Re: Re:
Pentacycle said:
Jakub said:
Well, that was again something today. The guy cannot ride the bike at all, I understand only a few words russisch, but he seems to be very....not smart. So in the end, he's a typicall Soviet type of athlete, who was chosen as a child, doped to heaven and after a (succesful?) career he'l suffer from depression and thinking about comitting a suicide. I find this tragic and even more tragic is, that he seems to have fans here. How is that possible?
With a wife like his I wouldn't be thinking of suicide. On Zakarin's intelligence I cannot judge, but at least he is able to post English messages on his twitter.
And as far as your other comments go, IMO he does not give the impression of being a typical Russian doping product. Those normally only shine a few times to then fade away into anonymity. If he performs at this level for the next two years I'm inclined to think he's 'only' on the same program as his opponents, and that there is in fact some natural talent in him.
Ilnur is a strange chase:
2007 Jr European ITT champ, then he got busted in 2009.
Then he comes back in 2011 and has a few decent results, 10th in the Giro della Regione Friuli Venezia Giulia and 4th in the Giro Ciclistico della Valle d'Aosta MTT.
In 2012 he showed even more climbing talent, 3rd on Monte Terminillo in the Giro Ciclistico d'Italia, he also won a stage and was the race leader before having a meltdown on the Gavia (he finished 9th on gc).
In 2013 he put on some muscle mass and became a TT specialist, in 2014 he became leaner without loosing much of his power and got some results in smaller races, he won Grand Prix of Sochi, Tour d'Azerbaïdjan and finished 12th on gc in Algrave and Burgos (7th in the ITT).
In 2015 he took it to the next level, the guy kinda looks like a Katusha experiment, maybe they tried to create their own version of Froome.
Katusha and Gazprom will go thermonuclear at the Giro.