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Courageous or crazy – Could different tactics have won Richard Carapaz – Rouleur

There is no denying that EF Education-EasyPost rode stage 20 of the Giro d’Italia with one single mission: victory. With this, they had to be prepared to take the risk of losing it all. Credit should be given to the American team for the way they took the race on, shredding the peloton in the approach to the Colle de Finestre in order to set up their leader, Richard Carapaz for what they hoped would be a detonating attack. The team in white and pink executed a full-throttle lead-out to the base of the climb, and the moment came with just over 40.1 kilometres of the stage remaining.

We all knew that Carapaz was going to have to go early on stage 20 – it was the Ecuadorian rider’s last chance to crack pink jersey wearer Del Toro on long climbs that the young rider is generally less suited to. Going long was the play for EF Education, and they committed in full. It took cojones. At first, it looked like it might have worked; Carapaz got an initial gap after one of his trademark out-of-the-saddle punches, but it didn’t last long. Behind, Del Toro and Simon Yates clawed their way back to the 32-year-old, and the games could begin again. After much back and forth between the trio, Yates made the attack which would eventually stick with 38.6 kilometres to go, and Carapaz would never see the Visma-Lease a Bike rider again. In the end, the EF man finished over five minutes behind Yates and four seconds behind Del Toro. For so much work from himself and his team, the result amounted to very little.

EF Education-EasyPost at the Giro d'Italia

“To win you need to play like this. The risk is that you can also lose,” EF sports director Juanma Gárate told media at the finish. “No regrets, not at all. Zero. We tried as a team to do what we hoped. We rode hard at the start of the Colle delle Finestre to try to hurt Del Toro.”

Gárate’s statement is true enough, his team did their best to drop the Mexican race leader, but this is not where it went wrong for Carapaz. Where the problems with the former Giro winner’s performances lie are in how he raced on the later slopes of the Finestre climb. Instead of trying to force Del Toro to work with him on the climb, Carapaz took to the front and paced, despite Yates being in the virtual maglia rosa up ahead. If Del Toro wanted to keep the race lead, then he needed to close the gap as much as Carapaz did, and if Carapaz is true to his mission of racing solely to win, he didn’t need to ride in order to protect his podium place….

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