Another note about Intermarché: they had 6 of their 7 riders finish in the top 25, with the seventh still in the top 60. With that mix of results they managed to accumulate 593 total UCI points at Paris-Roubaix, best of all teams even Ineos.
@@joaquinalonso3388 it boils down to this: Intermarché had 2 riders with excellent rides and another 4 who had a good result, whereas Ineos had one spectacular ride for the win but burned most of their riders during the race (particularly in keeping the WvA/MvdP group chasing) so only 3 of their riders total managed to get points as the rest finished too far down the order/were over the limit.
@@kevinreilly51 Van Der Hoorn looked incredible too, easily marking one of van Aert's moves when he attacked after they van Hooydonck leadout, but had a poorly timed mechanical leaving him out of contention. I honestly think that the Intermarché team support was the strongest, although there's not much they could do about van Baarle, he was ridiculously strong
Yves Lampaert did a great job when crashing after the spectator hit his handlebar/brake lever. He delayed the crash as long as he could which enabled him to slow down a bit and manage to roll over the ground instead of hitting it very hard. I couldn't even make out any damage to his jersey or skin. Pretty sure it hurt a lot but he could have broken some bones here.
@@texwallis Sorry, you're right. I also bought a VPN that shows me being in the UK, so I get everything that GCN shows. It is still more than worth it.
Ya know, when they’re not winning the TdF every year and making that race a snore fest, Ineos is kind of a fun team to get behind. What a week for them it’s been.
Dear LR, chapeau for your stellar recap. You were born to do this job -- and you do it with aplomb. This year's Paris Roubaix was a classic from the word go. Was this 'The Best Race You'll Ever See?' Perhaps. I'd say it's a dead heat between this race and stage 6 of the Tour of the Basque Country -- just eight days ago. We are living in a special time; thanks for helping me to savour it. Best wishes, English John
For a moment I thought Ganna would pull it off....but Dylan winning this race with Turner being the best youngster just shows us how strong this Ineos Team really is!!!
Finally the team have nailed a classics season, probably helped by not having an out and out GT probable this year, they have been so aggressive last few races, great to watch and something i wish they had embraced a long time ago.
at that point i expect he was thinking that Pevele & Carrefour would be the next place to test the group if he full sends there not many would catch him... by that point Mohoric, Lampaert and DVB had already made their moves between sectors.
It's almost like the Olympics again. WVA is marked by everyone and no ones chases an attack as long as WVA is also there. MVDP is the only one who in theory could want to work with Wout but he didn't have the legs. Then some quiet but very strong Ineos guy takes it away with a long range attack.
@@xx765 Wout is basically the modern 2016 Sagan in terms of no one wanting to bring him to the line and get beaten in a sprint. I think he's really gonna need teammates with him at the end of races to set pace and bring back attacks for him to have a chance of winning. Which is why it makes no sense that he burnt Van Hooydonck so early rather than letting him pace the group to the line and then trusting his sprint.
Wow it seemed like Wout was constantly scrambling to get position the last 60k, I’m surprised he even podiumed. But Ineos is looking flat out dominant. What a shame for Lampaert though..
Ineos isn't, one of their riders was. There were no other Ineos riders anywhere near the top 10... Ben Turner was 4:30 min away, and then it's Ganna in the 35th spot. If not for van Baarle Ineos would have looked incredibly bad.
Yeah there seemed to be a very high number of flats this time round. Having said that the speed was amazingly high so that may have been a factor. Edit: In fact it was the fastest ever at 45.79kph.
Road tubeless sucks ass. Much harder to seal when running at the higher pressures required for the width of tire typically seen on a road bike. For gravel and mountain it makes much more sense as you’re more prone to punctures to begin with, coupled with the lower required tire pressure means punctures are sealed more easily.
Jumbo - Visma not on tubeless. QST we’re not on tubeless last year, but were this year. Alpecin, who are on the same tire brand as Jumbo, actually ran tubeless and don’t flat
Yeah I use tubeless on my gravel wheelset and my mtb but went back to tubes on my road wheels. Tubeless setup seems to never hold enough pressure after a puncture on 25 or 28mm tires.
Ineos we’re rotating a lot didn’t see many off the other big names doing the same, in that first group that split 220k out .. glad Dylan won, his team worked the hardest 💪🔥chapeau as the say 🎩
Not sure if it would've been a race winner. It felt to me as if Van Baarle was the strongest man in the race. Even when Van Aert & Kung were chasing full gas with just the 2 of em they weren't making up any ground on a solo riding Van Baarle. But I do agree, Wout wasted a lot of energy in that 40-30km to go phase. But imo it's a bit what he always does: he's too eager to respond to every move and I think his direct opponents know this very well. Imo, he has to learn to sometimes gamble & stick with the gamble, he might lose a race or 2 because of it but in the long run he won't be the one closing every gap in every race with the same riders just sitting on every time. It's hard to say however what it would've been like if hadn't suffered that mechanical in Arenberg which made for 2 bike swaps (taking Roosen's bike and then switching back to his own bike). If he can save the energy he puts into getting back on there it might have been a different story.
Yeah even if Van Baarle was extremely strong, if Wout had a big enough gap the chasers would probably be looking at each other and fight for 2nd place. Maybe Van Baarle could break and catch up, doubt he'd win the sprint, but WvA wouldn't have been worse off than 2nd place.
When Van Baarle went, WVA probably thought that with the likes of MVDP and Kung they’d be able to close the gap easily, but VDP being cocked made it impossible to come back. If they would have known VDP was cooked, WVA would have probably react sooner
@@yarniefcu6197 not really! In the first try he was caught easily.. I think if WVA reacted as soon as Van Barle attacked he would catch him. He’s been the strongest guy of the peloton. He always close the gaps.. VDP and othered just keep going at his wheel… That’s why…
@@pjetrs To me it's just good sportsmanship from WVA. When you come 2nd you're not gonna be that guy who says he could/should have won, even if you believe so. Van Baarle and WVA are both exceptional rouleurs but the latter can sprint as well, he knows he could have beatten him, had he committed to getting onto his wheel. He could have pulled the same move as MVDP on Pogacar at Flanders this year
@@FlyingPastilla Let's be honest guys. Once van Aert and Kung were free and released they only lost time to van Baarle. Both Kung and van Aert said they went all out and only lost time. So maybe they would've been dropped by van Baarle on the final 2 hard cobble sectors. We will never know. van Aert certainly was caught by van der Poel who in the end simply didn't have the legs. Being one of the clear favourites is difficult, everybody is watching you. Best solution is to be at the front alone or with 1 other guy, but that's not that simple :D
Gent-Wevelgem 2015, storm edition, is my all-time favorite race, but Paris-Roubaix is the best race on the calendar, with the most editions in my top favorite races. The only thing I may have missed this year was suspense towards the end, but everyone was so exhausted that the rider who had the most strength left from strong legs, riding smart and being spared bad luck, drove away from everything and everyone and he (van Baarle) became the deserved winner. Unfortunately no West Flemish rider on the podium. Lampaert's crash that led to cursing throughout Belgium and far beyond, and afterwards the narrow fourth place for revelation Devriendt.
I wasn't able to attend the race this year (boo!) but the GCN+ coverage was brilliant. Worth the subscription fee just for this one race, easily. And, like you, I didn't leave the settee all day. Roubaix is the greatest sporting event of the year. Not quite sure how you managed to squeeze your summary into this tiny video but you did a great job.
Great job picking up little stuff I missed…I too was glued to the couch all race. I was wondering why Van Aert looked so bad in the Arenberg forest…and the pick of the Ionos rider pulling his seat off was classic.
Went out this Sunday with 35 km hr cross winds on 60 mm wheels a nightmare as every 20 seconds unless you had strong arms you would of crashed at 50km hr. This angled wind was pushing you forward but also taking out your front wheel. So went home and brought out my old 15 kg road bike, no problems at all.
Yip - UCI bans the super tuck for ‘rider safety’ , yet fans are allowed to stand un-cordoned on the side of the road and affect riders and results like this 🤦🏻♂️
@@cycle_365 I have a feeling that when UCI mentions “rider safety”, they’re not thinking about the safety of the pro peloton but are thinking of regular people pulling that kind of move and attempting to copy the pros. You’ll be surprised at how many people try to copy the super tuck position on the regular street. But I do agree with you re: your position on this. That being said, I’m not sure how much ASO (the organisers) could’ve done about this; the paved sides of the road already have bollards to attempt to force the riders to stay on the cobbles (never going to happen as the riders will weave in and out for any respite).
@@charliedillon1400 they changed priorities. With no absolute best man for the big tour they focus on races like this. Attacking instead of defending etc. They entertain instead of making it boring.
I thought after last year's mud-bowl I'd never see such an incredible race. But then this, 165 miles at something like 30 mph average speed? Superhuman performance. And hats off to Pinchon/Devrient for riding right on the freakin' edge from about the 80 km point to the finish. Don't know if anybody else caught Phil Liggett's disparaging remark about Pinchon and Arkea-Samsic (only 2 wins in a very long career and riding for a second-rate team) but, if you lined up to start this race, you've got some guts. And if you simply finished it, bravo. Pinchon landed a #8 finish--just unreal.
Ineos Finally got it rode like a team. And get Rewarded, about time. Obvious whos the Favorite if that succeed, thankey for that. Odds 35 here, I take that! Dont known whats Dane was doing? 44 place for Asgreen? wakey, wakey.🔝❤️
Cosmo seems to come and go from the RUclips recap game. LR is consistent and pro. Cosmo is a fine and funny analyst though for sure, and he's from my town.
I would not be opposed to a second part to this recap covering all the stuff LR had to leave on the cutting room floor. There was so much chaos. Anyone else with me?
I liked Liege Bastogne Liege this year, will probably stay in my memory longer than Paris Roubaix. But I always liked that race more. Great punch from Evenepoel.
I guess Wout didn't react on that last move because he already closed a few gaps and probably didn't know that Mathieu didn't have the legs and hoped he would've helped close it.
If you'd have told Devriend he'd get another top 10 in this race that day and it would have been 4th, he would not have believed you. Same for Petit's 6th
Brailsford getting himself on the camera at the finish line annoyed me. Van Baarle and Ineos' first Roubaix victory but he just HAD to make it all about him🙄
As a channel not supported by a bike brand - are there any questions to answer about the resilience of the tubeless tyres (most of) the teams are running? The quantity of punctures/wheel/bike changes that riders had seemed to be rather high to me. Commentary team (live on Eurosport) also seemed to find it excessive...
Ballerini was the last lead out man for Mark Cavendish when he tied Eddie Merckx's stage win record last year TDF. He's going to do good things, a rider to watch.
I think it's crazy that those incidents with spectators are happening again and again and again and again. I follow cycling only casually and I can't believe that the people behind this sport are not taking drastic measures to protect the riders from these accidents. It's so insanely dangerous, no other sport tolerates this kind of a threat to their athletes' health on a continuous basis. And here, nobody really even talks about it.
Looks like MvdP’s base was to thin, and he blew all his barrels of gunpowder in his effort to keep up with Pogo two weeks ago in RvV. But then, it was all worth it seeing his victory.. He will be back at full strength in the Giro.
Another note about Intermarché: they had 6 of their 7 riders finish in the top 25, with the seventh still in the top 60. With that mix of results they managed to accumulate 593 total UCI points at Paris-Roubaix, best of all teams even Ineos.
I was going to comment that. I'm still wondering how that could happen. IWG: 593 pts. IGD (winner): 580 pts.
Wanty cobble train incoming
@@joaquinalonso3388 it boils down to this: Intermarché had 2 riders with excellent rides and another 4 who had a good result, whereas Ineos had one spectacular ride for the win but burned most of their riders during the race (particularly in keeping the WvA/MvdP group chasing) so only 3 of their riders total managed to get points as the rest finished too far down the order/were over the limit.
Will be interesting to see what they can do in the Grand Tours this year!
@@kevinreilly51 Van Der Hoorn looked incredible too, easily marking one of van Aert's moves when he attacked after they van Hooydonck leadout, but had a poorly timed mechanical leaving him out of contention. I honestly think that the Intermarché team support was the strongest, although there's not much they could do about van Baarle, he was ridiculously strong
The only thing better than watching the actual race is watching LR's recap. This is one is definitely an instant classic too
They paid you to say that right ???
Where can one watch cycling on TV in the US? I used to get the races on NBCSN. But ATT U-verse no longer carries that station. Any ideas?
@@ChitownClassik I was able to watch it on Peacock. Have to pay subscription but it was awesome to watch Paris-Roubaix live.
between this and Cosmo Catalano doing HTRWW again we are doing real good.
@@williammurray1620 Thank you!👍🏾
Your race summaries (with thought bubbles!) are next level, dude. No one comes even close.
For sure!
Yves Lampaert did a great job when crashing after the spectator hit his handlebar/brake lever. He delayed the crash as long as he could which enabled him to slow down a bit and manage to roll over the ground instead of hitting it very hard. I couldn't even make out any damage to his jersey or skin. Pretty sure it hurt a lot but he could have broken some bones here.
That guy was an ass. Interfering spectator should be fined.
@@g.fortin3228 Yeah, if not criminally charged, just like the dumbass from TdF. Such a shame, really felt for Yves when that happened.
@@g.fortin3228 Spector's can be pure wankers at times
@@g.fortin3228 That idiot cost him a sure podium spot at a monument. There are real financial losses incurred when renewing his contract.
@@g.fortin3228 and prosecuted
Have never seen a bike yeet someone as emphatically as Lampaerts did today
Reminded me of the Beloki crash in the TDF (where Armstrong had to cut across the grass).
I remember Mark Cavendish coming down in a TdF finish. He lsnded glat on his back and bounced off the road.
Great recap. But don't cast shade on my boy Wurf, he's the only one who had a 5km swim and a 15km run scheduled later in the day.
Thank you-no fat, spot-on observations, damn fine clips chosen. Cheers.
As someone from the US who only got the last two hours on the telly, thanks for showing what went on through (about) the Arenberg Forest
Kevin - you gotta subscribe to GCN - they covered it from K 1. They are the best thing since sliced bread.
From the US but says "telly", hmm...
@@markdwelchforcongress4456 GCN didn't have this race in the US, Peacock shows the French races.
A lot of people punctured and for a couple of.kinutes we thought Wout was done, but that's about it
@@texwallis Sorry, you're right. I also bought a VPN that shows me being in the UK, so I get everything that GCN shows. It is still more than worth it.
I really appreciate the effort on the pronunciation of the Dutch and Belgian names. The commitment is there!
Ya know, when they’re not winning the TdF every year and making that race a snore fest, Ineos is kind of a fun team to get behind. What a week for them it’s been.
It’s almost like they’re successful at achieving their goals
They changed priorities. They wanna entertain with breakaways instead of high tempo defensive driving.
I agree, which really pisses me off - successful sports washing.
Somehow I think you got most of it.
You missed the family resemblance. The guy who took down Lampard was Opi.
frank lampard? thought he was manager of Everton
joking obviously lol
Tony Martin has joined the chat...
Dear LR, chapeau for your stellar recap. You were born to do this job -- and you do it with aplomb. This year's Paris Roubaix was a classic from the word go. Was this 'The Best Race You'll Ever See?' Perhaps. I'd say it's a dead heat between this race and stage 6 of the Tour of the Basque Country -- just eight days ago. We are living in a special time; thanks for helping me to savour it. Best wishes, English John
Roubaix never disappoints
best race of the year. always gripping
For a moment I thought Ganna would pull it off....but Dylan winning this race with Turner being the best youngster just shows us how strong this Ineos Team really is!!!
Finally the team have nailed a classics season, probably helped by not having an out and out GT probable this year, they have been so aggressive last few races, great to watch and something i wish they had embraced a long time ago.
💪💪💪💪🔥🔥🔥🔥😀👌
True
I love that watching 5h live coverage gave me less clue about what's happening in the race than 8min of your recap 😂
Great job laterne 👏👏👏
I get the feeling WVA knew he had great legs, but somehow had no idea how to win from the position he was in with 40km to go
at that point i expect he was thinking that Pevele & Carrefour would be the next place to test the group if he full sends there not many would catch him... by that point Mohoric, Lampaert and DVB had already made their moves between sectors.
Maybe because he just caught up again with the group after his flat tire.
It's almost like the Olympics again. WVA is marked by everyone and no ones chases an attack as long as WVA is also there. MVDP is the only one who in theory could want to work with Wout but he didn't have the legs. Then some quiet but very strong Ineos guy takes it away with a long range attack.
@@xx765 Wout is basically the modern 2016 Sagan in terms of no one wanting to bring him to the line and get beaten in a sprint. I think he's really gonna need teammates with him at the end of races to set pace and bring back attacks for him to have a chance of winning. Which is why it makes no sense that he burnt Van Hooydonck so early rather than letting him pace the group to the line and then trusting his sprint.
@@GDF07 imagine being sagan in 2016-2017..how tought that must have been. you against the whole peleton
fantastic race from Küng - super exciting to watch!
Agreed
What a race! Congrats Dylan the smartest and strongest. Very deserved win.
Everyone is talking about the race. But no one is talking about the high quality analysis by LR again. Both are high level and classic. 😎
Sheffield too strong for his own good. Ripping that saddle right off. 😜
Sometimes light ain't right.
Missed the race because of work, but what a great great video by LR. I love cycling and the classics.
Thank you for this!
Incredible race well summarised 🎉 Poor Lampaert - I would have called that guy a lot worse than a cow 🤬
Personally, I would not blame the spectator. Nothing outrageous in what he did. Thousands did the same throughout the parcours.
@@jean-jacqueslavigne3109, then who would you blame? Lampaert?
@@jean-jacqueslavigne3109 C'mon. The spectator caused an accident, the other "thousands" didn't: big difference.
@@jean-jacqueslavigne3109 I would assume you are a relative of the guy who caused the accident with that mindset
@@Meme_supplier wrong assumption.
Wow it seemed like Wout was constantly scrambling to get position the last 60k, I’m surprised he even podiumed. But Ineos is looking flat out dominant. What a shame for Lampaert though..
Yeah.. he was like "fuck this im getting to that podium no matter what" lol
Ineos isn't, one of their riders was. There were no other Ineos riders anywhere near the top 10... Ben Turner was 4:30 min away, and then it's Ganna in the 35th spot. If not for van Baarle Ineos would have looked incredibly bad.
7:08 not that it matters much but I think it was tan/khaki/white trousers, not pink that clipped Lampert
Yup, the spectator who creamed Lampaert was dressed in cream, but afterwards would've been as pink-faced as the pink-dressed dude beside him
Absolutely cracking summary and even though I watched the race this really added some colour that I must have missed.
Great race great analysis as usual. What's your opinion on all the flats? Tubeless not ready for a race like this?
Yeah there seemed to be a very high number of flats this time round. Having said that the speed was amazingly high so that may have been a factor. Edit: In fact it was the fastest ever at 45.79kph.
Road tubeless sucks ass. Much harder to seal when running at the higher pressures required for the width of tire typically seen on a road bike.
For gravel and mountain it makes much more sense as you’re more prone to punctures to begin with, coupled with the lower required tire pressure means punctures are sealed more easily.
Jumbo - Visma not on tubeless. QST we’re not on tubeless last year, but were this year. Alpecin, who are on the same tire brand as Jumbo, actually ran tubeless and don’t flat
Yeah I use tubeless on my gravel wheelset and my mtb but went back to tubes on my road wheels.
Tubeless setup seems to never hold enough pressure after a puncture on 25 or 28mm tires.
Superb video and commentary -cant quite catch your breath so much going on ---sheer class-chapeau
If mohoric stops going 200km from the finish he might be able to win every race.
Being at the front in Roubaix is an advantage, still he did a lot of work. So it's a pro and a con.
Ineos we’re rotating a lot didn’t see many off the other big names doing the same, in that first group that split 220k out .. glad Dylan won, his team worked the hardest 💪🔥chapeau as the say 🎩
check his post-race interview, he knows that it's a successful strategy
@@baza210 it might be but there is a limit to it.
100% agree WVA should’ve countered with 34km to go. He rides away and wins. Never know though. Van Baarle looked strong in those last 20km.
Not sure if it would've been a race winner. It felt to me as if Van Baarle was the strongest man in the race. Even when Van Aert & Kung were chasing full gas with just the 2 of em they weren't making up any ground on a solo riding Van Baarle. But I do agree, Wout wasted a lot of energy in that 40-30km to go phase. But imo it's a bit what he always does: he's too eager to respond to every move and I think his direct opponents know this very well. Imo, he has to learn to sometimes gamble & stick with the gamble, he might lose a race or 2 because of it but in the long run he won't be the one closing every gap in every race with the same riders just sitting on every time.
It's hard to say however what it would've been like if hadn't suffered that mechanical in Arenberg which made for 2 bike swaps (taking Roosen's bike and then switching back to his own bike). If he can save the energy he puts into getting back on there it might have been a different story.
Yeah even if Van Baarle was extremely strong, if Wout had a big enough gap the chasers would probably be looking at each other and fight for 2nd place. Maybe Van Baarle could break and catch up, doubt he'd win the sprint, but WvA wouldn't have been worse off than 2nd place.
When Van Baarle went, WVA probably thought that with the likes of MVDP and Kung they’d be able to close the gap easily, but VDP being cocked made it impossible to come back. If they would have known VDP was cooked, WVA would have probably react sooner
True but Van Baarle was also faster then Van Aert today so I think he would’ve won either way
@@yarniefcu6197 not really! In the first try he was caught easily.. I think if WVA reacted as soon as Van Barle attacked he would catch him. He’s been the strongest guy of the peloton. He always close the gaps.. VDP and othered just keep going at his wheel… That’s why…
V Aert himselfsaid he knew v Baarle was too strong , so no hecouldny close the gap if he wanted to
@@pjetrs To me it's just good sportsmanship from WVA.
When you come 2nd you're not gonna be that guy who says he could/should have won, even if you believe so.
Van Baarle and WVA are both exceptional rouleurs but the latter can sprint as well, he knows he could have beatten him, had he committed to getting onto his wheel.
He could have pulled the same move as MVDP on Pogacar at Flanders this year
@@FlyingPastilla Let's be honest guys. Once van Aert and Kung were free and released they only lost time to van Baarle. Both Kung and van Aert said they went all out and only lost time. So maybe they would've been dropped by van Baarle on the final 2 hard cobble sectors. We will never know. van Aert certainly was caught by van der Poel who in the end simply didn't have the legs. Being one of the clear favourites is difficult, everybody is watching you. Best solution is to be at the front alone or with 1 other guy, but that's not that simple :D
Some funny Easter eggs planted in the recap. Very timely for this day. Henceforth Dylan Van Baarle should be referred to as DVB!
Gent-Wevelgem 2015, storm edition, is my all-time favorite race, but Paris-Roubaix is the best race on the calendar, with the most editions in my top favorite races.
The only thing I may have missed this year was suspense towards the end, but everyone was so exhausted that the rider who had the most strength left from strong legs, riding smart and being spared bad luck, drove away from everything and everyone and he (van Baarle) became the deserved winner.
Unfortunately no West Flemish rider on the podium. Lampaert's crash that led to cursing throughout Belgium and far beyond, and afterwards the narrow fourth place for revelation Devriendt.
Your video presentation, narrative and analysis is stellar.....thank you!
I wasn't able to attend the race this year (boo!) but the GCN+ coverage was brilliant. Worth the subscription fee just for this one race, easily. And, like you, I didn't leave the settee all day.
Roubaix is the greatest sporting event of the year.
Not quite sure how you managed to squeeze your summary into this tiny video but you did a great job.
Your biggest challenge of 2022? What a race! Awesome summary!!
Van Baarle has such a beautiful position on the bike. His form looks absolutely immaculate!
The tumble at the end was intense! It would be hard not to be upset with that fan and return the favor.
Great recap of the race. Love your work!
PR is always a "pleasure" to watch. Cheers!
Great job picking up little stuff I missed…I too was glued to the couch all race. I was wondering why Van Aert looked so bad in the Arenberg forest…and the pick of the Ionos rider pulling his seat off was classic.
Amazing recap. Loved all the captions too, 2:27 Dennis Rodman fan haha
Thx LR! Awesome recap!
Missed the race this year. Thanks for the video recap LR. Love you passion for the sport. Surprised you haven't taken over from Robbie McCure tbh
“Even Wurf made it” lmao
Liked the Easter eggs, LR. Very timely.👍
Amazing video...well done!!! Easy to follow, quick and to the point. i usually skim vids...not this one!
I think 2021 was way more spectacular and exciting. ;)
Love this analysis - thanks
Excellent analysis as always!
Brilliant analysis!!!
Fantastic race and recap!
I love your channel, outstanding mate, what a race
What a glorious race that was.
GOAT Enterprises for Ben Turner’s name on screen
…I see what you did there!
Went out this Sunday with 35 km hr cross winds on 60 mm wheels a nightmare as every 20 seconds unless you had strong arms you would of crashed at 50km hr. This angled wind was pushing you forward but also taking out your front wheel. So went home and brought out my old 15 kg road bike, no problems at all.
Epic race this year. Soloing into the velodrome is super-class. lt only needed some rain and mud to be perfect.
One of the most iconic solo performances by Van Baarle that you will see in a one day classic
another great video - thanks
What a race! Great analysis! The guy who crashed Lampaerts ranks right up there with the idiot with the sign at the TDF.
Yip - UCI bans the super tuck for ‘rider safety’ , yet fans are allowed to stand un-cordoned on the side of the road and affect riders and results like this 🤦🏻♂️
@@cycle_365 good point
@@cycle_365 I have a feeling that when UCI mentions “rider safety”, they’re not thinking about the safety of the pro peloton but are thinking of regular people pulling that kind of move and attempting to copy the pros. You’ll be surprised at how many people try to copy the super tuck position on the regular street.
But I do agree with you re: your position on this. That being said, I’m not sure how much ASO (the organisers) could’ve done about this; the paved sides of the road already have bollards to attempt to force the riders to stay on the cobbles (never going to happen as the riders will weave in and out for any respite).
My friend, Ineos is the new wolves pack! 12 different riders have won this season without any victory from Thomas, Yates or Porte.
Much more fun to watch than Sky ever was.
@@charliedillon1400 they changed priorities. With no absolute best man for the big tour they focus on races like this. Attacking instead of defending etc. They entertain instead of making it boring.
Not that hard when you have unlimited money...
I thought after last year's mud-bowl I'd never see such an incredible race. But then this, 165 miles at something like 30 mph average speed? Superhuman performance. And hats off to Pinchon/Devrient for riding right on the freakin' edge from about the 80 km point to the finish. Don't know if anybody else caught Phil Liggett's disparaging remark about Pinchon and Arkea-Samsic (only 2 wins in a very long career and riding for a second-rate team) but, if you lined up to start this race, you've got some guts. And if you simply finished it, bravo. Pinchon landed a #8 finish--just unreal.
Cheers Patty. Great vid as always 🎉
Great work breaking that down, must be a hell of an effort from your end. What a race - we have been spoilt this year.
Ben Turner- "GOAT Industries"
Ben Turner-“GOAT Industries” in your caption. Well played, and true enough!
Insane race! We can’t ignore Kwiatkowski’s big work in favour of ineos today
Epic snot rocket at 4:55
Lol I never noticed the saddle coming off that's hilarious. (2:05)
Truly the best Paris - Roubaix for quite a few years
Longer recaps!! Would absolutely watch 15min!
Ineos Finally got it rode like a team. And get
Rewarded, about time. Obvious whos the
Favorite if that succeed, thankey for that.
Odds 35 here, I take that! Dont known whats
Dane was doing? 44 place for Asgreen? wakey, wakey.🔝❤️
Love the vids. You should make one about the Little 500. It's a yearly cycling race held at Indiana University. Super cool race.
Great review there 👏🏻 😍
Lmao you are slowly turning into Cosmo Catalano XD well done LR!
Cosmo seems to come and go from the RUclips recap game. LR is consistent and pro. Cosmo is a fine and funny analyst though for sure, and he's from my town.
2:28 Tom Devriendt is racing for team “Dennis Rodman Fan”?
I would not be opposed to a second part to this recap covering all the stuff LR had to leave on the cutting room floor. There was so much chaos. Anyone else with me?
I liked Liege Bastogne Liege this year, will probably stay in my memory longer than Paris Roubaix. But I always liked that race more. Great punch from Evenepoel.
That saddle made my day 😂😂
Thank you a great video.
Thermonuclear breakdown. Thank you Patrick.
great summary!
LR CORRECTION it wasn't the lady in the pink bottoms that took out Lampaert, it was the man in the brown/beige pants.
‘Mean Muggin’ 😁superb.
Wow !! Dylan van Baarle win !! Ineos is the new wolfpak!!
Great summary 🚴♂️👍
Bang up job LR 10/10 as always
Not only the best bike race but also the best commentary we're likely to see as well! Keep up the great work!
I guess Wout didn't react on that last move because he already closed a few gaps and probably didn't know that Mathieu didn't have the legs and hoped he would've helped close it.
That was a great race!!!
It was great from start to finish
Solo entry into the stadium for both men and women! Wow
Great RUclips Channel 👍
If you'd have told Devriend he'd get another top 10 in this race that day and it would have been 4th, he would not have believed you.
Same for Petit's 6th
Brailsford getting himself on the camera at the finish line annoyed me. Van Baarle and Ineos' first Roubaix victory but he just HAD to make it all about him🙄
As a channel not supported by a bike brand - are there any questions to answer about the resilience of the tubeless tyres (most of) the teams are running? The quantity of punctures/wheel/bike changes that riders had seemed to be rather high to me. Commentary team (live on Eurosport) also seemed to find it excessive...
Ballerini was the last lead out man for Mark Cavendish when he tied Eddie Merckx's stage win record last year TDF. He's going to do good things, a rider to watch.
I think it's crazy that those incidents with spectators are happening again and again and again and again. I follow cycling only casually and I can't believe that the people behind this sport are not taking drastic measures to protect the riders from these accidents. It's so insanely dangerous, no other sport tolerates this kind of a threat to their athletes' health on a continuous basis. And here, nobody really even talks about it.
Barriers on 250km = 500km both sides of the roads or no spectators...take your pick
@@spm36 no spectators during covid was great imo
Looks like MvdP’s base was to thin, and he blew all his barrels of gunpowder in his effort to keep up with Pogo two weeks ago in RvV. But then, it was all worth it seeing his victory.. He will be back at full strength in the Giro.
You put out great sh!t mate! thanks a ton.