sniper said:can you stand the hypocricy?
it goes down to the personal feeling of each follower.
I have no problem with Haas cheering on Ryder for the way he rode.
sniper said:can you stand the hypocricy?
i would say implicit, on a meta level, haas joins this constituency with ryder.pastronef said:sniper said:can you stand the hypocricy?
it goes down to the personal feeling of each follower.
I have no problem with Haas cheering on Ryder for the way he rode.
pastronef said:I don't think Ryder is clean
but reading some clinic here and some twitter, I had the impression Ryder is worse than Astana.
like it's a given Astana are on the juice, people laugh at their utter strength, while Ryder is thrown mud to, because of his re-born last week form
I think it goes back to the JV talk of clean team, new generation, stopped doping (and obviously Ryder admitting doping and saying he stopped)
people can't stand the hypocrisy I guess.
talking about Matt Cooke, I hope he writes a book or at least let us know something more about what he knows about Ryder.
he says Ryder is a liar, bad person, he stopped his career. well, I say, tell us more.
about the gritty Ryder performance, I cannot dislike it, and you know why? because I never raced, I never doped/raced clean, I don't know how it FEELS to be clean and watching other doped contenders go faster than you. I don't know the background stories. so my feelings are not touched by those things I don't know.
I think that could be also a reason of bitterness and revenge feeling. Clean riders are pizzed at us, the fans, who support a rider just because we like how he races, while THEY know something is wrong with that, and cannot stand our cheering for this or that rider.
see here Haas supporting Ryder
https://www.twitter.com/NathanPeterHaas/status/604303170102255616
and here's one of the answers
https://www.twitter.com/vayerism/status/604305343066345472
Haas is just cheering for a team mate. but dear oh dear, it was retweeted by Vayerism, Matt Cooke, Digger and co.
that's the neverending question about how is doping perceived by the racers INSIDE the pro cycling circus
The Hitch said:I think Ryder gets hate because the perception is that Ryder got away with it. Not only did he not serve a ban, he also never really got the hate that the non anglophone caught dopers get.
I'm glad he exists though because he shows what hypocrites these people can be. Even after he was outed Ive heard commentators treat his 2012 Giro as an example of how cycling cleaned up.
The hate is deserved. Once he serves his time, many will forgive him. I can't think of any other riders who got caught and were allowed to continue riding as if nothing ever happened. And it was his personal decision to do it that way, take the silent non ban and keep it hidden from everyone. If you are that one guy who thinks he is so special that even if you get caught you don't have to serve any ban, you deserve the hate.
if that's the case, let's see those bloodvalues.oldcrank said:Of course Ryder is not riding on bread and water.
More likely a Tim Horton's double double and a
Maple Syrup donut. Well done, Ryder.
oldcrank said:Of course Ryder is not riding on bread and water.
More likely a Tim Horton's double double and a
Maple Syrup donut. Well done, Ryder.
Master50 said:Really too bad none of you saw how strong he was at 16. He often started 2 to 5 minutes behind the elite racers and beat them too. His time of service to teams with a doping reputation was always short and each time he moved to a lower profile team. He would up at Health net which to me is a clear indication that what ever he was doing it was not playing the same game. He has suffered the criticisms of many he was racing against at home and has lost friends because of it. Call it naive and in this forum counter to the philosophy they are all still doping the change to Vaughters teams was his chance to play on his real talents than get fired for not playing the team game.
In the context of this Giro one team gives me the impression their licence should have been withdrawn. That is about the sheer numbers there for every attack.
Benotti69 said:Master50 said:Really too bad none of you saw how strong he was at 16. He often started 2 to 5 minutes behind the elite racers and beat them too. His time of service to teams with a doping reputation was always short and each time he moved to a lower profile team. He would up at Health net which to me is a clear indication that what ever he was doing it was not playing the same game. He has suffered the criticisms of many he was racing against at home and has lost friends because of it. Call it naive and in this forum counter to the philosophy they are all still doping the change to Vaughters teams was his chance to play on his real talents than get fired for not playing the team game.
In the context of this Giro one team gives me the impression their licence should have been withdrawn. That is about the sheer numbers there for every attack.
Steve Tilford will tell you all about Hesjedal's doping as a MTBer. Anyone who rides a GT is freak of human nature.
Hesjedal confessed to some of his doping. Hat he dropped Contador on Finestre aint normal even for a freak.
Garmin were never a clean team. End of. JV knows the sport all too well and that his silence on Astana has been deafening for a guy who professes to have dedicated his life to anti doping!!!!!!!
This sport thought for a split second about getting out of the cesspit, but then it passed and as this the 3rd fastest giro in history shows, doping is still very much part of the fabric of the sport and Hesjedals 5th place places him firmly deep in it.
trebe said:Benotti69 said:Master50 said:Really too bad none of you saw how strong he was at 16. He often started 2 to 5 minutes behind the elite racers and beat them too. His time of service to teams with a doping reputation was always short and each time he moved to a lower profile team. He would up at Health net which to me is a clear indication that what ever he was doing it was not playing the same game. He has suffered the criticisms of many he was racing against at home and has lost friends because of it. Call it naive and in this forum counter to the philosophy they are all still doping the change to Vaughters teams was his chance to play on his real talents than get fired for not playing the team game.
In the context of this Giro one team gives me the impression their licence should have been withdrawn. That is about the sheer numbers there for every attack.
Steve Tilford will tell you all about Hesjedal's doping as a MTBer. Anyone who rides a GT is freak of human nature.
Hesjedal confessed to some of his doping. Hat he dropped Contador on Finestre aint normal even for a freak.
Garmin were never a clean team. End of. JV knows the sport all too well and that his silence on Astana has been deafening for a guy who professes to have dedicated his life to anti doping!!!!!!!
This sport thought for a split second about getting out of the cesspit, but then it passed and as this the 3rd fastest giro in history shows, doping is still very much part of the fabric of the sport and Hesjedals 5th place places him firmly deep in it.
How can you talk about third fastest giro? How are your source to say this?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Giro_d'Italia_general_classification_winners
Watching this it doesn't look like Contador time is the third ever....
And how is possible to make such strange stat about a Grand Tour that change every year....
Yes, my friend, and perhaps the soigneur can be handingthe delgados said:oldcrank said:Of course Ryder is not riding on bread and water.
More likely a Tim Horton's double double and a
Maple Syrup donut. Well done, Ryder.
That makes his ride even more inspiring. Tim Hortons should capitalize on Ryder's double double ride by making a commercial where Ryder digs in to a maple syrup donut just before he drops Contador on the Finestre.
It would be a moving and inspiring scene.
winkybiker said:I can forgive the doping, but I can't forgive those glasses. Not ever. When he first started wearing them all those years ago, I naturally assumed it was some sort of joke, just to grab publicity. But he keep on wearing them! I think that he thinks that they really look good.
the delgados said:http://thewalrus.ca/tag/ryder-hesjedal/
Really good read about Ryder and cycling in general. I will always cop a quote by the author who says suffering is the currency of cycling.
One thing about the story that struck me is Ryder had a coach taking blood from his arms at an early age in races that didn't matter.
Benotti69 said:Master50 said:Really too bad none of you saw how strong he was at 16. He often started 2 to 5 minutes behind the elite racers and beat them too. His time of service to teams with a doping reputation was always short and each time he moved to a lower profile team. He would up at Health net which to me is a clear indication that what ever he was doing it was not playing the same game. He has suffered the criticisms of many he was racing against at home and has lost friends because of it. Call it naive and in this forum counter to the philosophy they are all still doping the change to Vaughters teams was his chance to play on his real talents than get fired for not playing the team game.
In the context of this Giro one team gives me the impression their licence should have been withdrawn. That is about the sheer numbers there for every attack.
Steve Tilford will tell you all about Hesjedal's doping as a MTBer. Anyone who rides a GT is freak of human nature.
Hesjedal confessed to some of his doping. Hat he dropped Contador on Finestre aint normal even for a freak.
Garmin were never a clean team. End of. JV knows the sport all too well and that his silence on Astana has been deafening for a guy who professes to have dedicated his life to anti doping!!!!!!!
This sport thought for a split second about getting out of the cesspit, but then it passed and as this the 3rd fastest giro in history shows, doping is still very much part of the fabric of the sport and Hesjedals 5th place places him firmly deep in it.
Dear Wiggo said:the delgados said:http://thewalrus.ca/tag/ryder-hesjedal/
Really good read about Ryder and cycling in general. I will always cop a quote by the author who says suffering is the currency of cycling.
One thing about the story that struck me is Ryder had a coach taking blood from his arms at an early age in races that didn't matter.
His coach was taking blood samples for testing when out training, in the forest.
Master50 said:Really too bad none of you saw how strong he was at 16. He often started 2 to 5 minutes behind the elite racers and beat them too. His time of service to teams with a doping reputation was always short and each time he moved to a lower profile team. He would up at Health net which to me is a clear indication that what ever he was doing it was not playing the same game. He has suffered the criticisms of many he was racing against at home and has lost friends because of it. Call it naive and in this forum counter to the philosophy they are all still doping the change to Vaughters teams was his chance to play on his real talents than get fired for not playing the team game.
In the context of this Giro one team gives me the impression their licence should have been withdrawn. That is about the sheer numbers there for every attack.
hulkgogan said:Honestly out of the big BC pro guys at the time, Ryder was the least impressive. Roland or Svein showed up at a local race you knew it was getting blown apart. They show up at a crit, they're gonna lap the field solo. My main memory of Ryder was him showing up at a race - and he must have been 19 or 20 at the time, so no junior - sitting at the back the whole time, making fun of all the roadies with his MB flunkies and then crashing out half way through the race. The only crash. This is the great Canuck hope?
I was frankly shocked he made it at as Euro pro. I think I almost had a heart attack when he won the Giro.
And he still sits at the back.
Moose McKnuckles said:Those glasses a sartorial abomination. He needs to return them to Urkel.
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