Latest comments
- 👩🦯➡️👩🦯➡️👩🦯➡️😎😎😎 sorry for giving my opinion, Cycling Nobel Prize. But I like to go beyond the numbers of palmares. I like to analyze development, evolution, rivals, and the quality of victories.. He's clearly a great cyclist who was a super-phenomenon as a junior, but as an adult, the super-phenomena have shifted to others. That's all, in my opinion.
- Shame he got a COVID at the Giro. He would have won.
- Can he match Lipowitz in Grand Tours in future? Red Bull bought Roglic after his peak and there's a real chance Remco has already peaked as a GT rider.
- "But we have others like that," Salty😏🤣
- 😂😂🤡🤡
- Look at his palmares - more than 60 wins - monuments, world championships, grand tour, olympic golds…. If that is not enough… people love to gives critics but this guy is incredible and only blinds cant see this
- For sure. With the Remco dollars saved they can go back to their roots and get riders that win but within the system. Not become the system like Remco.
- Let's not forget that Soudal - Quick-Step has won four stages in this Tour, and Remco has won only once. This is an achievement that should not be underestimated. Such a team has a significant future in the World Tour.
- @crashjames, agree. He was a prodigy boy, won a lot in the early years (never against the best) but, as is the case with children prodigies, they are gradually catch up by those that develop in conventional times. Since 2022 (his best year) he did not have a significant evolution, rather he is stagnated. Very talented rider, but his level is similar to a prime Lipowitz not Jonas o Tadej (TRUE phenomena) . With or without team (excuses).
- "He is 25, his palmarès already rivals most retirees."
What an understatement. Just over 60 riders in the history of pro cycling have retired with more wins than Remco has at 25. Shows how remarkable his career is.