@cultured_bogan said in [2021 Tour de France](/post/1399288) said:
So in a team, only one rider is a realistic chance of winning, and the others are just there for show?
Definitely not there for show - the domestiques are very important to anyone's chances of winning. Often a team will have specialists targeting different jerseys - GC, KOM, Young Rider etc. The final year Armstrong rode he had Contador on his team who ended up winning.
It's a bit like Formula One teams where they have multiple drivers with a lead driver who gets preferential treatment. The GC contender on a TDF team will always get protected and supported so they are best able to challenge on the money stages. If they falter they'll elevate someone else.
This is how Stuart O'Grady won the Paris-Robaix. Their main rider pulled out and he was in a position to go on and win.
Pro cycling is an incredibly strategic event.
I thought it was all based on times, basically the rider who rode the multiple stages in the shortest time won it. So you can effectively not finish first in any stage and still feasibly win it. What do your team mates have to do with that if they are gunning for particular jerseys?
I think the easiest way to explain that is to use the best team in history, the British team Skye racing. Their team leaders would be guys with a good engine that could ride at a consistent pace up mountains but couldn't handle the explosive change of pace that the Spanish and south American riders were capable of. To counter this the sky team would put their riders at the front and ride up the mountain at a pace that negates the explosive riders. To ride at the front is up to 20% harder due to wind resistance, they would burn through their riders until their team leader guys like Wiggins and Froome were the last ones left to ride to victory. Often these support riders were good enough to challenge for the tour themselves but sacrificed their chance to support the team leader.
So they are effectively fodder to help the best overall chance in the team take the gong?
Yes, happens with sprint stages as well with team mates used to lead out the sprinters.
Interesting thing it still happens in the Olympics road race and world championship when riders are riding for their country and there is only one winner.
Yes..but that Gold medal winner crosses the line 1st..not in the mass of the peloton