jens_attacks said:maybe you also tell us from what year he started epo. marco that is
42x16ss said:What? Lemond didn't defend Pantani doping, he attacked the Italian NADO for singling Pantani out. Big difference.
thehog said:It's the dumbest picture going around. It's looks official but it's not.
Randell is a tool as well. No idea that guy. Pantani family think he's a crock.
Digger said:Greg saying lance was top 30 at best and Pantani was a great cyclist...what kind of tripe is that....
thehog said:Randell is a tool as well. No idea that guy. Pantani family think he's a crock.
Benotti69 said:Pantani's family are tools as well.
deValtos said:Pantani's family were concerned that Rendell was going to portray him in a bad light.
I think Rendell did a good job but obviously relatives don't want to read about how Pantani became increasingly deluded and paranoid, his cocaine binges, the car crashes he caused and please please please don't mention performance enhancing substances ...
Wasn't it only recently that Tonina even admitted there was a "chance" Pantani was using ?
gooner said:It's great seeing the hog revise history with Walsh's work on Lance when he said nothing of the sort on here before Lance's fall. It wasn't despicable journalism then.
thehog said:How would you know what I posted? Your join date is only recently. Or are you a sock?
I always posted that Walsh draws a conclusion and then finds the story to match. Said that all through the Armstrong era. Also said he's a terrible writer.
Nothing's changed. Walsh is still very poor at what he does and burns people.
They harder Gooner.
Merckx index said:I recently saw “Slaying the Badger”, and have a couple of questions for anyone who may be more familiar with that period than I am. I followed the Tour a little in those days, but only through newspaper reports the following day (typically a couple of small paragraphs), and the occasional weekly TV summary.
The movie implies that Lemond would have won the Tour in 1985, if he hadn’t been held back on a key stage when Hinault was struggling. This of course is a well known story. However, no mention was made of an earlier stage in which Hinault let Lemond go up the road ahead of him while Hinault controlled the peloton. I’m not sure which stage this was, but I think it was before the mountains, and Lemond got into a breakaway. As I remember it, Hinault let Lemond go to help him get second in the GC, but that extra time would have come back to haunt him later, when Hinault was struggling and Lemond was held back from gaining more time on him. But then again, Lemond was also held back on an earlier stage, the first mountain stage I think, when Hinault and Herrera went off.
So the question is, considering all these factors, the tactics in the early part of the race, was Lemond deserving of the win or not? If Hinault had not crashed, it seems very unlikely there would even be a question, but given that he did crash, did the time he in effect let Lemond have earlier in the race make a big difference?
The other question is why Hinault retired after 1986. He obviously wasn’t over the hill. Though he was second to Lemond, he finished far ahead of Zimmerman, who was third. I assume Hinault, looking into the future, saw Lemond as dominating the TDF, and didn’t want to play second fiddle or domestique to him. But it seemed Hinault could have still been a strong podium contender, and/or won other GTs. Remember, when he retired, he had won just one less GT than Merckx. He was 31, older than Merckx when the latter won his last Tour, but was he as burned out at that point as Eddie was? I know in those days riders did far more racing, so maybe he was, but given how strong he still was in 1986, it would seem it was more mental than physical.
If Hinault did retire mostly because of Lemond, I wonder if he felt regrets after the hunting accident, when the TDF became wide open the following year. Hard to believe he wouldn’t have been a strong contender, at the least.
gooner said:That's what you think and no I wasn't a sockpuppet.
You're a revisionist.
thehog said:Them are fighting words! Your join date is 2013 so sorry you weren't here to know what I posted. Stop making up stuff.
My position on Walsh has not changed. He's the same fool he always was. Remember when he was telling us Lance was going to buy the Tour? Walsh managed to squeeze out an entire book on the subject of something that never actually occurred.
Like his recent writings on Sky.
If Walsh writes something good I'll praise him. If not I'll call him out or do I have to have undying love like yourself of everything Walsh does?![]()
gooner said:You're wrong on the bolded.
You're a revisionist on his work with Lance because you've spat the dummy out with regards to his opinion on Sky. I have no issue with people disagreeing on the latter, I do when they suddenly try to change it with the former because of it. That's where you come in.
Show me where you called him a despicable journalist towards Lemond's comments.
gooner said:You're wrong on the bolded.
You're a revisionist on his work with Lance because you've spat the dummy out with regards to his opinion on Sky. I have no issue with people disagreeing on the latter, I do when they suddenly try to change it with the former because of it. That's where you come in.
Show me where you called him a despicable journalist towards Lemond's comments.
+1.pmcg76 said:I think Hinault had a date set well in advance for his retirement and it had nothing to do with LeMond. Some riders couldn't let their ego suffer by going past it, so 'The Badger' wanted to pack it in when he was still on top or near the top. Riders definitely retired on average a lot younger back then, maybe as a result of so much racing.
As for the Tour questions, I think without the accident in 85 Hinault would have been the definite winner. There is a certain anglo bias in that it is perceived that LeMond should have been the rightful winner if he had been let loose, but up until St.Etienne, Hinault was the better rider.
Perhaps the book 'Slaying the badger' is more informative than the film.
thehog said:No they are lovely, highly respected and hard workers. Mrs. Pantani ran a very successful "piadina" shop which is still there today.
There's also a lovely Pantani museum in his home town. A well celebrated cyclist and the last of the true artists on the bike.
Digger said:Hinault Lemond thing
People seem to forget is lemond being one of those who chased down Jock Boyer in the Worlds of '82...teammates
Digger said:Hinault Lemond thing
People seem to forget is lemond being one of those who chased down Jock Boyer in the Worlds of '82...teammates
I’m certain that Boyer’s chance of turning that attack into a winner was as remote as the South Pole.