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As the weather forecast takes shape it would appear that the riders will experience pleasant and cool conditions on the bike, with some sun and interestingly some increasing wind in the afternoon. Whilst negligible from the morning, by the time they round the village of Kerkhove and follow the Scheldt river to the finish in Oudenaarde, the wind should be at its strongest and have some impact and it's likely to be a tail/cross.
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Sitting out this one and just watching for enjoyment. I like Sagan and GVA but not going to back either on the price.
No long shots for me this time. |
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looks like Sagan and GvA have missed the boat
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Ouch Vanmarcke has left half his skin on the road. No idea how he managed to go down there.
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Tommeke not having a good last week. Out of this one.
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Wonderful ride by Gilbert. You have to think Mrs Gilbert is pushing pins into models of the rivals somewhere though.
What a race. |
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Great effort from Gilbert, we will never know if the chasers would have reeled him in without Sagan's crash
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Strange race that one, but am certainly not complaining with Gilbert landing the win after going for a long 55km solo ride. Gilbert first came to the front with about 96kms to-go with Boonen sitting just behind, and he was really working hard. So the thinking there by QST was quite obvious in that they wanted a "tester" or "first course" on the Muur, which is a stiff climb prominently used in the Eneco Tour. Here, it was Boonen who allowed the hammer to drop, signalling quite clearly that hostilities were under way, and rightly it formed the first proper selection of the race, with about 20 riders going clear, which turned out to be the race-winning move as the race favourites were caught-out as bb66 observed. It was a quality group but there was still over 90kms to-go, so unlike BB I wasn't convinced it was over for the chasers but was happy Gilbert was involved as both options were covered, in the race re-joining or the breakaway holding out.
...It took the chasing peloton an overly long time to organise a proper chase, there was really only one rider there for a very long while, while the breakaway were combining very well, indeed. That's where such a highly-respected rider like Boonen tends to be a big advantage in a breakaway -- when he says work other riders respect him, and they did! I wasn't worried about Vanmarcke and Krsitoff, and thought Stuyven was just taking another big step, but as I stated in my write-up about Gilbert, the hellingen were always going to suit him down-to-the-ground, so there was really only Boonen who could match him in that group as far as I was concerned, and when Boonen's race was shot with mechanicals and Gilbert got a proper sniff on the Oude Kwaremont, it was "suffer-stations" for Gilbert and enjoying near career-best form he was free to go for home, which was still admittedly a long way out. Remember though, we have seen veterans ride very well in breakaways over the years, it seems that as they age they can measure their reserves so finely that it often carries them a very long way in such situations, and in this case all the way for the Belgian Champion. Lovely scenes and reception from the home crowds. A very big win for the Belgians, they'll remember that one for a long time, I believe. On face-value Sagan looked to be riding well, but I actually thought he was a little off all day, and from the social-media evidence it would appear that his crash was all his own fault. I think for such a superlative bike handler to come down like that, just showed that his concentration levels were down, he might have been suffering from fatigue after giving it a fair injection of pace just then. So, whilst I agree that we will never know what could have been had he not caused that crash, seeing GVA go "bury-mode" for long stints with the help of Van Baarle and only eating-out a small gap within the last 5kms, it would be difficult to think that Sagan's contributions would have changed the equation so much as to bring Gilbert back. In fact, I would argue that the equation was firmly on the back of Gilbert, his to lose if you will, it was simply up to him to find that extra something when there was nothing left, and he did do that with aplomb actually, he dug very deep, so I would tend to think he would have done it regardless of Sagan's involvement. But of course that is just an opinion, speculation. The best rider won, and that is what counts. Some good rides for Roubaix... |
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Oh, Benoot was brought back to the back of the peloton by teammates at 112kms after a mechanical, clearly not what he needed, and he is not finding much luck in this race.
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