For the simple reason that the Cobbled and Ardennes Classics are behind us, I have not alternative but to get back on my soap box about the Giro being the best of the three Grand Tours. Well, usually, at least. Last year’s race sucked the big one (even if it was supremely Rule #9), but for the most part it is the race that is the most closely contested of the three. There are mountains everywhere Italy meaning there are less bunch sprints, the weather is completely unreliable, and the slightly lower calibre of rider seems hungrier. Or maybe the reduced pressure means riders aren’t quite as stressed out and are able to funnel that extra energy into the race.
My favorite Giro is a hard one to pick out, but its either the 1988 Giro when Andy Hampsten took the win after freezing himself stiff with Erik Breukink on the Gavia or when Pantani took his in 1998. I’ve been watching the ’98 Giro during my morning turbo sessions and Merckx-oh-me, that was an All-Drugs Olympics nail-biter. ’98 is also an interesting contrast to ’88; in just a decade, the technology had changed so much but more than that, the doping atmosphere in the sport transformed completely. From Hampsten’s Giro, EPO went from just being dabbled with on the fringes to being abused by leaders and domestiques alike by the time Pantani won. Hampsten wrote a nice piece about racing against dopers in Tyler Hamilton’s book, The Secret Race. He described the various side-effects that the popular drugs of his era had, such as bloating and a tendency to make the user over-estimate their abilities. Amphetamine made the riders do stupid things, cortisone made them retain water, and steroids made them heavy; a clean rider could use those factors to their advantage. A far cry from the rocket fuel that allowed humble domestiques to big ring up major alpine passes.
Why am I talking about drugs? There’s a race starting in a few days, people! This is our first Grand Tour, and the picks are worth more points, not to mention that strategy starts to play into things with the chance to swap your picks out on either of the rest days – at a certain point penalty. Remember that points are not accumulated; the standings on the last day of the race are what kinds, so keep the long game in mind.
Any points you win count towards the overall prizes plus the winner of this event also gets to post for the rest of the year in the pink jersey badge. So check the start list, review the VSP Grand Tour Scoring Guidelines and get your picks in by the time the countdown clock goes to zero at midnight PDT on Friday, May 9th. If you think we mapped one of your picks wrong, use the dispute system and we’ll review it. Also remember to be precise enough in your description so we know which rider you mean; in other words, if you enter “Martin”, we will use our discretion (read: wild guess) to decide if you mean Tony or Dan – and that choice will not be negotiable once the the countdown clock goes to zero. There has also been a recent scourge of people putting a rider in more than one place. Two words: Piti Principle, people! Don’t make me do a bunch of extra programming to keep you from being allowed to submit such an obviously unsportsmanlike set of picks. We will mercilessly clear out all your entries should we find you have attempted this.
Also don’t forget we’ve got three major prizes for the season-long VSP:
Good luck, have fun with it, and don’t lose your Rule #43 spirit.
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View Comments
@The Grande Fondue
Yeah, and unless Cadel get's his mojo back, Rolland is looking possible for the podium. Anyone know how is is in TT mode?
I doubt the peloton is 100% clean (riders are human, after all), but by today's evidence, these guys were on the rivet the whole way on that last climb. It was like the old days - slogging their way up the mountains, not spinning up them.
I was hoping for a few more attacks from Uran's group, but like I just said, I think these guys are clean and were on fumes and empty tanks.
Can't understand 99% of this, but the commentators do seem to be in the spirit of the occassion.
http://www.steephill.tv/players/youtube3/?title=Last+Km+of+Stage+16&dashboard=giro-d-italia&id=CMftz-RmP-o&yr=2014
Major Chapeau to the RAI camera folks. I watched the whole race on BeIn Sport. Despite the bad weather conditions, the coverage was uninterrupted and the pictures were fabulous. I think I would have preferred to be riding a bike at 25kmh than sitting on a moto at that speed. At least the riders could generate body heat. Much appreciated.
@fignons barber
Hear, hear!100% agree. Today was not a fun day to be sitting on a motorbike and then to have to deal with crazy tifosi running in front of you . . . sheesh!
Entire stage 16 coverage 4:12:40
Quintana is my fucking hero, fucking awesome! Ryder looks like he is in form again, stoked for both of them.
You know it's a tough stage when the first grupetto finishes 39 minutes down and the second grupetto is 44 minutes behind Quintana who won in 4hrs 42 minutes.
Call it! Call it right now! Cancel the rest go the Giro. I'm happy with this. Four out of five all in the right place, just the way I expected it would play out (I had Rodriguez fourth). Let's just call it now.
lots of Rule#9 and Rule#5 out there today, wondering if all of the peloton is feeling like this or not:
http://velonews.competitor.com/2014/05/news/giros-stage-16-grim-cold-perhaps-unnecessary-procession_329798
@Steampunk
Chapeau professor on the extraterrestrial effort. Please report first to the anti-doping control.