Wednesday 25 April 2018

Philippa York's Romandie prologue analysis

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The Tour de Romandie has a reputation of kicking off proceedings with an entertaining prologue. This 2018 edition was no different, and served up a technical course with descents, cobbled climbs and a blast across the historically important and wooden Pont de Berne.

The dilemma for the riders, and subject of much discussion beforehand, was which bike to use: the road bike for the cobbled parts or the TT machine, which suited almost all the rest of the course.

Having walked the sections of the course open to the public and media - certain narrow sections were closed for safety - my choice would have been the TT bike. Let me explain how I reached that conclusion.

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The downhill start was all doable on the lo-pro, the first two corners were bumpy but that was solved by a good turn-in point and line selection to avoid the worst sections. Then it was into a false flat that the roadies were riding out the saddle, using a bigger gear but one that didn't look any faster. The riders on their specialist time trial bikes spared themselves and saved energy by staying in the tuck and spinning a smaller gear quicker. Once over that section, the following descent down to the river allowed the time trial bikes to come into their own. The riders who opted for their TT machines looked notably faster. A tailwind and gentle descent helped make the most of the better aero positions but it also helped save energy before the final kilometre and the climb towards the line.

From the descent, riders were forced to brake going into another cobbled corner, race over the wooden bridge then move back down into their TT tuck before hitting the cobbles and the 15 per cent gradient. At that point, unless you're a strong Dutch or Belgian Classics type you had to sit in the saddle in order to get traction. So, while it might have been more comfortable to take on the cobbled climb on the road bike it wasn't fast enough to negate the advantage gained on the fast section by the river.

The real difference, however, was made on the flatter section just after the top of the climb as riders headed towards the finish line. By now everyone would have been on the limit and hurting but with the aero energy saving riders had a chance to get the last drops of power out. The best time triallists could stay seated, turning a lower gear until the final 100 metres of flattish sprint to the line. The TT bike definitely looked the way to go.

You can read more at Cyclingnews.com



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