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Cycling News

Is this what we hav – Rouleur

Is this what we hav – Rouleur

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The Slovenian rider breezed to a seemingly effortless solo victory at the Jaén Paraiso Interior. While his performances are impressive, are they still entertaining?

Is bike riding just easier for Tadej Pogačar? It certainly looked that way at the Slovenian rider’s first race of the season in Spain as he embarked on a solo mission of over an hour to take victory. His winning attack was almost casual. Maybe once we would have been surprised by the audacity of the UAE Team Emirates rider to think that he had a chance to stay away alone to the finish for the next 40 kilometres of racing, but these days, it’s nothing that we haven’t seen before.

Take Strade Bianche last year for example, Pogačar won the race with a 50km solo exhibition on the white roads of Tuscany. He took victory by nearly 40 seconds in the end. Everyone else was suffering in the wild winds, haggard and defeated by the crashes that had marred a brutal race. Pogačar had the scars of battle visible on his ripped jersey, but barely seemed bothered by his earlier date with the gravel.

“I made my best effort on the Santa Maria and nobody followed,” Pogačar matter of factly said after that race. It’s quite simple when he puts it like that, isn’t it? I was the strongest rider so I decided to attack, no one else was strong enough to come with me, so I went on to win the race.

Read more: ‘I’ve got a new appreciation of hurt’ – Meet Luke Plapp, Ineos Grenadiers’ Aussie champion on a voyage of discovery

But cycling isn’t meant to be a simple sport. The thought, tactics and nuances in races are what makes them so intriguing. There’s nothing quite like the tension building as riders watch each other like hawks during the anticipation of who will attack and when, some of them burning their matches too early, others playing their cards perfectly so that they use their power exactly when the time is right. It’s hard to match the excitement of a close-run sprint to the line that is won by a whisker, a couple of watts, a final lunge that turns the tables. When a rider does what Pogačar can do, calmly and quietly dropping, his rivals, practically deciding the race long before it has reached its full distance, it risks removing the entertainment out of watching.

There’s no denying that Pogačar’s solo missions are…

Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at Rouleur: Cycling Culture | Magazine | Store | Desire | Event…

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