Dear Wiggo said:
This is naive and / or strawmanish (expect to hire an avg gp with no experience).
Experienced GPs who have worked for sports teams have enough experience to work with a pro cycling team. The human body doesn't differ just coz you're a pro cyclist - it reacts the same way to treatment and suffers the same maladies. Where do you think all the amateur cyclists go for treatment? Do you really think pros experience something different to an amateur?
Leinders was hired when?
Atfer Txema died. Txema, who had been ex-doper Millar's soigneur and again, close personal friend, back in the day. And in that same race, a number of Sky riders had to pull out.
Txema was in hospital. No GP is going to trump hospital and A&E care. Noone.
The saddle sore post above is due to the fact that that was one of the reasons given by Brailsford for the hiring of Leinders. Saddle sores. And riding in the heat.
Where do amateur cyclists go? Is that a trick question? They go to the same place that the pros would go - the best doctor available to treat a specific condition, given your economic, social and geographical circumstances. To your average amateur, that might mean your local quack, to a professional cyclist, it might mean a high paid, experienced, specialist.
Re: experience required, you and I can argue all we like about whether cycling specific experience, or just elite sport experience is general is required, but the outcome is irrelevant. An employer, in any country, in any walk of life, in any business, value experience highly as a criteria for employment, almost above anything else. The more relevant, specific and in depth, the better. That's just a fact of life, and I've been on the receiving end myself, when I felt I was the best man for the job. I'm sure we can all agree that's how it works - and Sky have simply followed that principle.