow.

The Route

Rather cruelly, the organisers have saved the easiest stage of the week until the end. There have plenty of mountains for the riders to get over to reach this point. We are in Switzerland though, so it is hard to avoid any hills at all so there are still plenty of small ascents for the peloton to tackle, but it is just the 2000m of climbing on offer.

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@LasterketaBurua

None of the climbs are long, or overly steep, so they are perfect for a barodeur. The stage gets easier as it progresses with the final 40km all mainly flat, with some of it even going downhill.

The finale is incredibly easy too, with only a left-hand turn on an open road with around 1.2km to go that might worry the peloton.

You can view the final 5km here:

Will it be a bunch contesting the finish though?

How will the day pan out?

On paper this is a sprint stage through and through but given we had a lack of sprinters at this race in the first place, compiled with the fact Viviani, Gaviria and Matthews have all pulled out then there is chance we don’t get a big bunch gallop to the line.

Who’s left?

Colbrelli, Ackermann, Albasini, Dumoulin and Ferrari are the main guys who are left. Not exactly a who’s who of sprinting talent…

Bahrain were foiled on stages 1 and 2 so a lot of pressure will be on them to chase as Colbrelli does look the fastest here out of those who remain. Can I see anyone else help them? Not really, but the prospect of a good placing for their sprinter on a WT stage could tempt some.

However, the much safer plan is to try to get a rider into the breakaway so that you can save energy for later on in the stage. If enough of the teams who represent the sprinters above get a guy up the road, it isn’t coming back. Unless of course we have some sneaky rider who is 5 minutes down and close enough to trouble the GC, although with that said, Jumbo only have 4 guys left at the race. Things could get very interesting if let’s say Castroviejo escapes in a group of 10.

Time to play that game again though…

TheBreakawayLottery

Finding the G-Spot…

Alexis Gougeard.

He was on the attack during the first open road stage and was oh so close to the win, being caught within the final few kilometres. This is his type of terrain where the climbs aren’t too steep or long and he can just plough his way through them. A tenacious rider, he will be a danger in the finale and he has shown in the past he has the strength to hold off a strong group.

Jose Goncalves.

When he’s hot, he’s really hot! The Portuguese rider is one of the hardest riders to predict from-wise but he has impressed me so far this race with a strong 12th place on the mountain TT. However, he suffered today and finished over 20 minutes down. A ploy so that he can go on the attack tomorrow? Possibly. The majority of his wins have come from reduced sprints on rolling terrain, can he add another to his tally tomorrow?

Andrei Grivko.

 

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Astana to make it two in two and three in total at this race? Grivko was on the attack on stage 2 when De Gendt took the honours but he was dropped on the toughest climb of the day which was on and over his limit! However, the parcours tomorrow looks more suited to his capabilities and as a strong barodeur he will like the challenge. The other riders will need to watch out for those Froome-like pointy elbows though…

Enrico Gasparotto.

If Bahrain decide that they don’t want to chase all day for Colbrelli then sending a man up the road is the perfect plan for them. We saw during the Ardennes week that the Italian is in a purple-patch of form at the moment. However, he was used on stage 2 to effectively pull back the break himself and that was never going to happen. Much more used to going on the attack, he will back his chances in a sprint from the break.

Prediction

The break to stay away and Alexis Gougeard to take a dominant stage win after attacking in the finale and coming home solo. He looked impressive on the opening road stage and if he puts in a similar performance tomorrow it will be tough for anyone to match him.

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Betting

It appears as if the bookmakers have a similar idea so the guys are quite short price wise, nonetheless I’ll still be backing them for an interest.

0.5pt WIN on them all:

Gougeard @ 33/1

Grivko @ 66/1

Gasparotto @ 33/1

Goncalves @ 40/1

 

Thanks as always for reading! Who do you think will win tomorrow and how? I’ll be having a few days off from blog writing before things kick into full swing for the Giro so expect daily previews throughout the race for that. Anyway,

Those were My Two Spokes Worth.

 

 

 

Tour de Romandie 2018 Stage 4 Preview; Sion -> Sion

Today’s Recap

Never in doubt, was it? Ha!

Bernal took an incredibly strong win (with possibly some help from his minute-man that happened to be his team-mate along the way), edging out a motoring Roglic who finished just 4 seconds behind the Colombian in the end after being 12 seconds behind him at the split. A resurgent Porte rounded out the podium and is a sign of what is to come from him later in the year.

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The result means that Roglic is still in the race lead with Bernal only 6 seconds down and Porte 27 seconds back himself.

All to play for going in to tomorrow’s stage. Let’s have a look at what is in store for the riders.

The Route

We have the Queen stage with over 3500m of climbing packed into only 150km of racing.

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@LasterketaBurua

However, it the toughest ascent of the day is actually the very first one that the peloton will tackle, starting the climb after only 8kms into the stage. Ovronnaz averages a leg breaking 9.5% for 9.1km but surely it is too early for anyone to try anything here, especially with a long section of flat that follows the descent.

Three climbs then come in quick succession, with the first of them being the second most difficult climb of the day. Again though, with 75kms from the peak of that climb to the finish it is hard to believe we’ll see any fireworks here.

The last climb of the day Collons (13.1km at 6.5%) crests with 27km to go and it will tempt attacks from the peloton.

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As you can see on the profile above, there are 3kms of much shallower gradients in the middle of the climb before it starts to ramp back upwards again towards the top, with the last 5kms averaging roughly 7.7%.

The descent is long and technical which means that gaps can be made by those who are more confident going downhill, consequently making it as good a place to attack as the climb. Thankfully for the riders, it looks set to be a dry day.

With roughly 6kms of flat to the line after the descent, it will take a strong rider to hold off a chasing group behind unless of course there is no co-operation in said group.

How will the race pan out?

Beats me.

This is one of those stages that could go a multitude of ways and it almost seems too hard which could lead to negative racing. Furthermore, with Roglic clearly flying it will be very hard for anyone to dethrone him, especially when you consider he is a very competent descender himself so a rider will need a good lead off the last climb. You then have to consider that he has the strongest domestique in the race, Kruijswijk, who just happens to be sitting 4th on GC himself, to help bring back any attacks.

Before the stage today Izagirre said in an interview that the rider who won the TT would win the race overall and I tend to agree with him. Bernal is incredible, but he will need a stupendous day to beat Roglic. He and Sky might know that and given that it is a tough stage to control anyway, they might turn their head to stage hunting.

I think we’ll see a strong group of riders go clear on the first climb that will fragment later on but survive any GC surge from behind. So once again, it is time to play everyone’s favourite game…

TheBreakawayLottery

The 3 Darter

Andrey Amador.

The Costa Rican is a strong all round rider who can go well on the flat and in the mountains. He was probably Movistar’s GC leader coming in to this race but he disappointed in the prologue and wasn’t great today either. However, his plans might have changed and he could be eyeing up a stage win from the breakaway instead. I would be surprised not to see Movistar on the attack tomorrow as they have a squad here geared up for that sort of thing. Amador has shown in the past at the Giro that he can cope well on tough mountain days but he can also descend like a stone. He will worry some if he gets into the morning move.

Rudy Molard.

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Took a breakthrough win in Paris Nice earlier in the year that was coming, after he has been knocking on the door for a good result over the past couple of seasons. He’s a very punchy climber who can cope with steep slopes so the opening climb should be good for him to make the break. Molard possesses a good kick so in a small sprint to the line he might have a chance.

Guillaume Martin.

I’m a big fan of the Wanty rider and he is slowly developing into one of the best Pro-Conti climbers. Last year he took an impressive third place in a stage at the Tour and followed that up with the GC win at Alfredo Martini. 2018 has been a solid year for him so far with a win in Cycliste Sarthe before being a bit under the weather scuppered any chances of a good result in the Ardennes. If he has bounced back from that illness then he has the potential to put in a good performance tomorrow.

If we do get a GC fight for the stage win then someone slightly further down the order might profit from Roglic / Bernal / Porte looking at each other but that is a bridge I will cross when it comes tomorrow!

Prediction

Andrey Amador to descend like a stone off of the final climb and hold off the chasing group of GC favourites.

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Behind, Roglic will hold on for the GC title.

Betting

0.5pt WIN on them all;

Amador @ 125/1

Martin @ 150/1

Molard @ 50/1

Giro Tips

I’ve been thinking for a while about either charging for tips (£5) during the Grand Tours or the blogs as a way of subsidising all my time and effort that goes into daily previews. I have left a poll on my Twitter feed that you can vote on if you would be interested in anything. The blogs would stay the same but just without the “Betting” section, which would obviously be left for others. I’m leaning more towards just the tips but then again, we all know how shite my Giro was last year and I don’t want any extra pressure!  Mr Wong will probably come crawling out of the doldrums…

Thanks as always for reading! Who do you think will win tomorrow? Will we see a break make it all the way or will the GC guys battle it out for glory? Anyway,

Those were My Two Spokes Worth.

 

 

 

 

Tour de Romandie 2018 Stage 3 Preview; Ollon -> Villars

Today’s Recap

All hail the King of the Breakaways.

After a small move made up of very strong riders went away this morning, Jumbo decided it would be a good idea to give them more than 7 minutes of an advantage. With no-one helping to aid the chase until we got into the final 65km where Bahrain took over, the gap was sustained for a long time. Slowly the group ahead was whittled down to just Campenaerts, De Gendt and Brown on the last categorised climb of the day; and they still had over 5 minutes going into the last 40km.

Campenaerts soon went out the back and De Gendt shelled Brown once we got onto the local lap’s climbs. From there, it was a TDG v Gasparotto TT and there was only ever going to be one winner!

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Behind, Colbrelli won the sprint for second with Dumoulin rolling back the years with a third place.

Roglic still retains the race lead as we head into what will be a crucial stage tomorrow. Let’s have a look at what is in store for the riders

The Route

Hmm, I think this is going to be the shortest route analysis ever:

It’s uphill.

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@LasterketaBurua

Mountain TT day so it will be a tough day out for the fast men, who will just be hoping to make the time cut. Villars-sur-Ollon is a tricky climb that has been tackled back at this race before: most recently in 2016 when Froome managed to hold off a group of favourites after he was given some freedom due to losing a lot of time the previous day.

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With an average of 8.1% for 9.7km, it will be hard for a non-climber to win. Even the very best TT riders such as Dennis etc will struggle.

Contenders

A mountain TT is something we aren’t treated to often as cycling fans with Alpe di Siusi in the 2016 Giro the most recent one that I can think of at a WT event in Europe. Although I’m sure someone is bound to correct me if I’m wrong!

Given that it is a one-off effort and essentially a w/Kg contest then Dennis might be up in or around the top 10 but I really think it will be difficult for him to compete for the win. Unless of course he has really prepared well for the Giro over the past few weeks and he’s lost a bit more weight. Instead it is his team-mate who probably starts as the favourite.

Richie Porte.

The best rider in the world on 4-6km climbs, tomorrow’s 10km effort might not be ideal for him but that won’t stop him charging up to Villars. If I knew he was in tip-top shape then I would probably end the preview here because no-one would be able to match him but it is that unknown about his form which makes it interesting. He was ok in the prologue but on balance he will probably be disappointed with his performance on that day and he’ll want to go a lot better tomorrow. He’s won the Col d’Eze mountain TT in Paris Nice on two occasions but that climb is easier than what we have here, although that shouldn’t phase Porte. As I’ve said, his form is a big unknown but I wouldn’t be surprised to see him blitz everyone away here. Look for team-mate Van Garderen to put in a good time too.

Primoz Roglic.

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We certainly know what the current race leader’s form is like, he is flying at the moment. Roglic has never done an uphill TT as far as I’m aware, so it will be interesting to see how he copes but he certainly is capable of putting out enough watts to compete. The one question mark that I have over his head is does he have the ability to be up there fighting the very best climbers on a one-off ascent that is as long and as steep as this? There is only one way to find out…

Geraint Thomas.

I would say that Thomas might suffer the same fate as Roglic given they are both slightly heavier compared to the likes of Porte, but then again, they both can put out a lot of power for a good time. Furthermore, we saw in Trentino last year that the Sky rider followed a very strong Quintana closely home on the Terminillo, not a bad result for someone who isn’t a natural mountain goat. Sky have been very impressive in TTs this year so why should that change for an uphill effort against the clock? He should be fighting for the win.

Egan Bernal.

As should his young Colombian team-mate. Bernal is one of the most exceptional talents to have come through the ranks in the past few years and I’m looking forward to seeing what he can do tomorrow; this climb looks right up his street. We saw in Catalunya that he was the only guy who could match a flying Valverde and if he produces a similar performance tomorrow then he might be the surprise package of the day.

Ion Izagirre.

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He’s had a good comeback this year after his season ending injury at the 2017 Tour. In both Paris Nice and Itzulia he looked very promising but in Fleche and Liege he was disappointing, particularly as he went well at the latter in 2017. An uphill TT should be to his liking but it just depends which Ion shows up tomorrow.

Simon Spilak.

You can’t talk about inconsistent riders without mentioning Mr “goes well at one of the Swiss races each year”. Don’t really think that nickname will catch on…We saw at the Tour de Suisse in 2017 a flying Spilak and on his day he can climb with the very best. In fact, on the same Terminillo stage that Thomas finished second on, Spilak came home 5th after being an aggresor on the earlier slopes. Who knows what we’ll see from him. I wouldn’t be surprised by a podium or a 23rd place.

Pierre Latour.

The French TT champion has looked lively so far this race and he could snatch a very good result tomorrow. The Grinder, as Kirby likes to call him for some unknown reason, has built on a promising early few seasons as a pro with a podium place on GC in Catalunya earlier in the year which included a hard-fought 4th place on La Molina. He’s one to watch with interest.

Also, riders you wouldn’t normally consider for a TT might be fighting for a good result due to the nature of the course, such as Martin, Fuglsang and Betancur.

Prediction

The best climber here wins…

Step up Egan Bernal!

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Betting

3pts WIN Bernal @ 13/2.

Then 2pts on this double.

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Thanks as always for reading. Who do you think will win tomorrow? Will we see some surprise results? Anyway,

Those were My Two Spokes Worth.

 

 

Tour de Romandie 2018 Stage 2 Preview: Delémont -> Yverdon-les-Bains

This will be a short and sweet preview!

Today’s Recap

An exciting finish to this afternoon’s racing saw a plethora of attacks go and be brought back before we ultimately had a reduced bunch gallop of 50 riders sprinting for the win. Omar Fraile made it look all too easy, producing a powerful kick to distance favourite (after Matthews was dropped) Sonny Colbrelli, with former World Champion Rui Costa rounding out the podium.

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It was one of those annoying punting days where the three riders were in the mix, with Buchmann squirreling off the front for a bit, Roglic being attentive and marking GC riders and Bernal getting up for 6th in the sprint but ultimately no bacon was brought home. Hopefully something that will change over the next few days!

With that said let’s take a look at what is in store for the riders tomorrow.

The Route

A tough start to the day with the riders climbing almost from the gun.

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@LasterketaBurua

This should ensure we get a fairly strong break that gets up the road before things get slightly easier for the following 80kms. The main test of the day is the Col des Etroits (5.7km at 6%) which crests with just under 65kms to go. However, it is too far out for any major action so it will come down to the rolling profile of the final lap circuit which will decide the day.

You can view a profile of that circuit here.

The three rises are; 3.5km at 3.8%, 2.3km at 5.2% and 4km at 3%.

They shouldn’t be enough to put the sprinters into difficulty but you never know, some went pop pretty quickly today.

As for the finish itself there are a couple of roundabouts and tight turns in the closing 5kms but nothing too crazy. Although a turn at 400m to go could well prove me wrong.

How will the stage pan out?

On paper, it should be one for the sprinters but the tough start will tempt a strong breakaway and if we get a reasonably large-sized group (6-8 guys) then they might not be brought back.

Furthermore, we don’t actually have that many sprinters here with Matthews, Gaviria/Viviani and Colbrelli the main ones in attendance. Consequently, a lot of the work will be left for their teams to chase – do they have the firepower to bring back a strong group? Probably, if everyone works well.

Tomorrow does have the same feel about it as the stage that Küng won from the break last year.

For the break to stay away the riders involved in it need to be either far down on GC already, or not a threat for the overall come the end of the week.

De Gendt will no doubt be up the road and he already tested the waters today. Others to possibly look out for are Dillier, Poljansjki, Frankiny and Ludvigsson for example.

Yet, I think we’ll see enough of a committed chase and a sprint at the end of the day. Maybe.

Prediction

Whichever Quick-Step rider sprints will take the day and after he looked stronger (wasn’t dropped as early) this afternoon, I’ll go with Gaviria as the winner!

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Betting

Can’t back any of the sprinters with confidence so a wasted 0.5pt on some break hopefulls it is:

0.25pt WIN Dillier @ 125/1

0.125pt WIN Ludvigsson @ 300/1

0.125pt WIN Frankiny @ 300/1

Apologies for the shorter preview. Who do you think will win? Will we see the expected sprint or will a surprise break make it? Anyway,

Those were My Two Spokes Worth.

 

Tour de Romandie 2018 Stage 1 Preview; Fribourg -> Delémont

Today’s Recap

After a disappointing performance on Sunday, Michael Matthews bounced back excellently today to take the win on a course that suited him perfectly.

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I’ll hold my hands up and say I got it wrong as I hadn’t expected him to have recovered from Liege, oh well! Behind him, Swiss rider Tom Bohli confirmed his explosive TT potential with a strong second place, with blog pick Primoz Roglic only managing to finish third.

Dennis was edged off the podium but he, Bohli and Roglic all finished just one second behind Matthews in what was a closely fought day. Interestingly, Matthews made a lot of his time on the slight downhill first section, with Dennis and Roglic gaining 5 seconds in the latter part but it was not enough for them.

Can the Sunweb rider hold on to the leader’s jersey tomorrow? Let’s have a look at what is in store for the riders.

The Route

A rolling day that hopefully should tempt some attacks from the bunch later on in the afternoon.

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@LasterketaBurua

The early climbs will more than likely see a fight for some KOM points between the breakaway and the honour to wear that jersey but the battle for the stage win comes down to the lap circuit around Delémont.

As per, I’ve made a Strava/VV profile of the closing lap that you can view here.

Romandie S1 Lap

The opening climb of the circuit is the toughest with the Col du Sommet averaging just over 7% for 5.1km.

COl du SOmmet

As you can see on the profile above, it is a climb that seems to go up in steps with quite sharp rises of gradients at some points. This should in theory make it difficult for some riders to get into a good rhythm and it might lend itself to a more punchy climber who likes to accelerate and decelerate.

Once over the top, the riders will face a 5km descent that isn’t overly technical and it is one that they will have to pedal on as some of the gradients aren’t too steep.

The road then kicks up again with the uncategorised ascent of Prés Sur La Croix. Or at least that is what the Strava segment is called.

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At an average of 4.3% for 3.1km most who made it over the previous climb should make it with the bunch here. However, with the final kilometre of the ascent averaging a more challenging 7%, it could be a perfect launchpad for an attack. There is around 600m of plateau before the road plunges down again, so it will need to be a committed attack to distance anyway. Conversely, an attack could even be made on the plateau as everyone looks around at each other.

Once onto the next descent the riders will only have 10km left, of which 6km are spent going downhill. It is much steeper this time so any gaps made previously will be hard to bring back.

RomS1Fin

The final 4kms have their own challenges though with a 4% drag halfway through and a 300m, 6% kick up to the line on narrow roads: which would be interesting if we get a reasonable sized bunch come to the line.

How will the stage pan out?

Tomorrow is one of those really weird days where almost anything could happen.

If Matthews doesn’t fancy his chances of holding on to the overall then Sunweb might call everyone’s bluff and we could see a break take the win. Conversely, the day could be raced at a pretty slow pace and he makes the finish and consequently doubles up.

It could quite well turn into a GC day but that all just depends on the approach of the riders. After all, it is only tomorrow and stages 2 and 4 which could shape the outcome of the race overall. Those looking to gain time might seize an opportunity and make it an aggressive race.

That situation then leads onto the possible late attack sticking, or will it be a very reduced group sprint?

Personally I think we will see something similar to what we had in the Alps recently, with tomorrow turned into an aggressively raced GC day with either a solo, or group of riders escaping. However, with the way the finish is, it will be hard for any big gaps to be made unless there is a complete stall in the main group. Which is possible.

Contenders

I could name a multitude of riders who might have a chance tomorrow given the unpredictability of the stage but I don’t want to be here all evening so I’ll just stick to a few.

Tejay van Garderen.

44th Volta Algarve 2018 - Stage Five

Somewhat disappointing today but the prologue never has been a speciality of his, the American will enjoy being back on the open road for tomorrow’s stage. I expect BMC to have quite a few guys in the head of the peloton as it is whittled down but I’m not too sure they will wait for a sprint with someone like Dennis. Instead, I expect to see them attacking on the lap circuit in an attempt to make the race as difficult as possible. Van Garderen was to the fore in Finistère but was caught not too far from the finish and his pretty poor sprint saw him finish in 8th. I think he has some good climbing legs at the moment but he will probably need to arrive solo to the line.

Egan Bernal.

Another team who should have numbers near the head of the race are Sky. Rosa, Thomas and Bernal all placed within the top 12 today and give them great options for a stage like this. Although the young Colombian is returning from the terrible crash in Catalunya that cost him his first WT stage-race GC podium, he appears to be in good form from first viewing. He is one of the most talented riders in the peloton and I don’t think he will be to far off his Catalunya level. That will scare the other teams as he was the only one who could match a flying Valverde then, even taking the race to him on the last stage before the unfortunate crash. He packs a surprisingly good sprint so he will fancy his chances in a gallop to the line against a handful of others. Will he be granted the freedom?

Louis Vervaeke.

If Matthews falters then Sunweb could possibly turn to their young Belgian rider to get involved in the finale. Vervaeke had a strong start to 2017 before over-training and burning himself out. This season he has taken a slightly different approach and it seems to be paying off as he slowly rides himself into form. A very strong climber as a junior and U23, can he roll back the years this week?

Emmanuel Buchmann.

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The former German champion is another who has had a slow start to the year but he showed in the recent running of Itzulia that his form is now starting to pick up. He finished a very respectable 4th on GC in that race against some strong riders. Arriving at this race as Bora’s “protected” rider, he will be unfortunately be left with little help in the mountains as half of the team is sprint-based with only a returning from illness Kennaugh and Poljkanski to help. I think he might be isolated quite a few times at this race! The best form of defense is attack as they say, so it would be good to see him being aggressive tomorrow. He’s not a slouch in a very reduced sprint to the line.

Prediction

The teams to ride an attacking race with the limited GC days that we have here and we’ll consequently see a small group of guys escape on the final lap. They all might not be the obvious favourites for the overall win, but with the majority of the stronger teams represented, the move stays away.

Bernal bounces back from Catalunya disappointment by taking a powerful sprint victory!

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Betting

1pt EW Bernal @ 18/1 (would take down to 14/1).

0.5pt EW Buchmann @ 66/1 (would take down to 40/1)

1pt EW Roglic @ 33/1 (Would take down to 22s)

I know I didn’t name Roglic in the list above but if he is climbing as well as he was in Itzulia then he has a chance of escaping and possibly riding solo to the line. As we saw in that race as well, he is no slouch. The price is too big to ignore.

Thanks as always for reading. How do you think tomorrow’s stage will play out? Anyway,

Those were My Two Spokes Worth.