SeriousSam said:Must be all that track training
You mean in lab tests or in races? Cav is notoriously horrendous in lab testsMatParker117 said:SeriousSam said:Must be all that track training
He was producing HTC days power levels in dubai if he's back at that level, then I feel sorry for the germans.
Red Rick said:You mean in lab tests or in races? Cav is notoriously horrendous in lab testsMatParker117 said:SeriousSam said:Must be all that track training
He was producing HTC days power levels in dubai if he's back at that level, then I feel sorry for the germans.
PremierAndrew said:His comments on Greipel back in the day would be one example, and he wasn't exactly the safest sprinter in the peloton to compete against in the past either. Can definitely understand why people dislike him
that test prolly better answered on a different subforum.MatParker117 said:Red Rick said:You mean in lab tests or in races? Cav is notoriously horrendous in lab testsMatParker117 said:SeriousSam said:Must be all that track training
He was producing HTC days power levels in dubai if he's back at that level, then I feel sorry for the germans.
During the final sprint in Dubai.
kwikki said:It's a funny one with sprinters. If you think about what they do, then you can see why, maybe, they need that super ego to be able to do it. Robbie McEwen is a classic example, one of the most exciting sprinters ever but....jeez.....what a ***. Cavendish falls into the same bracket, a phenomenal talent, definitely in the top three all time talents, but very abrasive. Fatherhood and a spell of few wins seems to have mellowed him out and it is good to see him finally have some complimentary things to say about Greipel. Love Cavendish or hate him, his palmares are unlikely to be equalled by Kittel or Greipel.
Thinking about super-succesful sprinters only Zabel stands out as having been a bit humble.
Gloin22 said:. . . is it really that hard to see why many hate him? I guess most people must have not followed cycling between 2008-2011 when Cav was completely dominant and acted as a complete *** in most interviews and towards many riders.
"The difference is between winners and losers. The guys who win understand it and congratulate each other. It's the ones who never win. Perhaps its not fair to bracket them all, but the ones who don't win perhaps feel bitterness, they resent things and take frustrations out in that way," he said.
gladster said:Gloin22 said:. . . is it really that hard to see why many hate him? I guess most people must have not followed cycling between 2008-2011 when Cav was completely dominant and acted as a complete *** in most interviews and towards many riders.
So true.
Especially when you consider that he can only be successful over the last 100 meters when he has been wheelsucking the previous 100 km.
gladster said:Gloin22 said:. . . is it really that hard to see why many hate him? I guess most people must have not followed cycling between 2008-2011 when Cav was completely dominant and acted as a complete *** in most interviews and towards many riders.
So true.
Especially when you consider that he can only be successful over the last 100 meters when he has been wheelsucking the previous 100 km.
gladster said:Gloin22 said:. . . is it really that hard to see why many hate him? I guess most people must have not followed cycling between 2008-2011 when Cav was completely dominant and acted as a complete *** in most interviews and towards many riders.
So true.
Especially when you consider that he can only be successful over the last 100 meters when he has been wheelsucking the previous 100 km.
SeriousSam said:On crashes:
"The difference is between winners and losers. The guys who win understand it and congratulate each other. It's the ones who never win. Perhaps its not fair to bracket them all, but the ones who don't win perhaps feel bitterness, they resent things and take frustrations out in that way," he said.
Great bloke
TMP402 said:gladster said:Gloin22 said:. . . is it really that hard to see why many hate him? I guess most people must have not followed cycling between 2008-2011 when Cav was completely dominant and acted as a complete *** in most interviews and towards many riders.
So true.
Especially when you consider that he can only be successful over the last 100 meters when he has been wheelsucking the previous 100 km.
Refer to last year's British national road race.
You don't have to post here if you don't want. Of if you have nothing constructive to post for that matter.SeriousSam said:On crashes:
Great bloke
The article is nonsensical or missing a connecting paragraph. It starts with talk of GC riders team(s) being up front where back in the Armstrong era the GC guys were not. This follows the articles in a similar vein regarding quotes from Sagan and Cav's own teammate Eisel. Then we get this "you only get this from guys that don't win" diatribe out of nowhere.King Boonen said:SeriousSam said:On crashes:
"The difference is between winners and losers. The guys who win understand it and congratulate each other. It's the ones who never win. Perhaps its not fair to bracket them all, but the ones who don't win perhaps feel bitterness, they resent things and take frustrations out in that way," he said.
Great bloke
Cavendish does not mention the word crash or anything related to it once in that article. He is referring to people who don't win, not those who crash.
Full article:
http://www.cyclingnews.com/news/mentality-of-the-riders-causing-stress-in-final-kilometres-says-cavendish/
Red Rick said:You don't have to post here if you don't want. Of if you have nothing constructive to post for that matter.SeriousSam said:On crashes:
Great bloke
Unnecessary dangers in sprint finishes is the context in this article, though upon reading it again it's unclear to me why Cavendish said what he said. Perhaps a missing paragraph as Nick C saidKing Boonen said:SeriousSam said:On crashes:
"The difference is between winners and losers. The guys who win understand it and congratulate each other. It's the ones who never win. Perhaps its not fair to bracket them all, but the ones who don't win perhaps feel bitterness, they resent things and take frustrations out in that way," he said.
Great bloke
Cavendish does not mention the word crash or anything related to it once in that article. He is referring to people who don't win, not those who crash.
Full article:
http://www.cyclingnews.com/news/mentality-of-the-riders-causing-stress-in-final-kilometres-says-cavendish/