- May 29, 2011
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Wasn't talking about the Giro specifically, but a fair point nonetheless, and duly noted. However, I want the king sprinter himself to get shafted, too, and that is only after he actually tried going thru the inferno.Caruut said:Once in a while has been for the past 3 years - Scarponi (from Bert), Cadel and Menchov (from Di Luca). You have to go back to 2008 for the last sprinter to win, with Daniele Bennati.
Earlier, when there was the dispute about hanging onto the car, I said that having to ride the course is punishment enough. Completing the race and losing is what I had in mind. Usually, there is granted salvation at the end but not this time, and that's nice.
This has nothing to do with hating, and all with being occasionally fed up with the stale scripts of the branch of the cultural industry called procycling. It should be racing, human effort pregnant with uncertainties and contradictions, not a robotized assembly line; but in the end we tend to get precisely the opposite, a watered down predictable spectacle that is easy to market.
During this Giro the stages, that is the individual moments of the race might have been dull. However, their interplay ie the dynamic of the race taken as a whole has, to me at least, produced something exiting, something that we de facto did not know beforehands. I'm content with that. Perhaps it's enough to me to see the favorites and stars in trouble. But whattaheck, Im a commie, so it figures.
Also in this sense, although I often tend to contradict hrotha's complaints about conservative racing, I 100% agree with the spirit and ends that he sports. Only I think the means are not simply riding more aggressively when the guys might not have the reserves to do so.
Now, if someone wants argue that a sprinter actually winning the jersey would be the break in the pattern called for by me, that's fine and I cannot say a word. Matter of perspective, I guess.
