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Antonio morgado 172842 82 PT
António Morgado 90 COB 40 GC 71 HLL 46 ITT 31 MTN 56 SPR CyclingOracle.com
Antonio morgado 172842 82 PT
António Morgado 90 COB 40 GC 71 HLL 46 ITT 31 MTN 56 SPR CyclingOracle.com

Information Morgado

Name
António Morgado
Nationality
portugal Portugal
Birthday
28 January 2004
Age
20 years and 311 days
Weight
0 kg
Length
0 cm

António Morgado

António Morgado is a professional bike-rider from Portugal. António Morgado is contracted at UAE Team Emirates and was born on January 28 2004. António Morgado weighs 0 kg and is 0 cm long. More info on António Morgado will be avaialbe soon. Please take look at the skills of António Morgado at the rider-card at this page, those will be updated daily.

Current scores of António Morgado

We keep track of all indicator-scores of António Morgado (and all other pro-riders) based on results in UCI-races in the past 3 years. Stats are updated every day in order to provide up-to-date scores. It gives you the possibility to check current rider-specialties of all riders. Here you can find the scores of António Morgado.

  • António Morgado has an average strength of 82 points.
  • Morgado scores 90 points on riding on cobbles, meaning the rider is one of the best cobbled-specialists.
  • António Morgado scores 71 points on hills.
  • Morgado gets 31 points on mountains.
  • António Morgado has 40 points on riding General Classifications.
  • Morgado is ranked at 46 points in time trial.
  • António Morgado scores 56 points on sprinting.
  • Morgado gets 72 points on riding on the flat.
  • António Morgado indicates 47 points on doing a leadout.
  • Morgado gained 87 points on riding one-day races, which makes the rider one of the best one-day specialists of the peloton.
  • António Morgado has 33 points on racing prologues.
  • Morgado gets a score of 20 points on riding short time-trials.
  • António Morgado scores 45 points on riding long time-trials.

About CyclingOracle.com

CyclingOracle.com is created by six cycling-addicts who found each other in their shared passion for cycling. Tom Nederend (@TomNederend), Arjan Zoer (@ZoerCyclingStat), Daniël Herbers (@StatsOnCycling), Thomas Zwetsloot (@zwetmas), Fleur Kok (@fleurrkok) and Stef van Zon (@stefvanzon) invest a lot of their free time in making content for the website and developing the computer algorithm predicting professional cycling races.

Computer-model of CyclingOracle.com

Arjan Zoer is the mastermind behind the smart computer-algorithm. Arjan developed the model and is working on improvements of the model on a daily basis. We will not share the depths of the model publically, but can give some insight in how it works. The model is based on results of riders in the past 3 seasons in which more recent results have a larger impact on the outcome. The model runs for every male and female rider in all UCI-races. That’s a lot of data. The result of race, combined with the profile, quality of the startlist and the UCI-classification of the race, determines on which skills a rider gets ‘points’. Riders score points between 20 and 100 on 13 different skills (categories), being: spring, flat, mountain, hills, time-trial, ITT-long, ITT- short, prologue, cobbles, leadout, GC, one-day races and stage-races. In addition, a rider gets points for his current shape (good results in recent races).

Some examples:

  • A rider wins a bunch sprint in Tour de Rwanda. He gets points awarded for ‘flat’ and ‘sprint’, but these points will make less of a difference compared to a bunch sprint-victory in Tour de France given the UCI-classification of the race (2.1) and weak field of participants.
  • A rider wins a bunch sprint in Giro d’Italia and his teammates get rewarded points for ‘leadout. If teammates of a sprinter have a lot of leadout-points, the computer lifts the chances of a sprinter to win a flat race which is likely to result in a bunch sprint. Team-quality is part of the model.
  • A rider solos to victory in Ronde van Vlaanderen: the rider gets rewarded a mix of points on skills like ‘cobbles’, ‘hills’, ‘one-day races’ and ‘time-trial’.
  • A rider wins the sprint of a small-group at a summit-finish of Alpe d’Huez. He gets points for ‘mountain’, but also for ‘sprint’ and ‘stage-races’. Moreover, these points will weigh heavily on a rider’s shape or form in order to predict future results in the same race better.

All these skills will be used to predicted a cycling-race. Depending on the profile and field of participants, the computer predicts the most likely winner. The probability a certain rider will win the race is called ‘Expected Win’.

How to find CyclingOracle.com

WielerOrakel.nl can be found at Twitter, Instagram and YouTube named @wielerorakel. Further the ‘WielerOrakel podcast’ is our most important media outlet, you can listen to us in your favourite podcast-app. In the WielerOrakel podcast, cycling-addicts Tom and Thomas rejoice about the upcoming cycling races. They will be joined by several others, like data-mastermind Arjan Zoer, stat-expert Daniël and other guests from the cycling community. They elaborate on and discuss the predictions by the computer model.

Cycling Oracle Cycling Quiz

Every year the Cycling Oracle Cycling Quiz is organised in Café Scheltema in Leiden (NL). Cycling-lovers from several countries gather to fight fort he Challenge Cup and several other prizes. Follow us on Twitter to know more about the quiz.

Collaboration with CyclingOracle.com?

Do you want to sponsor us of collaborate with CyclingOracle.com? Let us know by sending an e-mal to [email protected] and we will get in touch to explore the possibilities. That’s it for now, see you later.

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