Re: Re:
loge1884 said:
Libertine Seguros said:
Olaf Ludwig. Didn't get to ride it until he was nearly 31, then was 9th, 2nd, 3rd, 4th in consecutive years despite being past his peak. His record on cobbles in the 80s speaks for itself.
think you have a valid point there .... somehow Olaf Ludwig always escapes me as one of the finest sprinters and powerhorses of his generation ... perhaps because he came to the scene only at an age when others used to retire .... I remember the only sprinter I had on close radar in those days was madman Adoujaparov (a guy I definitely wouldn't want to be in his way on the last 200m)
LS on the money as usual

. For your point, Uwe Raab was another heck of a sprinter, track, road, ITT, a beast. Ludwig...great call.
But just so I disagree with LS every chance that I get (and that's not too often), I'll praise one of my favorite riders ever: Fons De Wolf, who won the Espoirs PR, turned pro, won GDL and MSR back to back, the Het Volk (Omloop) twice at least, runner-up in LBL, 4th at the '80 infamous edition. Podium in GW and AGR. two top-10 at the RVV. Points winner at the Vuelta with multiple stage wins. 2nd in PN.
PR: 6th in '80, 10th in '81, Fons didn't get his day in the sun (so to speak - gray skies prevail) in Roubaix. But what a rider! The "new Merckx" label was too much...
Big Thor Hushovd? Yeah. Paul and Phil squealing in the mikes would have been fun

.