Re: Re:
we could
...but for some of us time has indeed stood still...because we lived with (or actually more descriptively without, so absent was he from results) the froome with no potential...indeed i have lived with him since 2006 when he raced against my mtb peers at the commie games (again, funnily enough, showing no potential - think he got lapped :surprised: ).....no bell curve for our hapless hero...quite literally from zero to hero.........
brownbobby said:gillan1969 said:brownbobby said:ScienceIsCool said:Hmmm. Nope. The first Google result for "potential" is: "having or showing the capacity to become or develop into something in the future".brownbobby said:Yes, i am saying everyone who reaches WT level has 'some' potential.
Making it to the big leagues only says you have the minimum level of required ability or talent. Your results beyond that indicate your ceiling. Thus has it been and how it always will be. Name a champion, any champion, and their "potential" is as obvious as their destiny. Hinault, three years after being a neo-pro won his first attempted Tour and Vuelta. Before that he had already won Liege, and Gent-Wevelgem. At the age of 23. Talent doesn't "emerge" as you approach 30. It's on fire and ready to explode by time you're 23. At that point it's only a matter if you can handle the work load and pressure.
John Swanson
OK, as you wish lets use your friend Google as the Arbiter here:
"having or showing the capacity to become or develop into something in the future"
So using the terminology which you yourself borrowed from Google, we can probably agree that he never showed the potential to become a multiple GT winner, but what we now know without doubt, is that Chris Froome has won 4 Tours and 1 Vuelta. The act of someone achieving something by default proves that the potential to achieve was there. Therefore what we also now know without doubt is that Chris Froome did always have the potential to win a GT.
So i stand by my original refutal of your statement that Froome had no potential
Of course the above is really just bickering over terminology; the golden question, the one which has generated 1256 pages and rising on this thread, is to what means and length did he resort to fulfil this potential.
you're confusing google with language
the important part is 'future'....you're applying in retrospect to our hapless hero....
Google wasnt my choice, but it was used by others to try and illustrate a point. I'm not confused but maybe i'm confusing others :lol:
The original debate was around a statement of no potential, which in the context of what we now know was a historical assumption, not a future forecast. Retrospect is the only absolute proof or disproof of historical assumptions. Therefore retrospect is being correctly and justifiably applied here.
This is becoming a circular argument with no likelihood of any meaningful conclusion.
Shall we move on :Neutral:
we could