In hindsight, it may have been the wrong time to attack… but then again, who was going to bridge the gap if he didn’t? As Cadel says, “Funny, usually people tell me I don’t attack…”.
Post-race it’s always easy to pull things apart and make declarations about what would have happened if…. but until we can set up some parallel universe and trial all of the options, we’ll never really know. At 5th, Evans was ahead of some big names. (Worth noting too that Simon Gerrans had another good race, finishing 8th.)
And come July we’ll get to see Cadel defend his now traditional 2nd place in Le Tour. He may even attack!
In hindsight, it may have been the wrong time to attack… but then again, who was going to bridge the gap if he didn’t? As Cadel says, “Funny, usually people tell me I don’t attack…”.
Post-race it’s always easy to pull things apart and make declarations about what would have happened if…. but until we can set up some parallel universe and trial all of the options, we’ll never really know. At 5th, Evans was ahead of some big names. (Worth noting too that Simon Gerrans had another good race, finishing 8th.)
And come July we’ll get to see Cadel defend his now traditional 2nd place in Le Tour. He may even attack!
Kidding. As I’ve said before, he attacks when he thinks he has an advantage, not because it’s his only tactic. Evans plays a strategic game in his races, mulling over the pros and cons whilst digging deep to counter important moves. Well, that’s how most riders do it, too. But he has the engine to launch decisive attacks, which is not the case for every rider. So there are expectations.
Anyway, he launched but lost. It was close. It confirms his form and his motivation. It was worth a shot. Kim Kirchen won instead, Cadel 2nd, Cunego 3rd. Read CN’s report of the Arrow of Wallonne here: With Efimkin exhausted, Wegmann pressed on solo and held a 20-second advantage to the final kilometre. But he quickly succumbed to the savage gradients of the Mur as Evans blasted past with 400 metres remaining. Davide Rebellin (Gerolsteiner), Cunego, Joaquím Rodríguez (Caisse d’Epargne) and Kirchen were all in tow as the 31 year-old Australian fought hard with Amstel Gold winner Cunego and last year’s winner Rebellin.
Kidding. As I’ve said before, he attacks when he thinks he has an advantage, not because it’s his only tactic. Evans plays a strategic game in his races, mulling over the pros and cons whilst digging deep to counter important moves. Well, that’s how most riders do it, too. But he has the engine to launch decisive attacks, which is not the case for every rider. So there are expectations.
Anyway, he launched but lost. It was close. It confirms his form and his motivation. It was worth a shot. Kim Kirchen won instead, Cadel 2nd, Cunego 3rd. Read CN’s report of the Arrow of Wallonne here: With Efimkin exhausted, Wegmann pressed on solo and held a 20-second advantage to the final kilometre. But he quickly succumbed to the savage gradients of the Mur as Evans blasted past with 400 metres remaining. Davide Rebellin (Gerolsteiner), Cunego, Joaquím Rodríguez (Caisse d’Epargne) and Kirchen were all in tow as the 31 year-old Australian fought hard with Amstel Gold winner Cunego and last year’s winner Rebellin.