BroDeal said:I don't have confirmation that this was a triathlete, but I did get this off Slowtwitch from a guy who works at a tri shop:
We had a guy come in the other day carrying his bike with a "mechanical emergency"
He had dropped his chain and didn't know how to put it back on the chain rings.
I thought that was a prerequisite for participatingBoeing said:Is it just me or do 9 out of 10 tri guys push too big a gear? I'm talking outrageously low cadence. like 60 rpm. in the areos too..
Boeing said:Is it just me or do 9 out of 10 tri guys push too big a gear? I'm talking outrageously low cadence. like 60 rpm. in the areos too..
ElChingon said:Tri-FRED or Tri-GEEK.
See previous two words for your second question.
Alex Simmons/RST said:Possibly, although in solo ultra endurance events that are sub-maximal power for the duration (as in Ironman, RAAM, audax etc), there is a natural tendency to pedal at slower rates. Being in aero position is not really relevant to that.
Boeing said:I learned something from this thread. thanks
stainlessguy1 said:Reading most of the posts , ( sorry I had too stop and get on with life) but;
Judging by all the posters :
I truly believe that there is a huge amount of ill feeling towards triathletes from hard core cyclists ( licensed cyclists) because they (the triathlete) tended to short circuit the mentorship that most of us received from the old school cyclists of years gone by.
The simple fact that my generation learned from that old school of hard knocks and we were licensed from when we were as young as 14 or 15 years old and that cycling was our passion and our transportation and our life.
We didn't have huge television HD vision play by play displayed , we went on group and training rides with veterans instead. WE learned hands on we learned of the riders that even came before our mentors and how they did things. WE were part of cycling clubs and racing teams . period.
I guess in short we learned the traditions and we didn't make new rules just because we drive a BMW and learned bike racing from TV , and can now drop over 5000 to 10,000 dollars on a racing bike.
Does that makes that new breed of rider or triathlete with a fetish for gizmos somehow an expert. I think not.
The resentment will always be there , because hard knowledge and tradition is lacking.
The more horrifying issue is that with each generation that tradition is chopped up and broken down and forgotten, even more.
The second situation about Triathletes is they have an attitude, it seems to affect some types of personalities. That arrogance alone seems to tick off traditional cyclists.
The entire tri-thing is much more of a North American thing in attitude where More of Something that you do somehow elevates a person on the Status Richter scale and makes for great TV view and commentary by Patty Participation, and how its just great to be here today.
That's about folks .![]()
- saw guy on bike with a plastic grocery bag (am talking about a Walgreens one) filled with gels, bars and I think a sandwich. It was hanging off his road bike drop bars. And I saw it out on course (not in transition).
- wetsuit inside out. Looking at it and noticed the washing instructions on the outside and zipper being inside. Did point out and he changed to correct way before start (barely).
- racer doing complete race in cycling bibs only (no wetsuit, no cycling top). And I am talking about all 3 legs. Talked to him after and he was damn funny guy. He thought it was normal attire.
- A person starting relay swim and literally jumped in (with no wetsuit) and waving hand straight away to signal to get them out. All of 8 seconds.
Boeing said:proof that fitness is not a skill set
Soloist said:Hard to believe this thread is still alive. "Cyclists" here need to obtain lives. Now you're ridiculing fitness like it's some foreign quality. If fitness is not one of your skillsets, you really need to ride more. Really. Go for a ride. Today. Now.
Now you can begin the "lighten up" responses. And then keep up this pathology for another year! After you start riding again, get some therapy.
*Yawn*Soloist said:Hard to believe this thread is still alive. "Cyclists" here need to obtain lives. Now you're ridiculing fitness like it's some foreign quality. If fitness is not one of your skillsets, you really need to ride more. Really. Go for a ride. Today. Now.
Now you can begin the "lighten up" responses. And then keep up this pathology for another year! After you start riding again, get some therapy.
TomasC said:Great finds.
Took me a while to realize that the last guy was actually pondering mounting an empty water bottle to decrease drag))
BroDeal said:^^^^ Frustrated triathlete, as if the name did not give it away.
Thank you for reinforcing the impression I had of triathletes.Soloist said:Unfit "cyclist" who got passed by his 1, 2, 3, and 4 minute men at the last time trial he did. His response(s) gives that away.
Rationalization strategy: reclassify strength on the bike so as not to be part of the "cyclist" skill set.
Better strategy: get more fit. This will require work and pulling yourself away from slowtwitch. Lose some weight too.
Soloist said:Unfit "cyclist" who got passed by his 1, 2, 3, and 4 minute men at the last time trial he did. His response(s) gives that away.
Rationalization strategy: reclassify strength on the bike so as not to be part of the "cyclist" skill set.
Better strategy: get more fit. This will require work and pulling yourself away from slowtwitch. Lose some weight too.
Race Radio said:......Someone does not realize that BroDeal is crazy fit dude who runs ultra marathons
3,2,1....
Soloist said:Who nevertheless enjoys trashing triathletes, many of whom are also crazy fit and are also runners
Here's a basic thing that tri-trashers here don't seem to quite comprehend. Bike racing and triathlon are different sports - with different rules and different skill sets. You all know this on some level, because you want to keep tri-geeks (as you call them) out of your exclusive club by ridiculing them, and at the same time you continue to trash them for not being part of your club and for not playing by your rules and standards.
This has to be the most ironic thread at cyclingnews, and it should be renamed as such: on and on endless drivel about "self-important" triathletes, and yet the slowtwitch "researchers" here exhibit nothing but the very same thing they condemn.
All that time researching food for your ridicule machine - good lord, enroll in a class or something. Take a MOOC, or bone up on some skills at your local community college. Learn a programming language. Learn to crochet. Something.
As someone else said, you might consider embracing anyone who is out on the road trying to stay fit, no matter how ungainly it seems to your hyper sensibilities. If you want to unite people, maybe start a thread about aggressive motorists. There's something all cyclists could get behind and relate to.
Or not, peace out.