offbyone said:First of all, I have no respect for posters like yourself who insult other posters that are engaging in thoughtful discussion.
Again I think this is a faulty way to measure palmares. It opens up the door for presumption and excuse making. Contador has so many impressive palmares, there is no reason for this.
I live in a world of facts. Here are some factual statements. Contador raced the 2014 tour de france. Contador did not win the 2014 Tour De France.
Contador lost the race. Just like Wiggins lost the Giro in 2013. He doesn't get off the hook because he dropped out. I don't care if you drop out because your sick, hurt, had bad luck, don't like the weather or whatever. You drop out, that means you lost.
Plus, all these excuses can be attributed to bad racing. When Contador crashed he wasn't at the front of the race. This is bad positioning. He also was eating on a wet descent I believe. Another risky move. These little things can add up. Grand Tours are so hard to win because you have to be nearly perfect the whole time. The rider who is closest to perfect wins. Small mistakes can cost the entire race or can create obstacles that are too big to overcome.
Most of the arguments which I have read, including from yourself, of how Contador should have won that tour revolve around his amazing conditioning. But you have to learn that a grand tour is about a lot more than legs. They aren't racing in a bubble. In a grand tour you need to stand on more than your legs to win and you need to do it for 3 weeks straight.
You have no respect? You do realize that you are being just as unreasonable as anyone else here.
You ask us to look at the facts and then completely smear them. You say "Contador raced the 2014 Tour." That is extremely misleading...he raced HALF of the 2014 Tour. That comment makes it seem as if he raced the entire Tour and lost. If you want to talk about facts you must include all of them, not only the one's that suit you.