Sure, punish him, I don't mind. Still enjoyed watching that.What you call brilliant is dirty. Lampaert should get a punishment, unfortunate to see people encouraging dangerous racing on this forum.
Sure, punish him, I don't mind. Still enjoyed watching that.What you call brilliant is dirty. Lampaert should get a punishment, unfortunate to see people encouraging dangerous racing on this forum.
Even two weeks would suffice in this case if applied swiftly as that would cost him the NCs and the Tour, but I agree that it wouldn't be in line with the precedent at all. And yes, the golden kilometre is a terrible idea.It would need to be a lengthy enough suspension to make it not worth a team-mates while to interfere like that. But then that would probably be a ban that would be overturnable on appeal, as it would be disproportionate to the offence (a bit of shoulder, hands on handlebars throughout)
Maybe we just need to conclude that sprint bonuses encourage dirty riding, and a golden km encourages it threefold.
Then throw the whole team out. That was totally unnecessary and poor sportsmanship.Schmid didn’t do anything, it would be BS to relegate Schmid.
Throwing the whole team out for the actions of one rider is legally indefensible, sets a terrible precedent (how do you determine when one rider should be thrown out and when it should be the whole team?) and inherently punishes riders who had nothing to do with the whole situation.Then throw the whole team out. That was totally unnecessary and poor sportsmanship.
But sends a clear message.Throwing the whole team out for the actions of one rider is legally indefensible, sets a terrible precedent (how do you determine when one rider should be thrown out and when it should be the whole team?) and inherently punishes riders who had nothing to do with the whole situation.
It was a very solid win by Jakobsen - He'll definitely win a stage at the TDF ?
Giving Lampaert the death penalty also would send a message. Doesn't mean it's good though.But sends a clear message.
It doesn't, because it's impossible to draw the line between throwing a rider out and throwing the whole team out.But sends a clear message.
A cynical message that is unwarranted.But sends a clear message.
“The team did a great final today and I want to congratulate them for that. The lead-out for Sam had been almost perfect, but unfortunately we didn’t get the reward. There is not a lot more to say, it was a fair sprint, a very good lead-out from us and in the end the fastest guy won.” – Torsten Schmidt, sports directorAs for Bennett there is probably a fair case for not bringing him and giving Vlasov more resources.
That a team can get away with such blatant cynicism and not face any kind of punishment is a reaffirmation of the UCI's incompetence.It doesn't, because it's impossible to draw the line between throwing a rider out and throwing the whole team out.
It would also immediately be overturned in a lawsuit because it isn't in line with UCI rules in any way, so the only message it would send is reaffirmation of the UCI's incompetence.
How do you create a legally sound basis for punishing an entire team for one rider breaking the rules?That a team can get away with such blatant cynicism and not face any kind of punishment is a reaffirmation of the UCI's incompetence.
That they've somehow manoeuvred themselves - despite so many tinkerings with sprint rules over recent years - into a position where they can't actually produce any meaningful action against such blatant - and let's not forget dangerous (maybe less so here, but if you can get away with it in an intermediate, then you can get away with it in a bunch gallop at higher speeds) - cynicism is yet further reaffirmation of the UCI's incompetence.
“The team did a great final today and I want to congratulate them for that. The lead-out for Sam had been almost perfect, but unfortunately we didn’t get the reward. There is not a lot more to say, it was a fair sprint, a very good lead-out from us and in the end the fastest guy won.” – Torsten Schmidt, sports director
I think at the moment they really have to think what to do. They didn't take Ackermann last year who even had a better sprint then Bennett at the Belgium Tour. Still not really good. He was third at the last stage and second at one stage where he was relegated I think. Bennett is missing a lot at the moment despite having a really good leadout.
Schmid didn’t do anything, it would be BS to relegate Schmid.
It is extremely tough, I agree. That was part of why you had the debate around the Renshaw DQ back in 2010, because he was acting with complete impunity in the leadout and doing a variety of dangerous and cynical tricks because it didn't matter if he got relegated as long as Cavendish did nothing wrong, but he pushed his luck too far and got bounced from the race. That only worked because it was in the middle of the race and so it meant they'd have to go several days without him. On a final day, there's simply no deterrent whatsoever. Any fine they reasonably give him will be countered by the divvying up of the money that comes from the won intermediates and the GC victory his antics confirmed.How do you create a legally sound basis for punishing an entire team for one rider breaking the rules?
Agree that Lampaert should be DSQd. Also agree that a DSQ on the final day should result in a short ban so that it's actually meaningful. But sanctioning the team as a whole is practically impossible. And they have the easy way out in this case anyway because DSQing Lampaert removes him from the golden kilometre results...
