La Flèche Wallonne Féminine 2018 Preview

Last year’s edition of the race saw a dominant Boels Dolmans once again top the podium at the end of the day with a late-attack from van der Breggen before the Mur de Huy saw her hold on to the line rather comfortably: taking what was her second win of the week and third win in a row at this race. Valverde who?

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Deignan completed the 1-2 for Boels (a recurring theme during this week last year) with Niewiadoma coming home third after she was the rider who split the field on the penultimate climb of the day.

Will we see a similar outcome this year? Let’s take a look at what is in store for the riders.

The Route

The organiser’s have decided to change the route ever so slightly from last year with the finishing circuit being completed twice, rather than once, which means the removal of the Amay and Villers-le-Bouillet.

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@LaFlammeRouge16

It means the women will have to face 6 categorised climbs inside the final 50kms of the race. The Côte d’Ereffe (1.7km at 6.4%) and Côte de Cherave (1.4km at 7.6%) act as a “warm-up” for the big finale atop the Mur de Huy.

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The road just gets going up as the riders continue, with brutally steep gradients of 19% in some places. Whoever comes out on top here will have deserved it!

How will the race pan out?

Well, unlike the men’s race we might actually see (well, we won’t actually see them but more on that later) some attacks from far out and not just a sprint up the Huy. Last year Moolman attempted a long-range effort with an attack on the Villers-le-Bouillet, ultimately holding off the bunch on the first passage of the Huy, but she was soon brought to heel. However, the winning move of the day was formed on the Cherave where Niewiadoma put in a brutal attack that only van der Breggen could initially follow before Deignan caught back up just near the top. Moolman was close behind but she paid for her earlier efforts.

I’m hoping something similar happens this year, especially with lots of teams having a few options who could feasibly win the race. We saw this happen in Amstel when the “second-tier leaders” got up the road and with enough teams represented, they were never going to be brought back.

Van der Breggen is dominant in this race and even when the peloton arrives at the foot of the climb together, she is almost impossible to beat. They need to try to isolate her but given the strength of Boels that will be difficult. However, the climbs here are harder than they were in Amstel so the other teams do have a chance.

After missing out in Amstel, I think it will actually be the favourites who will be pushing the pace early.

Contender

Wielrensters in actie tijdens Waalse Pijl

In all seriousness, I’m struggling to think of a situation where van der Breggen doesn’t have a really good chance of winning this race. We saw in Amstel that Boels have plenty of riders to fill the void left by Deignan and the Olympic Champion is on some sensational form at the moment. She is the current Queen of this climb (Vos is not the same as she was a few years ago) so a rider will have to carry an advantage onto the foot slopes to beat her.

Best of the rest?

Niewiadoma is the obvious challenger to van der Breggen and she should be there to seize her opportunity should the Boels rider falter. In her last three attempts at this race Niewiadoma has finished 5th, 4th and 3rd: so 2nd this year? She’s been lively so far this season and will no doubt animate the finale again this time round, can she finish it off though?

Van Vleuten was disappointed after Amstel not to be able to test her legs as she said she felt very good at the moment. Her performances in the second part of last season would suggest that she is capable of going well on a climb like the Huy. In 2017 she was best of the rest from the reduced peloton, finishing in 4th place, while back in 2015 she was 12 seconds down on AVDB. Not having Kennedy there will be a big loss for Mitchelton, she would have had the ability on the climbs to potentially attack early and force others to chase. Spratt will have a lot of work to do.

Moolman might just be the dark horse for the day. This is a climb that the South African admits she loves and she is incredibly consistent here: 5th (2012), 3rd (2013), 5th (2014), 4th (2015), DNF (2016) and 6th (2017). Despite not having won this year, I have been very impressed with how well she has ridden, she just needs to time her attack correctly this edition.

Longo Borghini returned to action at Amstel Gold after missing some races due to illness. A classy bike rider and climber, if she has fully recovered and is back to racing fit then she can compete here. Last year she missed the race but she has finished on the podium here twice in the past so knows what it takes to compete at the pointy end. A lot of her season so far has been derailed by bad luck so it would be nice to see something go her way for once!

Those are the four riders who I can see challenging AVDB for the title but of course others might get involved in a tactical race where attacks come early and no one follows; Ferrand Prevot (Canyon), Guarnier (Boels), Ensing (Ale), Stultiens (Waowdeals) and Gillow (FDJ) spring to mind.

Prediction

It is hard to look past a van der Breggen win but I’m going to do exactly that…

Ashleigh Moolman to take home the crown!

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I have been very impressed with the slight climber who has gone well in every race she has competed in so far this year, including a strong 4th place in Flanders – a race which doesn’t really suit her. Fleche Wallonne does suit her and I think she has the form to go toe-to-toe with anyone on the Huy. Her early part of the season has been built around this race and week, skipping the Commonwealth Games to be here, and I think we’ll see that decision justified.

Coverage.

We’re not getting a live stream, great job ASO.

Every WWT race has managed to at least have half an hour of the race live streamed but for some reason the arguably biggest cycling race organisation, with over £40million profit in 2017, can’t manage to get it together. Go figure.

Heck, 1.1 level race Omloop Hageland had the whole race covered. So it is clearly not money motivated but I’m struggling to think of a reason/excuse for the ASO not to cover the race. But then again, what else should I expect from an organisation that loves a glamourised criterium: original La Course and Madrid Challenge are prime examples of that.

Aaaaaand that’s me now on a blacklist.

Personally I think the UCI should introduce some regulation that if you want a race to be WWT level, there needs to be a live stream available. How can they expect the sport to grow if no one is able to watch it, apart from being roadside?

Anyway, to follow the race it will have to be via Twitter and the “#FWWomen” hashtag. I also recommend following @richiesteege and @petervdveen who tend to have the best updates from the ground.

Thanks as always for reading; who do you think is going to win tomorrow? Will we see an upset or will the Queen of the Mur win again? Anyway,

Those were My Two Spokes Worth.

La Flèche Wallonne 2018 Preview

The Ardennes Classics week continues with the first race which actually visits the region. Flèche Wallonne is a race many fans do not like due to the very same-y race pattern and outcome we get every year but it has grown on me. You just have to view it as you would with a sprint stage; it is all in the positioning and energy conserving before the final dash up the Huy. Last season saw Valverde win, again, making it 4-in-a-row for the Movistar man.

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Behind, Dan Martin finish second behind Valverde, again, with Dylan Teuns taking home a surprising third place: a sign of things to come from him in 2017.

Will we see a similar outcome this year? Let’s have a look at what is in store for the riders.

The Route

We do have a bit of a parcours change compared to the past few seasons but that is mostly in the early part of the day, with the riders facing some of the climbs that will feature at the pointy end of the race on Sunday.

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@LaFlammeRouge16

3200m of climbing in 200km of racing makes it a fairly tough day in the saddle but the majority of the climbs are under 2km in length so they suit the puncheurs and climbers alike.

On paper it look as if the parcours would suit a long-range attack on the Côte d’Ereffe (2.1km at 5%) which crests at roughly 17kms to go. We sometimes see some attacks go here but one hasn’t been successful in a long time!

The Côre de Cherave (1.4km at 7.6%) is the last place for someone to attack if they want to avoid the sprint up the Huy. Cresting with only 6kms to go, a strong rider or group of riders could hold off the chasing bunch if there is a stall behind.

It is then over to the Mur de Huy to decide the race itself.

MurdeHuy

 

The climb gradually gets steeper the longer it goes, with the steepest ramps coming around a semi-hairpin turn. More often than not though, it is a very tactical ascent with no one really wanting to take the pace up fully until 150m to go. Last year Gaudu spiced things up by attacking at 200m out but he “blew up” near the end and finished 9th in the end. Will anyone go for broke this year by attacking at the bottom? I would love to see that.

How will the race pan out?

I hope we see some teams take it up early and try to isolate Valverde by forcing his team to seriously chase before the final run up the Huy. The slightly trickier opening half of the day might see some riders more tired than they are used to once they come in to the final 30kms and it could increase the chances of an attacking sticking. However, it needs to be a serious move for that to happen though with a few strong riders from big teams represented.

I do think there is an increased chance of an earlier move sticking this year because of the trickier opening part of the stage but ultimately I think it will once again come down to the peloton climbing the Huy together.

However, I hope someone goes full gas from the bottom to throw the proverbial cat amongst the pigeons. Maybe I’m just being wishful with my thinking though!

Contender

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Best of the rest?

Alaphilippe looked sprightly in the opening few stages of Itzulia before he made the selection on Sunday in Amstel. He is the only rider here who I genuinely think has a chance of beating Valverde by going toe-to-toe with the Spaniard, but even then, it will be tough for him to do just that.

Teuns surprised everyone last year at this race with an impressive third. He’s started the season well with some good GC results in Paris Nice and Itzulia, which included a solid 4th place in the latter race’s tough Arrate finish. However, he missed the move in Amstel which might indicate that his form isn’t as good as it should be.

Martin has had a pretty horrid year so far with a 4th place on the second stage of the Volta ao Algarve the only result to even somewhat shout home about. He was a DNF in Amstel and I can’t see him getting on the podium this year.

Vanendert, Izagirre, Gaudu, Bardet and Henao might all be involved at the head of the race too.

However, I am interested in the chances of four outsiders tomorrow.

The “Value” picks

Michael Matthews.

Yep, I’m doing it again. Those of you who read last year’s preview will potentially remember my “if Albasini is a favourite; why isn’t Matthews?” argument and I’m rolling that bad boy out again. The Australian has had an early season that has been hampered by injury but he’s been slowly refinding his form as of late and he might just have timed his peak correctly. In Amstel he looked comfortable following the main group but a very untimely puncture before the Cauberg ruined his chances of a good result. We saw in the Tour last year that Matthews can climb very well on the short, sharp ascents so why can’t he do the same here? A 3 minute power effort should suit him well.

Jay McCarthy.

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The same argument can be made for McCarthy who also was robbed of a chance to perform well in Amstel after being involved in a crash just before the race kicked off with 40km left. He tried to get back in but his day was done and he ended a DNF. In an interview with CyclingTips he says that he has been training for this type of effort and is aiming for a top 5. I believe he can deliver, but he just needs to be in a good position at the bottom of the climb, like everyone else. An improvement from his 19th last year should be easily achievable. Can he go a lot better?

Romain Bardet.

Bardet has quietly gone about his business this year in stage races, instead, he has performed much better in one-day races. Aside from Dwars door Vlaanderen, the AG2R rider has finished 8/1/8/2/2 in those events so far this year and a good result tomorrow is within his sights again. He comes into this race almost under the radar but he shouldn’t be discredited and I think he’ll improve on his 13th last year. Who remembers his win on the steep finish of the Peyragudes in France last year?

Enric Mas.

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One of the riders who I would love to see go full gas from the bottom of the Mur, I hope to see QuickStep deploy him in a role like that to cause panic within the Movistar camp. His stage win on the brutally steep climb to Arrate highlights just how well he can go on the steep slopes and I think he has a good chance of going well again tomorrow. Could we see QuickStep repeat the 2-3 they had from a few years ago?

Prediction

Boring, but Valverde wins. I just can’t see any team being bold enough to try something serious from far out which means that we’ll see a sprint up the Mur and the result from there is inevitable.

Please prove me wrong other teams: I would like them to at least try.

I do think we could see a few surprises on the podium though…

Betting

A day for picking some outside value and cheering them on as they finish 7-12th.

I already tweeted the two outside picks of Mas and Matthews before Amstel so I am sticking with the odds that were available then (and a while after).

0.25pt EW Mas @ 200/1 (still available at that price with William Hill, would take 150/1 elsewhere)

0.25pt EW Matthews @ 300/1 (he’s shortened a lot but is still 250/1 with Betfair, I’d take 150/1)

Newer bets are;

0.25pt EW McCarthy @ 325/1 with Betfair (would take 250/1 elsewhere)

1pt EW Bardet @ 125/1 with Betfair (would take 80/1)

 

Thanks as always for reading! Who do you think will win tomorrow? Can anyone stop Valverde? Anyway,

Those were My Two Spokes Worth.

La Flèche Wallonne 2017 Preview

The second of the Ardennes classics this week and we’re finally in the Ardennes! A race dominated by the famous Mur de Huy ascent and the sprint up it, the day is often won by some of the best climbers in the world.

Last year an imperious Valverde won it for the third time in a row (his 4th in total), beating Alaphilippe and Dan Martin.

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I’m not going to beat about the bush here though, this is one of my least favourite races of the year. A long afternoon waiting for one short effort up the final climb, not my idea of fun. Maybe that will change this year though after all the attacking racing we’ve had so far this Spring?

Let’s take a look at what’s in store for the riders.

The Route

A shade over 200km, with most of the challenges packed into the latter half of the race.

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The road is up and down for the last 80km but more than likely it will be the final 30km that will settle the day.

With the second passage of the Huy, some teams might look to increase the pace and shed some domestiques of the main favourites, or even send attackers up the road.

It’s then around 12km until they hit the Côte d’Ereffe, cresting with only 15km remaining. At 2.1km in length and averaging only 5%, it’s not a hard climb, but I expect the pace to be high and a few riders might get dropped from the peloton.

Once over the peak, we have a quick descent and an unclassified rise before a gradual drop to the penultimate climb of the day.

The Côte de Cherave is an easier Mur, averaging just over 8% for 1.3km. Last year saw Izagirre, Jungels and Wellens attack on the climb and we could well see some similar moves this year. With its proximity to the finish, if the peloton behind is not co-operating then there is a chance that riders make it all the way to the Mur with a gap. However, they’ll need to have something left in the tank before tackling the famous climb.

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The 9.6% average gradient is a bit deceitful because we have a kilometre that averages closer to 11%, with much shallower slopes at the bottom and right at the end of the climb.

It will be a strong rider who wins tomorrow!

Weather Watch

It looks like a nice day out in the saddle for the riders, but it also looks to be a relatively windy day.

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Source; Windfinder

The above image is the forecast for a town called Maillen which is just north of the route near Yvoir (at the 63km gone mark).

It’s a similar story for the rest of the region tomorrow, with a brisk North-Easterly wind which means that it will be a head or cross-head wind for most of the day until we reach the closing circuit around Huy.

Combining the wind direction, speed and road direction then echelons are certainly a possibility but I fear there is a greater chance of it just being a block head-wind instead.

There are some exposed roads in the area though, so if the wind would turn ever so slightly, then that would be great!

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I’m just thinking wishfully again though.

How will the race pan out?

I’m really hoping that the attacking racing of the Spring continues here. The route has a lot of potential, especially the closing 15km, it just requires some teams to be risky for once. Otherwise, we’ll end up with another damp squib of a race again.

The onus is really on Movistar to do most of the work as Valverde is the man to beat on this climb, going for his 5th win and considering his form, no one else will win if the bunch comes to the foot slopes together. Barring any mechanical or other incident of course.

Therefore it’s up to other teams to make the race hard and wear down Movistar as the Spanish team here is solid, but not great. Potential race winning attacks will need to come further out than 15km to go though because they should still be able to cope with them then.

In theory, no one should help them and that’s how I would certainly play it if I was a DS of a team. Yet as we know, some teams don’t seem to think that way and I fear that Sky/QuickStep will crack and help do some work.

However, if Sky sent someone like Rosa up the road on the penultimate passage of the Huy then that would set alarm bells ringing in the Movistar camp and soften them up for the last trio of climbs. Joined by some allies from other teams, then we could have a race on our hands. It would need to be a meaningful attack though because the route isn’t tough enough to cause any damage if it’s a half-hearted effort.

With all that said though, I fear it may come down to a sprint up the Mur.

Contender(s)

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Anyone else?

Team Sky duo of Henao and Kwiatkowski should be up there. Both have finished well in the past at this race and they were strong in Amstel which will give them a lot of confidence going into tomorrow. A 1-2 punch might see them beat Valverde but Quick Step tried that last year and failed, so we could see a similar outcome again.

No Gilbert is a blow for Quick Step but they still have Dan Martin who will be in contention. He wasn’t great in Catalunya but that could turn around here, he won’t win though.

Albasini will top 10 again, possibly top 5.

Uran has looked good this season and should be up there again. His team-mate Woods should like this type of finish but his tactical ineptness lets him down at times. I guess there aren’t many tactics to a 1.3km uphill effort!

Several other GC riders/climbers will feature in and around the top 10, such as Bardet, Pantano and Costa.

As for outsiders;

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My logic still stands with Matthews for tomorrow, or at least it does in my head anyway! He seems to be going exceptionally well this year and he’s survived some steep climbs when I’ve not expected it. With the race only being 200km he should be fresh at the finish so in a 3-minute effort, why can’t he compete with the best GC riders in the World?

I’m also intrigued to see how Kudus goes. The Eritrean will benefit from the shorter race distance and I keep thinking back to how impressive he was in February on the climb to Llucena. The issue is that, that result was February and we’re now in April when riders are almost in peak condition and Kudus hasn’t shown so much recently. Nonetheless, as a proper outsider, he’s one to keep an eye on!

If we get a late attack succeed or a group of riders get away then Vakoc is my man for that situation.

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As QS’ join second best option IMO (along with Brambilla), he could be a good foil to send up the road in an attacking race. He looked incredibly strong in Brabantse, bridging the gap to Wellens and then to the leaders fairly comfortably. Peaking for this part of the season, I don’t think we’ve seen everything from him yet this week…

Prediction

An exciting/attacking race? Hopefully! But…

Cycling is a sport where 180 guys ride around on their bikes for 5 hours and in the end, Valverde wins.

Betting

I fear #HaugheyWednesdays will be coming to an end tomorrow. Some really small punts for interest but they are already a hiding to nothing and almost being marked down as a loss before the start…

0.125pt EW Matthews @ 300/1 (As I tweeted this I’m counting it, and I would maybe take the 200s still available. The 150 is a push)

0.125pt EW Kudus @ 500/1 with Betfair/PP (would take 300s lowest)

0.125pt EW Vakoc @ 250/1 with Bet365 (150/1 lowest but again, that’s at a push).

 

Thanks as always for reading and any feedback is greatly appreciated. Who do you think will win? Will it be a walk in the park for Valverde? This is the first of three previews I’ll have out today, with Women’s Fleche out next then Tour of the Alps out later, so do return for those! Although the latter may be cancelled due to the weather. Anyway,

Those were My Two Spokes Worth.