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#1
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What about the other 30%?
From http://www.cyclingnews.com/news.php?...eb05/feb21news
Fourteen UCI ProTeams have decided to put the UCI ProTour logo on their jersey, demonstrating their commitment to the circuit, the International Cycling Union has announced. |
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#2
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In any democracy, 70% is a tremendous success, indicating approval of well
thought out leadership and planning. True: The formulation "they have decided" is funny. Looks more like all were asked and 7 teams refused . I am done with trying to look for proper information. Can anyone tell how rankings by nation will be done from now on, with such a complete separation of ProTour and continental (teams') scoring? And with the ProTour teams eating so much points away from continental races in Europe? |
#3
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Two separated classifications, if you ask me. PT-riders cannot earn
points in continental races and vice versa. Kenny |
#4
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On Tue, 22 Feb 2005 08:09:48 +1100, "Jeff Jones"
jeff@cyclingnews-punt-com wrote: Two separated classifications, if you ask me. PT-riders cannot earn points in continental races and vice versa. That's how I understand it. Mutually exclusive. What's the chance of a Continental pro team getting in enough Pro Tour events to have a virtual Pro Tour champion? Or does the small print somewhere limit how many non-'resident' Continental teams can enter an event, so that no non-Pro Tour team can rack up enough to have a real chance? Curtis L. Russell Odenton, MD (USA) Just someone on two wheels... |
#5
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On Tue, 22 Feb 2005 17:09:14 +1100, "Jeff Jones"
jeff@cyclingnews-punt-com wrote: c) Because all the good riders capable of winning the ProTour are on ProTour teams. Well, and the need to make all the Pro Tour events means most of even the next level are being sucked into the slightly larger Pro Tour teams. But just wondering if the next version of Eddie Merkcx misses out on making a Pro Tour team, whether he could catch a break and win a virtual title. But. of course, there is always the full power and might of the UCI to step in if that becomes a danger, I guess, and do what is necessary to prevent the embarrassment. Largely because the UCI never views their unilateral actions to be an embarrassment... Curtis L. Russell Odenton, MD (USA) Just someone on two wheels... |
#6
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On Tue, 22 Feb 2005 17:09:14 +1100, Jeff Jones wrote:
Maybe if Astarloa can win every ProTour event that Barloworld gets invited to... For now, he broke his left wrist at the Classic Haribo, according to (from the admin of http://www.ciclonews.com/portal/inde...=single&id=829 ). -- Firefox Web Browser - Rediscover the web - http://getffox.com/ Thunderbird E-mail and Newsgroups - http://gettbird.com/ |
#7
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What's the chance of a Continental pro team getting in enough Pro Tour events to have a virtual Pro Tour champion? Or does the small print somewhere limit how many non-'resident' Continental teams can enter an event, so that no non-Pro Tour team can rack up enough to have a real chance? If Rebellin would ride for Mr Bookmaker and he did his tricks from last year over, there would be a virtual continental Pro-tour winner. Possible, but the chances are very little. On the other hand; what if VDB... :-) Kenny |
#8
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In any democracy, 70% is a tremendous success, indicating approval
of well thought out leadership and planning. That's exactly what Zapatero says. I am done with trying to look for proper information. Can anyone tell how rankings by nation will be done from now on, with such a complete separation of ProTour and continental (teams') scoring? UCI Pro Tour: sum of points from 5 best riders Continental circuits: sum of points from 10 best riders Worlds' qualification rules - mix of Pro Tour and continental rankings http://uci.ch/imgArchive/Rules/qual%...e%202005-a.pdf jenko |
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