![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Changes in stage 10 compared to stage 9 Biggest gainers by position : +39 Sylvain Calzati +37 Giovanni Lombardi +33 Moises Aldape Chavez +32 Sven Krauss +32 Benoit Joachim +30 Jose Luis Carrasco Gamiz +29 Benoit Poilvet +28 Torsten Hiekmann +28 Michael Rasmussen +26 Raffaele Illiano Biggest losers by position : -27 Davide Rebellin -24 Nicolas Vogondy -23 Andrea Moletta -23 Joerg Ludewig -23 Mikel Pradera Rodriguez -22 Jonathan Patrick Mc Carty -22 Matthias Kessler -22 Olaf Pollack -22 Olivier Bonnaire -22 Renaud Dion -22 Stef Clement Biggest gainers by time : +3:43 Franco Pellizotti +3:35 Vladimir Efimkin +3:29 Serguei Yakovlev +3:24 Marco Pinotti +3:21 Hubert Dupont +3:20 Theo Eltink +3:20 Jose Luis Carrasco Gamiz +3:19 Alexandr Kolobnev +3:18 Sven Krauss +3:15 Joan Horrach Rippoll Biggest losers by time : -14:50 Cyrille Monnerais -14:50 Henk Vogels -14:50 Jason Mccartney -14:40 Aaron Olsen -14:40 Alberto Loddo -14:40 Andoni Aranaga Azkune -14:40 Andy Flickinger -14:40 Arnaud Gerard -14:40 Axel Maximiliano Richeze -14:40 Bert Roesems -14:40 Bobby Julich Favourites by position : +1 Leonardo Piepoli -1 Serguei Gonchar -1 Paolo Savoldelli -1 José Rujano Guillen -1 Gilberto Simoni -1 Giampaolo Caruso -1 Danilo Di Luca -8 Carlos Sastre Candil -27 Davide Rebellin Favourites by time : -2:20 Carlos Sastre Candil -13:07 Davide Rebellin Favourites standings : 1 Ivan Basso 39.29.40 2 José E. Gutierrez Cataluna 1.34 3 Damiano Cunego 1.48 ..... 5 Paolo Savoldelli 2.35 6 Serguei Gonchar 2.43 7 Danilo Di Luca 2.48 8 Gilberto Simoni 3.20 9 Giampaolo Caruso 3.23 ..... 11 Andrea Noe' 3.45 12 Luca Mazzanti 3.50 ..... 20 José Rujano Guillen 5.32 ..... 30 Leonardo Piepoli 8.56 ..... 36 Carlos Sastre Candil 10.25 ..... 62 Davide Rebellin 22.59 Retirements to date : Bouygues Telecom Sébastien Chavanel Cofidis, le Credit par Telephone Cristian Moreni " Leonardo Bertagnolli DNF 4 " Thierry Marichal Davitamon-Lotto Christophe Brandt DNS 4 Euskaltel-Euskadi Koldo Fernandez Française des Jeux Bradley Mcgee Liberty Seguros-Würth Team Dariusz Baranowski DNF 10 Quick Step-Innergetic Remmert Wielinga Rabobank Graeme Brown Selle Italia-Serramenti Diquigiovanni Alessandro Bertolini T-Mobile Team André Korff Team Milram Alessandro Petacchi DNS 4 Total retirements : 13 |
Ads |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Bob Martin wrote:
Changes in stage 10 compared to stage 9 Biggest losers by time : -14:40 Bobby Julich I was going to make some comment about Ullrich taking the ride so gently he'd lose time on the bus to the start but Julich is certainly giving him a caning in the losing times stakes. Is Julich actually still alive? |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Bounty Bob wrote: Bob Martin wrote: Changes in stage 10 compared to stage 9 Biggest losers by time : -14:40 Bobby Julich I was going to make some comment about Ullrich taking the ride so gently he'd lose time on the bus to the start but Julich is certainly giving him a caning in the losing times stakes. Is Julich actually still alive? *Rolls eyes* Maybe it is time for a FAQ on GT racing would be a good idea for these uninformed posters. 1. Julich is a DOMESTIC in this Giro, just as Sastre. With CSC he gets a free role in smaller tours (Paris-Nice, Romandie), but in the Giro he works (hard!) for Ivan Basso. Considering Basso is going very well indeed it stands to reason that Julich is doing fine. Noone at CSC and certainly not Julich gives a rats ass at what time distance Sastre or Julich come in, just as long as they work for Ican Basso and are within the time-limit. 2. Ulrich and probably Rasmussen ride the Giro to get into shape. It was clear from the start they will loose hours. They don't care for their time either, they are just testing themselves. Considering the TTT and that he wasn't dropped on evry mountain it seems Jan is indeed improving rapidly. And no, it's never sure if it will be enough for the tour and no I don't think he will win the TdF. But thats how Ulrich prepares... nothing new there. This is grown up, Pro cycling... people pick their targets (none better as Lance) and try to be in shape at the right moment. They don't try to win everything or force their reserves by trying to hang on no matter what. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Actually the Julich thing only really come out because Ullrich had disappeared from the stage summaries. So Julich is doomed to serving? No targeting stage wins? As long as Basso needs his help I think he won't target a stage win. Its really Ullrich I don't understand, everything in other sport seems to suggest that you need to actually properly compete at higher level to get right for the big event. I can't see how his current tactics of riding with the biggest slow bunch can be all that helpful and from what I read he's ditching the tour de suisse for a shorter tour and can't see him getting a good work out in that. Cycling is quite a tough profession. Going with the "slow" bunch still taxes the body, so in general this can be seen as a workout. Coasting in the build-up to a big round is actually quite normal, in a way Lance did this too (he just didn't race much in preperation). Same goes for being too heavy (allbeit that Jan is to extreme at this). Top cyclists have such a low fat-percentage that their body becomes vulnerable for disease (some say that top-form is actually a form of being out of ballance). Also, riders tend to loose weigth during a TdF. If you start out at mimum you can go too low (Theunissen is a good example). Being a bit heavy in the build up isn't such a big deal, just as long as you are trimmed when the first mountain stages begin. Again, Jan is taking this to an extreme and so it's not a good strategy for him. But in itself it's normal for GC riders to be heavy in the build-up. Still I guess the TT tomorrow will tell whether hes going to do any real work or merely continue to be a commuter (And he could work hard on some of the mountain stages I guess). The one who knows will be his trainer ![]() to coast he will coast, if his trainer decides he needs to hurt his body we can expect fireworks. Even if he goes "commuting"don't equate it by bad preperation, training/building up is seldom done @ 100% To finish, a low intensity is the best way to burn fat, higher intensity training tends just to chew up carbs and let the fatties stay where they are... his gut. So don't be surprised if you get reports of Jan training at 15 miles an hour... it's modern training methods ^^ |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Giro d'Italia Stage 5 TTT | petulance | Australia | 4 | May 12th 06 02:43 PM |
Robbie wins Giro d'Italia Stage Two sprint | cfsmtb | Australia | 14 | May 10th 06 12:52 AM |
Cottur Passes on | Davey Crockett | Racing | 2 | March 9th 06 03:57 AM |
The Graciousness Of A Champion | hold my beer and watch this... | Racing | 41 | September 4th 03 08:14 PM |
Wins in Grand Tours? | Isidor Gunsberg | Racing | 11 | July 31st 03 07:32 PM |