Re: Re:
GenericBoonenFan said:
RedheadDane said:
Well, we know he did it, there's picture-evidence, so...
Honestly, I just feel sorry for Alaphilippe here. He's trying to win a bike race, and now he might not get a chance to, because one of his - supposedly older and smarter - teammates decided to be an idiot.
We know he did the stupid pose. We don't know wether or not he touched her. Anyways does someone remeber Peter Sagan? He actually did
grope a women. And got away with it being the big name he is
I've thought about that incident too in the last few days, and it's made me wonder if the landscape has changed in almost 6 years. I think it has, quite significantly. I think the outcry and pressure would be similar if it was Sagan doing that today - I mean, in the last 6 years, tons of races have done away with the practice of having podium girls entirely, which is a sea change from the previous decades. Part of the change in thinking towards that was spurred by that incident, like 'while we're talking about him groping podium girls, uhhh, why are there podium girls'. So although it is dumb that, relatively speaking, Sagan skated by that one while Keisse is in the middle of a sh*tstorm, I do feel that if Sagan did exactly that today, he'd be in the middle of an even bigger sh*tstorm. Like, my feeling is that he didn't get away with it because he was a big name, it's because not as many people thought it was a big deal as they do now. Plus it was after a one-day race that was over, so it's not like Flanders Classics found itself in a tough spot with an ongoing race and the choice of whether to exclude him a la ASO with Rasmussen in 2007.
But yeah, the way this is playing out is pretty frustrating. There are two issues getting conflated - on the one hand, Keisse (and Sagan and whoever else) would do well to learn that the benefit that they might get from a laugh at what might be a meaningless joke for them is more than countered by the serious humiliation someone might feel at being on the other end of that joke. By his statements, that seems to be getting through (although not to Lefevre I guess). But the way that the team and organization have both handled it is rather clumsy - if the organization was going to take him out of the race, they should have done it before the TT. If the team was going to protest, it should have pulled out of the race rather than boycotting the podium. Now it's dumb and petty. Obviously the race organization thought Qst would handle it 'in house' the way that they wanted them to, so that the race organizers wouldn't have to appear to be punishing someone for something that wasn't part of the sporting event. But they've gotta commit to their approach - no one looks good here.