View Poll Results: First to go on schedule
La primavera
0
0%
LBL
0
0%
Giro
0
0%
Vuelta
0
0%
None of them
0
0%
Voters: 10. You may not vote on this poll
Which 2021 race will be the first to go off on schedule?
#1
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Which 2021 race will be the first to go off on schedule?
I saw the UCI put out a 2021 calendar that looks normal, i.e. ambitious. Fingers crossed but I'm not holding my breath that it's not simply a rough draft from which to depart as we continue to pandemic.
I put some of the big raced in a poll. Tick the one you think (not hope) and would lay money on that it will be the first one to happen in its normal time time slot.
P.S. I can't seem to edit the poll to fix the typo, or Freudian slip, amidst the hellingen.
I put some of the big raced in a poll. Tick the one you think (not hope) and would lay money on that it will be the first one to happen in its normal time time slot.
P.S. I can't seem to edit the poll to fix the typo, or Freudian slip, amidst the hellingen.
Last edited by slcbob; 11-19-20 at 01:39 AM.
#2
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someone had some free time...personally? still destroyed from the compressed schedd in sept/oct. omfg.
something tells me i'll be digging into my old wcp dvd's this winter to watch the '98 giro, '02 vuelta and '08 tdf...again.
something tells me i'll be digging into my old wcp dvd's this winter to watch the '98 giro, '02 vuelta and '08 tdf...again.
Last edited by diphthong; 11-19-20 at 02:26 AM.
#3
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Not much free time. But a lot more now that we're past Biketoberfest / UCIchella / Raceapalooza. Just catching my breath.
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#5
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Yes. Preferably w/o.
Not to be old Glum, but hoping there is a 2021.
I'm still waiting to vote in my own poll. I think the spring will be derailed. I'm cautiously optimistic the fall can happen and am inclined to vote for Lombardia, but I think the falling leaves may be swept aside in the calendar re-jiggling so am leaning to none of the above.
Not to be old Glum, but hoping there is a 2021.
I'm still waiting to vote in my own poll. I think the spring will be derailed. I'm cautiously optimistic the fall can happen and am inclined to vote for Lombardia, but I think the falling leaves may be swept aside in the calendar re-jiggling so am leaning to none of the above.
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I wouldn't bet on any 2021 European race going off on schedule. Unless the vaccines currently in development show remarkable efficacy without significant side effects very soon it's likely the organizers will plan on bumping every race a few months later to be better ready.
I'm still surprised by how smoothly the Giro, TdF and Vuelta went off in 2020, considering the last minute prep. With that kind of experience under their belts, perhaps the organizers will delay any decisions until a few weeks before the usual starts for those races and hope for sticking with the traditional schedules.
It may be harder on the cyclists than on the organizers. But that's part of what made 2020 so exciting.
I'm still surprised by how smoothly the Giro, TdF and Vuelta went off in 2020, considering the last minute prep. With that kind of experience under their belts, perhaps the organizers will delay any decisions until a few weeks before the usual starts for those races and hope for sticking with the traditional schedules.
It may be harder on the cyclists than on the organizers. But that's part of what made 2020 so exciting.
#8
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I wouldn't bet on any 2021 European race going off on schedule. Unless the vaccines currently in development show remarkable efficacy without significant side effects very soon it's likely the organizers will plan on bumping every race a few months later to be better ready.
I'm still surprised by how smoothly the Giro, TdF and Vuelta went off in 2020, considering the last minute prep. With that kind of experience under their belts, perhaps the organizers will delay any decisions until a few weeks before the usual starts for those races and hope for sticking with the traditional schedules.
It may be harder on the cyclists than on the organizers. But that's part of what made 2020 so exciting.
I'm still surprised by how smoothly the Giro, TdF and Vuelta went off in 2020, considering the last minute prep. With that kind of experience under their belts, perhaps the organizers will delay any decisions until a few weeks before the usual starts for those races and hope for sticking with the traditional schedules.
It may be harder on the cyclists than on the organizers. But that's part of what made 2020 so exciting.
there were some issues-obviously-but they seemed to generally do a great job at managing rider/race safety
re: the pandemic. the actual course, aggressive motorcycles, cars out for a larkabout on the closed course, etc
was the usual.
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frankly, i'm shocked all three gt's went the distance (with the vuelta being 3 days/stages shorter than usual).
there were some issues-obviously-but they seemed to generally do a great job at managing rider/race safety
re: the pandemic. the actual course, aggressive motorcycles, cars out for a larkabout on the closed course, etc
was the usual.
there were some issues-obviously-but they seemed to generally do a great job at managing rider/race safety
re: the pandemic. the actual course, aggressive motorcycles, cars out for a larkabout on the closed course, etc
was the usual.
There were probably other problems we haven't heard about yet because the teams don't want to alienate their hosts. Eventually we'll hear more, especially after participants are set for 2021. The racers and crews who don't participate will probably feel free to air some grievances about the 2020 races.
But overall things seem to go remarkably well. Although I wonder how much of a revenue hit the sponsors and organizers took. The hospitality industry along the grand tours this year probably suffered from the sparse attendees.
#10
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If I'm recalling correctly there were only a few significant glitches. Some folks behind the scenes at the Giro complained about lack of precautions -- no masks, etc. -- in common indoor spaces. Some folks ended up testing positive and had to withdraw. That surprised me because Italy was hit hard in the springtime.
There were probably other problems we haven't heard about yet because the teams don't want to alienate their hosts. Eventually we'll hear more, especially after participants are set for 2021. The racers and crews who don't participate will probably feel free to air some grievances about the 2020 races.
But overall things seem to go remarkably well. Although I wonder how much of a revenue hit the sponsors and organizers took. The hospitality industry along the grand tours this year probably suffered from the sparse attendees.
There were probably other problems we haven't heard about yet because the teams don't want to alienate their hosts. Eventually we'll hear more, especially after participants are set for 2021. The racers and crews who don't participate will probably feel free to air some grievances about the 2020 races.
But overall things seem to go remarkably well. Although I wonder how much of a revenue hit the sponsors and organizers took. The hospitality industry along the grand tours this year probably suffered from the sparse attendees.
everyone's taking a big hit this year. the sponsors. hospitality. the ice cream cart guy halfway up the last climb on stage 13. tv/journalism. advertisers. organizers. riding packages.
airlines. rental cars. the towns that successfully bid for starts/finishes...