Yep, that would be great. Just had a look at the stats over at PCS, and it appears Valverde has never ridden Emilia. Wonder why?Blanco said:I hope he will race Emilia, it's such a nice race, and that climb suits him like a glove.
DJ Sprtsch said:Yep, that would be great. Just had a look at the stats over at PCS, and it appears Valverde has never ridden Emilia. Wonder why?Blanco said:I hope he will race Emilia, it's such a nice race, and that climb suits him like a glove.
I wonder who is the most winning spanish cyclist of all time? Perurena?tobydawq said:DJ Sprtsch said:Yep, that would be great. Just had a look at the stats over at PCS, and it appears Valverde has never ridden Emilia. Wonder why?Blanco said:I hope he will race Emilia, it's such a nice race, and that climb suits him like a glove.
He and Italy haven't always been the best of friends.
If he goes and wins Emilia then he can beat his personal best of 15 season victories in Lombardia. Pretty mad for a 38-year-old.
He will thus also surpass Boonen's number of career victories.
Yes, just read yesterday that Valverde is 2 wins from tying him for the winningest Spanish rider of all time.Cance > TheRest said:I wonder who is the most winning spanish cyclist of all time? Perurena?tobydawq said:DJ Sprtsch said:Yep, that would be great. Just had a look at the stats over at PCS, and it appears Valverde has never ridden Emilia. Wonder why?Blanco said:I hope he will race Emilia, it's such a nice race, and that climb suits him like a glove.
He and Italy haven't always been the best of friends.
If he goes and wins Emilia then he can beat his personal best of 15 season victories in Lombardia. Pretty mad for a 38-year-old.
He will thus also surpass Boonen's number of career victories.
https://www.procyclingstats.com/rider/domingo-perurena
Cance > TheRest said:I wonder who is the most winning spanish cyclist of all time? Perurena?tobydawq said:DJ Sprtsch said:Yep, that would be great. Just had a look at the stats over at PCS, and it appears Valverde has never ridden Emilia. Wonder why?Blanco said:I hope he will race Emilia, it's such a nice race, and that climb suits him like a glove.
He and Italy haven't always been the best of friends.
If he goes and wins Emilia then he can beat his personal best of 15 season victories in Lombardia. Pretty mad for a 38-year-old.
He will thus also surpass Boonen's number of career victories.
https://www.procyclingstats.com/rider/domingo-perurena
Blanco said:Cance > TheRest said:I wonder who is the most winning spanish cyclist of all time? Perurena?tobydawq said:DJ Sprtsch said:Yep, that would be great. Just had a look at the stats over at PCS, and it appears Valverde has never ridden Emilia. Wonder why?Blanco said:I hope he will race Emilia, it's such a nice race, and that climb suits him like a glove.
He and Italy haven't always been the best of friends.
If he goes and wins Emilia then he can beat his personal best of 15 season victories in Lombardia. Pretty mad for a 38-year-old.
He will thus also surpass Boonen's number of career victories.
https://www.procyclingstats.com/rider/domingo-perurena
Poblet and Delio Rodriguez also have lots of wins, I counted around 120 for Poblet and some 10-15 more for Delio. Txomin Perurena also has couple of more victories than listed at PCS. Procyclingstats is not the most accurate, especially regarding older results.
Valv.Piti said:Funny, I also thought about him ending his career with the Vuelta after the Olympics. That would be very fitting IMO since I assume the Vuelta is his favourite race?
Anyways, at least 1 1/2 season more of Valverde and one season in the stripes. Gotta love having him as your favourite rider.
Valv.Piti said:Funny, I also thought about him ending his career with the Vuelta after the Olympics. That would be very fitting IMO since I assume the Vuelta is his favourite race?
Anyways, at least 1 1/2 season more of Valverde and one season in the stripes. Gotta love having him as your favourite rider.
The weekly spin: The Alejandro Valverde conundrum
by Neal Rogers
October 2, 2018
https://cyclingtips.com/2018/10/the-weekly-spin-the-alejandro-valverde-conundrum/
"...Yes, there is still doping in cycling. No, it’s not rampant as it was 10 or 20 years ago. Riders are still cheating the system, and cheating one another, but there are far fewer riders doing it, and the advantages they are gaining have been mitigated to a significant degree. From what I have seen, and heard, I believe riders born in the late-80s and 1990s are part of a cleaner, if not totally clean, generation.
I can’t say anything with certainty about Valverde. I know he has passed all his doping controls since he returned from his suspension, but he also passed all his doping controls prior to his suspension. It was a police investigation, not a doping control, that netted the Spaniard a violation.
I know that Valverde has raced at the same level, following his suspension, as he did prior to it. The same thing could not be said for riders like Basso and Contador. It’s entirely possible that a successful doped rider, winning against a doped peloton, would also be a successful clean rider winning against a clean peloton. I do know that Valverde has never shown contrition, so it’s not clear to me why anyone should give him the benefit of the doubt and believe that his views have changed since 2006, or 2009, or 2012. Maybe they have, but how would we know? Why should we believe in his results?..."
Oh, yeah. Its in Aigle - for some reason I thought it was in Flanders. Might as well take that Worlds as well thentobydawq said:Valv.Piti said:Funny, I also thought about him ending his career with the Vuelta after the Olympics. That would be very fitting IMO since I assume the Vuelta is his favourite race?
Anyways, at least 1 1/2 season more of Valverde and one season in the stripes. Gotta love having him as your favourite rider.
Ending his career just two weeks before the Worlds?
Not gonna happen!
Valv.Piti said:Oh, yeah. Its in Aigle - for some reason I thought it was in Flanders. Might as well take that Worlds as well thentobydawq said:Valv.Piti said:Funny, I also thought about him ending his career with the Vuelta after the Olympics. That would be very fitting IMO since I assume the Vuelta is his favourite race?
Anyways, at least 1 1/2 season more of Valverde and one season in the stripes. Gotta love having him as your favourite rider.
Ending his career just two weeks before the Worlds?
Not gonna happen!![]()
joe_papp said:So Neal Rogers, who I respect as a journalist, published a Valverde commentary also on CyclingTips. It was nowhere near as insulting to AV as Caley Fretz's scandalous screed, but Neal falls into a logical trap by suggesting that the "current" generation of riders may be entirely clean (lol), but Valverde may not be clean because he's passing the same doping controls now as he was before. But the "current" generation are also passing those same controls!Arggggh!
The weekly spin: The Alejandro Valverde conundrum
by Neal Rogers
October 2, 2018
https://cyclingtips.com/2018/10/the-weekly-spin-the-alejandro-valverde-conundrum/
"...Yes, there is still doping in cycling. No, it’s not rampant as it was 10 or 20 years ago. Riders are still cheating the system, and cheating one another, but there are far fewer riders doing it, and the advantages they are gaining have been mitigated to a significant degree. From what I have seen, and heard, I believe riders born in the late-80s and 1990s are part of a cleaner, if not totally clean, generation.
I can’t say anything with certainty about Valverde. I know he has passed all his doping controls since he returned from his suspension, but he also passed all his doping controls prior to his suspension. It was a police investigation, not a doping control, that netted the Spaniard a violation.
I know that Valverde has raced at the same level, following his suspension, as he did prior to it. The same thing could not be said for riders like Basso and Contador. It’s entirely possible that a successful doped rider, winning against a doped peloton, would also be a successful clean rider winning against a clean peloton. I do know that Valverde has never shown contrition, so it’s not clear to me why anyone should give him the benefit of the doubt and believe that his views have changed since 2006, or 2009, or 2012. Maybe they have, but how would we know? Why should we believe in his results?..."
Very frustrating. Valverde just can't get a fair shake from these Anglo journalists!
This isn't intended to be a post about doping, so it shouldn't be moved to Clinic. Rather, it is criticism of coverage of Valverde in the mainstream English-speaking cycling press.
Blanco said:Cance > TheRest said:I wonder who is the most winning spanish cyclist of all time? Perurena?tobydawq said:DJ Sprtsch said:Yep, that would be great. Just had a look at the stats over at PCS, and it appears Valverde has never ridden Emilia. Wonder why?Blanco said:I hope he will race Emilia, it's such a nice race, and that climb suits him like a glove.
He and Italy haven't always been the best of friends.
If he goes and wins Emilia then he can beat his personal best of 15 season victories in Lombardia. Pretty mad for a 38-year-old.
He will thus also surpass Boonen's number of career victories.
https://www.procyclingstats.com/rider/domingo-perurena
Poblet and Delio Rodriguez also have lots of wins, I counted around 120 for Poblet and some 10-15 more for Delio. Txomin Perurena also has couple of more victories than listed at PCS. Procyclingstats is not the most accurate, especially regarding older results.
joe_papp said:So Neal Rogers, who I respect as a journalist, published a Valverde commentary also on CyclingTips. It was nowhere near as insulting to AV as Caley Fretz's scandalous screed, but Neal falls into a logical trap by suggesting that the "current" generation of riders may be entirely clean (lol), but Valverde may not be clean because he's passing the same doping controls now as he was before. But the "current" generation are also passing those same controls!Arggggh!
The weekly spin: The Alejandro Valverde conundrum
by Neal Rogers
October 2, 2018
https://cyclingtips.com/2018/10/the-weekly-spin-the-alejandro-valverde-conundrum/
"...Yes, there is still doping in cycling. No, it’s not rampant as it was 10 or 20 years ago. Riders are still cheating the system, and cheating one another, but there are far fewer riders doing it, and the advantages they are gaining have been mitigated to a significant degree. From what I have seen, and heard, I believe riders born in the late-80s and 1990s are part of a cleaner, if not totally clean, generation.
I can’t say anything with certainty about Valverde. I know he has passed all his doping controls since he returned from his suspension, but he also passed all his doping controls prior to his suspension. It was a police investigation, not a doping control, that netted the Spaniard a violation.
I know that Valverde has raced at the same level, following his suspension, as he did prior to it. The same thing could not be said for riders like Basso and Contador. It’s entirely possible that a successful doped rider, winning against a doped peloton, would also be a successful clean rider winning against a clean peloton. I do know that Valverde has never shown contrition, so it’s not clear to me why anyone should give him the benefit of the doubt and believe that his views have changed since 2006, or 2009, or 2012. Maybe they have, but how would we know? Why should we believe in his results?..."
Very frustrating. Valverde just can't get a fair shake from these Anglo journalists!
This isn't intended to be a post about doping, so it shouldn't be moved to Clinic. Rather, it is criticism of coverage of Valverde in the mainstream English-speaking cycling press.
GuyIncognito said:That's putting it mildly. It's the worst of the cycling databases. At least of the 8 or so I'm aware of.
And that's not even getting into the owners' disgusting behavior towards other people.
I can't find any sources that list Poblet's wins, only a wins total. I see different numbers, but all well above 200. 262 is the highest I've seen given.
In any case, it's impossible to compare. On one hand any stage race had way more stages in the past than they do now. But now a far far higher percentage of races are bunch sprints so the fastest sprinters in the world get a huge number of wins that they wouldn't get before the 90s.
You are missing the fun part.Valv.Piti said:I use PCS all the time. Guess its a matter of habits, never really like CQ Ranking. Sure its not perfect, but it more often than not gets the job done. Can spend hours on a rainy day, like today.![]()