Olympic Games mens road: Preview

By Brendon Vella / Roar Guru

After all the talk of mosquitoes, unfinished stadiums and buildings and crime, the Olympic Games get underway this Saturday, with one of the first gold medals up for grabs being in the Mens Road Race.

For many athletes, the Olympics are the grand daddy of all sporting events, however, for sports such as road cycling in particular, there are many other events each year which are held more important.

This includes, example, the cobbled classics, the Ardennes and the Grand Tours. However, with an Olympics coming around once every four years, riders will often make sure that they are at their peak.

In 2012 on the streets of London, we saw controversial Kazakhstanian rider Alexander Vinokourov take the win from an overpowered breakaway.

A key feature of the Olympic Games Road Race is the fact that teams are ranked on past results, with the top nations being able to bring the maximum number of five riders to the race. In 2012, we saw a relatively flat course, with exception of the Box Hill climb, specifically designed for a home win with sprinter Mark Cavendish.

The Brits had their full allotment of five riders, however were not able to control the 250-kilometre race, as an overpowered break got up the road including former Paris Roubaix winner Stuart O’Grady, and talented classics riders Jurgen Roelandts and Alexander Kristoff. This break would practically stay away for the entirety of the day, however, did grow in size as there were several attacks across from the peloton once the riders hit the circuits around Box Hill.

This is ultimately where the British lost the race, in not being able to control the riders that got across to the break, including Philippe Gilbert, Alejandro Valverde, Robert Gesink, Rui Costa and others.

Control was something that the five riders British team could not gain once these attacks occurred. It is a key feature that will play apart on the tricky final third of this year’s edition.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RhhGJ3I4p9k

The course for the 2016 editions suits the climbers, specifically those that pack a sprint at the end of a hard days racing.

The first 100 kilometres are ridden along lumpy roads. The route looks like very tiny sharks teeth up until the 150 kilometre completed point. It includes two main climbs which will be covered four times, the 1.2km, nine per cent average gradient Grumari climb and the 2.1km climb of Grota Funda which averages 4.5 per cent.

Lots of steep, sharp climbing that will hurt the legs of the riders before they hit the three circuits which will determine the races winner.

The final 100 kilometres include three circuits which take in the two climbs of the Canoas and Vista Chinesa climbs. The two climbs are completed one after the other, with the entire climb being nine kilometres at around 6.2 per cent.

The first part of the climb starts in the town of Canoas, and will climb sharply at over nine per cent for just under four kilometres. It is then a short, steep descent of around a kilometre before the road rises for the final four kilometres stretch of the climb, which average only 5.7 per cent.

It will be interesting to see what happens in the final few laps. Will teams look to go early on the first half of the climb which should be more selective due to the gradient, or will they stay patient and save their energy for the final part?

The descent off the climb and down into the finish line at Fort Copacabana will be thrilling to watch, as the road is never straight, with constant corners hitting the riders. The race for position on the first two circuits will be key to both save energy, learn the corners, and be positioned well for the final circuit.

A race which will be difficult to control, and with a course which suits attacking both on the ascents and descents, l have a feeling we will be in for quite some race.

Here are five of the riders that I consider as the favourites for today’s stage.

Irishmen Daniel Martin comes into the race having finish inside the top ten at the Tour. The climbs should suit him, as they are not too long, unlike Mont Ventoux on which he lost considerable time at the Tour. Having been a former winner of both climbing heavy classics of Lombardia, and Liege Bastiogne Liege, the route is right up his alley.

He will back himself in the sprint, however, will he be able to hold on the descent to give himself that opportunity?

Alejandro Valverde has a palmares which features many wins which have been won over similar terrain. A well known puncher, and a fairly good descender, the Spaniard should be looking at a medal as a minimum. However, will he and Joaquin Rodriguez work together. Three years ago at the World Championships, they did not. Both riders podiumed, however only in the minor positions.

Chris Froome comes into the road race off the back of a stunning win at the Tour de France, claiming his third crown on only his fifth attendance of the race. We all knew that he could climb, but on Stage 8, he showed he could descend as well.

However, this final descent is much more difficult than the wide pedalling descent that he faced off the Col de Peyresourde. As he showed on Stage 19, he still has much to learn when it comes to the technical descents, as will be on show in this race.

Two men who can be classified as world class descenders include Giro D’ Italia champion Vincenzo Nibali, and runner up to Chris Froome, the talented Frenchmen Romain Bardet.

Having won the Giro, Nibali took a backseat ride at the Tour, only showing himself on a couple occasions, in preparation for a big performance in Rio. Bardet was the opposite, with him riding superbly in the final week to claim the wet and wild Stage 19, and finishing second on the overall.

Both are incredible climbers, however, both would be inside my top five descenders in the peloton. Both are willing to go on the attack as well, something which will play into their hands with the smaller teams. Let these two riders off the front at your peril.

Other riders to watch include Michael Albasini (Switzerland), Joaquin Rodriguez (Spain), Louis Meintjes (South Africa), Rui Costa (Portugal), Rafal Majka and Michal Kwiatkowski (Poland), Steven Kruijswijk, Wout Poels and Bauke Mollema (Netherlands), Fabio Aru (Italy), Nicolas Roche (Ireland), Adam Yates (Great Britain), Julien Alaphillipe, Warren Barguill and Alexis Vuillermoz (France), Jakob Fuglsang (Denmark), Andrey Amador (Costa Rica), Esteban Chaves, Sergio Henao, Jarlinson Pantano and Rigoberto Uran (Colombia), Tim Wellens (Belgium) and Richie Porte (Australia).

The Crowd Says:

2016-08-05T23:51:36+00:00

Daspoon

Guest


The highlight of the games for me was team pursuit world record by GB. Aussies on here were so arrogant about dethroaning the Brits . I loved it when the bunch of ordinary Brit guys thrashed the Aussie super stars. I will love it if your guys lose against the 36 year old geriatric Wiggins this time round.

2016-08-05T23:41:32+00:00

Daspoon

Guest


The London event was poor. Won by a doper. The Aussies didn't help chase down the break away because ogrady was in the break. It latter transpired that he was also a self admitted doper. The Brits also had millar as captain, another doper. So it was dopers chasing dopers and a doper won. Not a great advert for cycling.

AUTHOR

2016-08-05T07:38:58+00:00

Brendon Vella

Roar Guru


Scott Bowden is down to the ride the MTB race which comes later in the program. It makes him also available to ride the road race. Should be good on the climbs. However, racing for Charter Mason in the NRS does not really compare with a field as star studded as this one.

AUTHOR

2016-08-05T07:35:29+00:00

Brendon Vella

Roar Guru


Yes, Roche is there. Should be a good support attack for Martin.

2016-08-05T05:43:32+00:00

delbeato

Roar Guru


From the description in this article - it seems so. 9% for 4 km x 3 times is pretty brutal if you ask me. And that's not all.

2016-08-05T05:38:45+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


Sagan can handle punchy hills, but not the big ones. Is the course really that hilly?

2016-08-05T04:38:47+00:00

delbeato

Roar Guru


Sagan is riding the XC mountain bike race. He's got buckley's chance in that, but no more than in the road race - which is too hilly for him.

2016-08-05T04:32:25+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


Is Sagan not riding? Apart from him, Mollema and Porte showed they have a lot. But could Porte beat Froome? Tour Olympic double maybe? Richie is a big shot to get on the podium though. He sowed he was the 2nd best GC rider in the Tour - cruelled by two desperately unlucky breakdowns. Look out for him next year.

2016-08-05T02:04:39+00:00

Torchbearer

Guest


The road race was one of my highlights of London 2012- watching the British dream team slowly realise they were running out of KMs to catch the breakaway with 20 mins to go- and all hell suddenly broke loose! The British commentators kept saying that the GB riders were being tactically brilliant controlling the pack all day, but were left with egg on their faces when they couldn't catch the leaders.

2016-08-05T01:49:17+00:00

delbeato

Roar Guru


It sounds like a brutal course and one for the climbers. 9% for 4 km, which I think you're saying they will do 3 times - looks really hard. I'd predict this will flush out just about anyone who isn't an elite climber. I agree with most of your picks. Australia's chances rest on Porte. Only he can stay in touch when the gradient goes up that much. I don't know much about Scott Bowden but he's inexperienced.

2016-08-05T01:27:04+00:00

Howie

Roar Pro


Yep - Dan Martin was my sneaky for this race - His Irish team will be fairly weak compared to the other teams though. Is Nico Roache riding with him? If so, that may help him - otherwise Froome and the Shark of Messina are in pretty decent form.

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