La Vuelta

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James Malloch

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Is anyone planning to watch this starting tomorrow?

Any tips for good coverage would be welcomed. I’ve got Discovery+ so can have the live race in the background, but it would be good to have some shorter daily summaries to watch.

I’ve never really watched cycling but really enjoyed the TdF: Unchained series on Netflix so I’m keen to keep track of the Vuelta.
 
Lanterne Rouge highlights on You Tube are always worth a watch. They are packed with insight. It surprises me that even when I watch a stage from start to finish, how much I have missed. Love the Veulta, thinking man's tour!
 
I think Discovery+ is the same coverage as GCN. They might do 30-40 minute highlights as well as the 2-3 minute ones. If you are unable to watch live and want to watch it after the event then my preferred option is to follow How Far Out For This Race? on twitter who give a suggestion of where would be good to watch from and then you can just skip through the full race coverage to the relevant points. This way if it is a sprint stage with a break full of cannon fodder you know you only need to watch the last 5km rather than sit through the whole 40 minute highlights. However, if the same stage gets blown apart by crosswinds then you can choose to watch more of it.

If you are following live whilst at work then the livestats on procyclingstats is pretty handy for working out what is going on.
 
The vuelta is often a really good watch as is the last grand tour of season so lots of people go for it!

I tend to watch a few of the bigger stages in full on eurosport (have as part of tv package).
However, for majority of stages I watch the ITV4 highlights show which is usually pretty good (set to record series).

For more detailed analysis I am a really big fan of the cycling podcast. They do a daily episode that comes out late each night (so i usually listen next morning on commute) and often pick up on smaller stories etc with good interviews and guests. They also tend do adjunct episodes covering topics related to race eg historical or related to specific climbs or stages.
 
I don't think ITV have any coverage this year, it's either GCN+, Discovery+ or Eurosport.

GCN seem flaky with getting highlights up on time and not getting confused between the long and short highlights.
 
ah your right, just googled it, no highlights on ITV4.

There is mention of an hour show on Quest at 7 as well as the eurosport, gcn etc.
 
I'd second the Cycling Podcast. They do a daily pod ast during the grand tours. The Lanterne Rouge YouTube is good and they also do a daily podcast which I love.

Both podcasts have slightly different perspectives. CP is more journalistic, interviews with riders and they have people at the race. LR is more in depth analysis of each stage, tactics etc. I think they compliment each other really well.
They both did a preview podcast each to the tune of about and a half, if you're not prepped after that you never will be!
Should be a cracker this year - Jonas, Roglic, G, Remco and a bunch of others. Fingers crossed for a close race.
 
Paul B said:
I don't think ITV have any coverage this year, it's either GCN+, Discovery+ or Eurosport.

GCN seem flaky with getting highlights up on time and not getting confused between the long and short highlights.

Daily coverage on S4C…
 
Quest didn't excel yesterday with "well who's that then" and when the first group crossed the line "can't help you there with that shot" commentary.

The TTT seemed pretty daft. Regardless of the rain, it was pretty dark by the end!
 
Johnny Brown said:
Paul B said:
I don't think ITV have any coverage this year, it's either GCN+, Discovery+ or Eurosport.

GCN seem flaky with getting highlights up on time and not getting confused between the long and short highlights.

Daily coverage on S4C…

Can prob make that work with a VPN.

I've been told you can watch all the classics on Australian TV that way. Never tried it personally........
 
I don't know if you've started to follow La Vuelta, as a Spaniard I hope you haven't, the first 3 stages were so awful. Organisational errors that make me feel ashamed...
 
Vuelta a Espana: Four arrested over plot to sabotage stage three:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/66647757
 
If anyone can enlighten me as to:
a) what happened to Remco and his GC race (and the subsequent stage win)?; and,
b) what on earth Jumbo's tactics were today?

I'd be grateful.

Also:
https://www.cyclingnews.com/news/nathan-van-hooydonck-in-life-threatening-condition-after-car-accident/

which sounds utterly horrendous.
 
Remco had his GC race self destruct on the Tourmalet stage, didn't have the legs for the long high mountains. Since he was then so far back in GC he has been able to get in the breakaway for stage wins/mountains jersey. Yesterday since he took so much time back he chose to lose another 15 minutes to ensure he is not in the GC race and will probably go for another stage win again today.

As for Jumbo such a dominant performance, Jonas seems to have attacked as he had the legs and they want a second place rider as close to Sepp in case he can't get through the third week as a team leader and cracks (funny seeing him get accused of mechanical doping as well...). Don't think that Roglic is super happy about the tactics though and funny seeing his missus ripping into the team on social media.

In other Jumbo news sad to see one of their other riders has been caught doping, they have of course banned the rider however the full house searches brought back memories of the bad old days. Let's hope the whole Jumbo story is really good sports science and some bicarbonate of soda for the good of cycling long term.
 
Good luck with that. Stage 16 of the Tour really soured cycling for me after years of gradual increasing faith and interest.
 
Duma said:
Good luck with that. Stage 16 of the Tour really soured cycling for me after years of gradual increasing faith and interest.

Am I missing something here (am aware of the ketone stuff)? An individual mountain time trial in week 3 is always going to highlight differences between those leading riders who are normally on a par but have big gaps in relative fatigue. Just look what Remco can do after a good rest, despite loosing it a few days before.
 
Pogs result was impressive. Jonas' was out of this world. I linked the power data over on the TdF thread; take a look and see what you think?

Badly phrased question perhaps. I was interested in why Remco seemed to tank so badly?
 
The explanation was even if Remco went as fast as he could he was going to lose so much time the Podium race was over. Hence he slowed more to save energy for potential stage wins and other jerseys.

I fully recognise the cynicism around exceptional performance and the history of drug cheats getting away with consistent illegal behaviour but I also won't forget, in terms of French cynicism, nearly all the French riders were exposed as well around the time the Armstrong fallout happened. The doctors involved also had clients who were famous footballers, tennis stars etc. International sport is obviously corrupt and seems more so when more money is involved.
 
Offwidth said:
The explanation was even if Remco went as fast as he could he was going to lose so much time the Podium race was over. Hence he slowed more to save energy for potential stage wins and other jerseys.

So he was never really a GC contender (as many of his critics seem to suggest)? :worms:

I think this sums up today well (i.e. WTF):
https://www.cyclingweekly.com/racing/analysis-what-is-going-on-with-jumbo-visma-and-sepp-kuss

Roglic doesn't come across well in those quotes and seems to gloss over the fact it's a team sport which he's benefited from previously.
 
Of course Remco was a contender, he was the defending champion and last year was in red ahead of Primoz before he crashed on stage 16. Saying otherwise is daft gossip.

Jumbo were much stronger this year though, and on the day before yesterday their rivals gifted Jumbo an even tighter stranglehold by not chasing Jonas (incredibly strange tactics). Jumbo certainly didn't expect Jonas to gain so much time on Sebb: his stage win was a statement for a best friend and teammate in hospital in critical condition.

I think the Jumbo tactics yesterday made less sense but still some (although I seem to be in a minority). Sepp still has the lead but is in an untested situation for him. There are two more really hard stages and if Sepp cracks (with the cumulative fatique of being in red for days he hasn't faced before) and Primoz and Jonas lost time pointlessly, with some subsequently bad luck, like a crash, they could still risk the race. If we face the same situation at the finish today and they don't help him to stay in red when there are no close contenders around, then I'd say the critics are right, as even more time over 4 minutes is almost certainly enough to defend one hard stage.
 

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