jens_attacks said:
rhubroma i was talking only from my personal view.i watch cycling just since 98-99 so it might be the nostalgia and the lack of knowledge of '80's cycling.
Well their is certainly some nostalgia at work, however, not merely.
Over the last two decades we've seen the speeds go up so much, significantly as a result of peds, partly as a result of more refined training methods and tech advances, that this has made it all just so predictable and script like. Attacks from afar are much more risky, so that anything daring is just snuffed before it can even be attempted. Riding is done to deter attacks by teams where everyone is so f-in strong that it usually works, which has made the races less exciting. Sure we have exceptions, Pantani on the Galibier, Flandis on testosterone, but these are few and far between.
I starting following and practicing cycling in the early 80's. Everything was different, more spontaneous, less robotic. Even the fact that helmets weren't worn, when safety wasn't such an obsession, and high-tech eye ware was unknown, made the athletic gesture seem more natural, human, free, etc.
Yet it was the first modern decade of cycling just the same. Lycra was introduced, new time trial equipment was tried, the team kit reflected a new modern sensibility. For the first time the Irish and Americans produced real champions, from Kelly and Roche to Lemond and Hampsten. Just the same the French were still, at times, the best in their own race between Hinault and Fignon, while Italy, Belgium and Spain always kept pace. The Colombians seemed like the greatest threats in the mountains, while for the first time serious events took place in Ireland and the US. The sport was growing, but hadn't reached the corporate levels it would during the Armstrong era, nor did we have the superteams to shut the races down before they got started. And it still had a respect for all the great legends of Europe that had made the sport the greatest public spectacle on its roads since the turn of the XX century. Doping played a role in the game, but it wasn't the arms race yet that it would become in the 90's and 00's.
There was still room for fantasy and daring attacks like in the previous decades going back to the 60's, when pro sport began its first push towards the modern era, yet the speeds were increasing, the athletes and their equipment becoming more streamlined and avant guarde, but not ballistic and space-aged.
All of that has been destroyed, or most of it, by the total lack of freedom that athletes are given to interpret the races for themselves, invent, improvise (and, yes, race radios play a role here, sorry), but also because of the general corporatization of the sport (like everything else), where only wins count and sponsorship investment dollars means that there is no margin for any rider independence outside of team orders.
The result is that the sport has advanced in speed, efficiency and strength, but the entertainment and aesthetic value of the events have been decidedly lessened. IMO.