I'm quite sure that a statistician would come to the conclusion that no, it hasn't gotten any more dangerous. And then where would we be?
More or less dangerous in what way and in compared to what exactly?
I'm quite sure that a statistician would come to the conclusion that no, it hasn't gotten any more dangerous. And then where would we be?
More or less dangerous in what way and in compared to what exactly?
More crashes, compared to earlier years.
What else could I possibly have meant?
And how were you able to make such conclusions without the numbers? How can you be so sure? Or lets be more specific. How many collarbones were broken per season in 2010 compared to 2022? If some apparel would be introduced. Due to high numbers. And the numbers would be reduced after. Would that really be such a wasted effort? Or it really doesn't make all that much difference if it's 100 or 10 collarbones per season?
I don't have enough data to answer that question. The way i see it. A while back somebody decided to do something to prevent or reduce serious head injuries. They looked at the head and it clicked instantly. Lets put a helmet on it. And you know what? It worked. Cyclists can still cycle just fine after. I don't know why other body parts would be all that special. For the same methodology not to work again and again. It's not rocket science.
Seems like the tweet has been removed.
Is it that person from Turkey?
Seems like the tweet has been removed.
Is it that person from Turkey?
Do you want the race caravan on the left side of the road?I believe there is a requirement that the DS must be the driver: what sort of idiocy is it to insist that the tonne and a half of steel being driven close to vulnerable riders be manoeuvred by the guy with multiple other distractions?
And related to that, why is it deemed sensible to have the driver passing bottles, coping with flapping jackets, and chatting to riders instead of looking at the road?
Presumably in training, on open roads, most dealings between the car and the riders are conducted from the pasenger seat: why not in races?
Are there major drawbacks to it?Do you want the race caravan on the left side of the road?
Yes. The driver would be near the gutter, not the centre of the road.Are there major drawbacks to it?
Yes. The driver should have good vision of where exactly the riders are, and fetching bottles by a passenger would only take a little error for the driver to mess it up.Happens with people driviing British & Irish cars in Europe/European cars in Britain and Ireland all the time. Might help them stay as close to the edge of the road as possible, allowing more room for the cyclists.
Do you really see that as more of a problem than all the distractions and other duties placed on the driver in the status quo?
Certainly the results of accidents are dramatic. Cars and fans; hard to know which poses the greatest risk.If we count life threatening events for this season on the top level:
Did i miss somebody? All in all the numbers are rather high so far?
- Egan Bernal
- Sonny Colbrelli
- Milan Vader
Does a rider's skull need to be fleksible during a race? No!
Do a rider's collarbones need to be fleksible during a race? Yes!
Why are you suddenly so worried about collarbones anyway? They're on GC riders losing time level of seriousness. I think I've even seen riders joke that you're not really a pro unless you've had a broken collarbone.
If you really want to talk about protective apparel, why not something that can protect a rider's inner organs? Injuries to those can be fatal, as we have already seen.
Why shouldn't somebody be worried about healthy collarbones in the peloton. That is indeed a good question.
Because there are so many injuries that are so much worse.
No one has ever died from breaking a collarbone! Otoh; we don't need to go that far back in time, to find a case with a young man, who landed with his torso on a concrete culvert by the side of the road in such an unfortunate way that he got a bleeding in his liver, and... we all know what happened then.
Hopefully you would still like to decrease the amount of broken collarbones if possible. Sure it isn't the worst bone to break, but it's still an injury which affects many riders and teams during a season.