Liège - Bastogne - Liège : Sunday April 22th 201é

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May 27, 2010
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WTF Singapore has muslim malays. BUT ITS NOT a muslim country. Most people in Singapore are chinese. Its just here the rules on alcohol are very strict and you can only drink it at an older age. Here very few people do underage drinking. And the alcohol has crazy taxes.
 
Mar 31, 2010
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singapore is great example almost of a policestate. it's all very clean and structured. but there's so much forbidden it's a very dead place in many regards. throw something on the ground and you get a huge pentalty. stuff like that. a cousin of mine lived there
 
Jan 22, 2011
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Ryo Hazuki said:
singapore is great example almost of a policestate. it's all very clean and structured. but there's so much forbidden it's a very dead place in many regards. throw something on the ground and you get a huge pentalty. stuff like that. a cousin of mine lived there

Don't you get whipped there, if you get caught littering?
 
May 27, 2010
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Ryo Hazuki said:
singapore is great example almost of a policestate. it's all very clean and structured. but there's so much forbidden it's a very dead place in many regards. throw something on the ground and you get a huge pentalty. stuff like that. a cousin of mine lived there

Its not that bad as people say it is. Many people do litter. Its just the government has huge fines and all that, which rarely do happen. Or maybe its just that I'm used to it:eek:
 
Jan 22, 2011
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dlwssonic said:
maybe singapore has a bad reputation with dealing with those europeans involved in vice:p

Well, maybe I'm wrong. I do fully support death penalty for trafficing 15g+ of heroin though. But we're steering way of topic here.
 
May 27, 2010
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Zam_Olyas said:
I love the nightlife in Singapore. :D

Yeah its not as bad as ryo mentioned. Its still a pretty free state. If you go to the real muslim countries its way worst.
 
May 27, 2010
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Fetisoff said:
Well, maybe I'm wrong. I do fully support death penalty for trafficing 15g+ of heroin though. But we're steering way of topic here.

Yeah but the whipping part was way exaggerated lol.
The worst that can happen for litter is a few hundred dollars fine if you are caught by the police(damn unlikely).
 
Mar 31, 2010
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Fetisoff said:
Well, maybe I'm wrong. I do fully support death penalty for trafficing 15g+ of heroin though. But we're steering way of topic here.

most idiotic post of cn.com I leave it at that
 
Mar 31, 2010
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dlwssonic said:
Yeah but the whipping part was way exaggerated lol.
The worst that can happen for litter is a few hundred dollars fine if you are caught by the police(damn unlikely).

yes that's what I meant. very high fines
 
Mar 31, 2010
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dlwssonic said:
lol its just a threat to the westerners saying. You don't touch singapore, or I will cut your head off:p;)

no. I mean deathpenalty itself is quite ridiculous. let alone for trafficking drugs
 
Jan 22, 2011
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Ryo Hazuki said:
most idiotic post of cn.com I leave it at that

OK, this coming from you is almost a compliment to me

Ryo Hazuki said:
I mean deathpenalty itself is quite ridiculous. let

Yeah, instead let's listen for 5 days+ to this non-human, whose name I won't even mention bull**** and gloat in court for killing 77 people, read his proclamations and such, and then let him out after 21 years.
 
Aug 29, 2011
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Libertine Seguros said:
Yup, cos he gave his bike to Valverde, loyal domestique that he is, and was trying to maintain his balance running uphill at 15% whilst also pushing his team leader away. Hence why he nearly ended up using his teeth as a climbing aid.

Madrazo is just something else. :D

You cannot not love that guy.
 
Mar 10, 2009
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Vino about LBL win for Astana:

Alexandre Vinokourov showed up at the start of stage 2 in the Presidential Tour of Turkey in Alanya with a large smile, as did Valentin Iglinskiy because of the win of his elder brother Maxim at Liège-Bastogne-Liège. Both Astana riders watched the last fifty kilometres of "La Doyenne" from their hotel room near the Mediterranean coast.

"We have awaited our first victory for a while but this is a wonderful time for our team," Vinokourov told Cyclingnews.

Janez Brajkovic opened the team's account at stage 3 of the Volta a Catalunya and now Astana has three wins including two major Classics back-to-back with Amstel Gold Race (by Enrico Gasparotto) and Liège-Bastogne-Liège.

"Our start of the season was far from our expectations but these two Classics have put an end to our hard time," Vino continued. "It proves that Kazakh cycling is not only about myself. I've told Iglinskiy that after what he did yesterday, I can retire quietly."

The soon-to-be Astana team manager played his part in Iglinskiy's victory in Belgium. "I called Maxim yesterday morning before the start," Vino added. "I had noticed that he had good legs at Amstel Gold Race and Fleche Wallonne. ... He rode to perfection. He did it the Vino way! I told him to wait for the Roche-aux-Faucons and go with [Joaquim] Rodriguez. When he did it, I was confident that he'd finish on the podium. He dropped Rodriguez on St-Nicolas and turned the turbo on to catch [Vincenzo] Nibali."

Vinokourov revealed why Iglinskiy didn't win a big Classic until the age of 31. "He lacked motivation," the (substitute) member of the Kazakh Parliament said. "When he won the Strade Bianche and a stage of Tirreno-Adriatico in 2010, I told Maxim: ‘you can ride like Valverde' but he said: ‘no!!! I'm not at this level'. This year he's gone to altitude training camps here and there and he's motivated again. After this victory, he can step up to another level. He'll go back to Kazakhstan tomorrow and take some rest prior to training for the Tour de France and why not the Olympic Games."

On the eve of the Amstel Gold Race, Vinokourov reassured the president of the Kazakh cycling federation Kairat Kelimbetov that a great win was around the corner. "I'm even happier that a Kazakh rider is the winner. It shuts the mouth of the people who haven't believed in Kazakh riders. I reminded Maxim last night when we spoke again at 11pm: ‘I've always believed in you.'"

As a result of the revival of the motivation at Astana, Vino himself went on the attack at the Tour of Turkey after 48km and won the intermediate sprint at Manavgat.

Cyclingnews.com

Brilliant man, he's basically taking credit for the win :D
 
May 5, 2011
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Arnout said:
Vino about LBL win for Astana:

Alexandre Vinokourov showed up at the start of stage 2 in the Presidential Tour of Turkey in Alanya with a large smile, as did Valentin Iglinskiy because of the win of his elder brother Maxim at Liège-Bastogne-Liège. Both Astana riders watched the last fifty kilometres of "La Doyenne" from their hotel room near the Mediterranean coast.

"We have awaited our first victory for a while but this is a wonderful time for our team," Vinokourov told Cyclingnews.

Janez Brajkovic opened the team's account at stage 3 of the Volta a Catalunya and now Astana has three wins including two major Classics back-to-back with Amstel Gold Race (by Enrico Gasparotto) and Liège-Bastogne-Liège.

"Our start of the season was far from our expectations but these two Classics have put an end to our hard time," Vino continued. "It proves that Kazakh cycling is not only about myself. I've told Iglinskiy that after what he did yesterday, I can retire quietly."

The soon-to-be Astana team manager played his part in Iglinskiy's victory in Belgium. "I called Maxim yesterday morning before the start," Vino added. "I had noticed that he had good legs at Amstel Gold Race and Fleche Wallonne. ... He rode to perfection. He did it the Vino way! I told him to wait for the Roche-aux-Faucons and go with [Joaquim] Rodriguez. When he did it, I was confident that he'd finish on the podium. He dropped Rodriguez on St-Nicolas and turned the turbo on to catch [Vincenzo] Nibali."

Vinokourov revealed why Iglinskiy didn't win a big Classic until the age of 31. "He lacked motivation," the (substitute) member of the Kazakh Parliament said. "When he won the Strade Bianche and a stage of Tirreno-Adriatico in 2010, I told Maxim: ‘you can ride like Valverde' but he said: ‘no!!! I'm not at this level'. This year he's gone to altitude training camps here and there and he's motivated again. After this victory, he can step up to another level. He'll go back to Kazakhstan tomorrow and take some rest prior to training for the Tour de France and why not the Olympic Games."

On the eve of the Amstel Gold Race, Vinokourov reassured the president of the Kazakh cycling federation Kairat Kelimbetov that a great win was around the corner. "I'm even happier that a Kazakh rider is the winner. It shuts the mouth of the people who haven't believed in Kazakh riders. I reminded Maxim last night when we spoke again at 11pm: ‘I've always believed in you.'"

As a result of the revival of the motivation at Astana, Vino himself went on the attack at the Tour of Turkey after 48km and won the intermediate sprint at Manavgat.

Cyclingnews.com

Brilliant man, he's basically taking credit for the win :D


Already posted in the Astana team thread, and yea, he is awesome :p
 
Jun 14, 2010
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Lexman said:
DNQ Alejandro Valverde Belmonte (Spa) Movistar Team
DNQ Angel Madrazo Ruiz (Spa) Movistar Team
DNQ Jose Joaquin Rojas Gil (Spa) Movistar Team
DNQ Laurens De Vreese (Bel) Topsport Vlaanderen - Mercator
DNQ Pablo Lastras Garcia (Spa) Movistar Team

Apparently they took, after Valverde's bike change, a shorter route by following the motors, the Director of the race ordered them to turnaround which they refused so he disqualified them. What a shame and a sportsman unworthy...:mad:

If you look at the way Valvrerde struggled up the hill after having to restart on the steepest section, there wasnt really much of a point in continuing.
 
Aug 5, 2010
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The Hitch said:
If you look at the way Valvrerde struggled up the hill after having to restart on the steepest section, there wasnt really much of a point in continuing.

due to the wet roads madrawesome's push was almost insignificant, so piti had to start from pretty much 0 Km/h on a road bike on a steep hill. it's not exactly a piece of cake to do that, that's why it looked like he was massively over geared and bonking big time.
 

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