- Jul 17, 2012
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bernie's eyesore said:both great posts which i enjoyed immeasurably, classic examples of the extremes on both sides of the argument and neither making a single word of sense.
lol
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bernie's eyesore said:both great posts which i enjoyed immeasurably, classic examples of the extremes on both sides of the argument and neither making a single word of sense.
ianfra said:So sad that when people come in to sponsor and promote our sport, there are ne'er-do-wells, no hopers, losers like the poster quoted above - who all they seem to contribute to our sport is rudeness to the sponsors and their riders. You people who find it so easy to talk like this on the net should ask yourself: Could I talk like this face to face with the riders, the managers, the coaches? My guess is that you could not. Because what you say has no substance, no basis in fact and is rude - displaying a complete lack of social skills. Where are the positives? What do you do on a daily basis for our sport? Do you help kids? Do you give of your free time? Or do you just sit at home, all lonely and lost, sniping at those good people that achieve?
The Hitch said:In amidst the white noise you make a good point. Nibali is a doper, proved ferrari client. A Ferrari client climbing specialist who was a talent from the start. And yet Wiggins,a nobody till 2009, and froome, a nobody till 2011 outclimbed him in the tour. Italy's greatest gt prospect in a decade, on a Ferrari programme, and sky at will coughs out "fully clean"riders who he can't even match.
amazing.
Don't be late Pedro said:You were saying a similar thing about Wiggins last Tour. How did that work out for you?
btw Do you suffer from Napoleon complex?
roundabout said:When did Nibali go head to head with Porte?
How does turning pro at 25 relate to the actual talent level?
When did being a consistent top-20 climber in the first GT in the first year of turning pro become a sign of limited ability?
Galic Ho said:Personally I have no issue saying it to your face or any cyclist who tried pushing their lies on me to my face. I actually have upper body mass and can fight. Hockey player talking. We carry weapons into battle.
So you are like 'little' Richie Porte but with a hockey stick. You must garner great respect where you live.Galic Ho said:I was reading his [Richie Porte's] stats on Wikipedia. He's basically my build, well lighter, but yeah, same deal.
Now this made me chuckle.Galic Ho said:Hockey player talking. We carry weapons into battle.
Galic Ho said:I know how to ride a bike little girl. One does not drop chains randomly. It is ones own fault.
Benotti69 said:Paul Kimmage at the whistleblowers event last night compared his 1986 TdF with Wiggins 2006 TdF. Stark!
Kimmage finished 2+ hours down on winner LeMond in a race with 1 rest day.
Wiggins finished 3+ hours down on Landis in a race with 2 rest days.
Both races over 4000kms long.
Walsh talked to Bobby Julich and Julich said that Sky were the 'cleanest' team he ever worked with. Whatever 'cleanest' means for a guy who rode throughout the 'dark era'.
Kimmage said that Walsh being on the inside is not going to learn anything and that he should do what he did with Armstrong, talk to people on the outside.
Don't be late Pedro said:So you are like 'little' Richie Porte but with a hockey stick. You must garner great respect where you live.
Now this made me chuckle.
Like I said...Napoleon complex.
Galic Ho said:No it really was pure accident and some darn manufacturing fault that a bike that retails for more than $10K drops a chain.
I cannot remember the last time I dropped a chain. Then again I know how to shift. Maybe they can blame this one on Tim Kerrison. Knows how to use swimming techniques to get blokes to ride faster but he never learnt how to shift and he confused Wiggins in there somewhere. Man, where is Julich when you need him?Oh my bad...I forgot, he left because Sky are super duper amazingly clean and they didn't need his pro expertise anymore..
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2010 Giro. 2012 Tour.roundabout said:When did Nibali go head to head with Porte?
It doesn't, but typically super talents are recognised early. I know Richie came from tri, but so did Armstrong and he was already a World Champion on the road long before 25. People who turn pro late and hit the top very quickly are of concern, but no more than any other rider who makes huge and sudden strides.How does turning pro at 25 relate to the actual talent level?
When did I say it was a sign of limited ability? It was a sign of not being as good a climber as Nibali, who is older than him by a monolithic two months.When did being a consistent top-20 climber in the first GT in the first year of turning pro become a sign of limited ability?
Are you sure you are not the only person getting hit in the game? I am guessing your 'team mates' also hit you, no?Galic Ho said:No champ. The hockey stick reference is not to threaten. It's to remind. Remind you that I played a sport where you get hit every single game. It's about how we can take a hit. About mental toughness. The exact thing your boy didn't reveal when he threw in the towel. I know it's hard for you Pedro, but you'll forget about this next week. Wiggins had a bad day, okay.![]()
I played Hockey for my university (in goal so didn't need to worry so much about getting hit). I also used to train in kali (escrima).You should play hockey. Very similar to downhill mountain biking. It's for the crazies. Well not entirely. But as I said. It's not about fighting. It's about being able to take a hit. And yes, people do deliberately hit you and aim for you. I've been on the receiving end of a lot of it.
Hey, pick on who you want, Short-round. Why should I be offended?As for Porte. I've said before, he is practically my build and height. I even look a little like him in facial structure, skin tone of course is different. Or did you miss my joking in his thread about how I should have gone to Europe in my early 20s and taken up pro cycling?I guess you didn't see that. Oh well, your loss not mine. Is that your gripe this time? That I'm not duly picking on the Aussie boy as well? Because I have a long history of taking the mickey out of Mick Rogers. I think that has bought me some allotted freebies to exclude the Aussie on Sky just this once.
Galic Ho said:One does not drop chains randomly. It is ones own fault.
Need a mechanic? Deflect some more oh gullible one. I'd hop on the replacement and ride. I'm not the one on the marginal gains plan and over analysing everything to justify my doping. Nor am I washing down, warming up, shaving my nuts, wearing a body suit on top of having my bike arranged specifically for every stage I ride. The gearing on the replacement wasn't absurd. But of course, Wiggins bike(s) both stopped working. What are the statistical odds of that? Better buy a lotto ticket. Be sure to run all your favourite Sky riders dates of birth.
Dropping a chain. Hilarious! You probably hated evil Alberto back in 2010 now didn't you?Poor Andy had the same problem didn't he? Accountability. Your heroes own their mistakes and their behaviour. Wiggins behaved like the git he is and showed how well he takes losing. Not so nice when the proverbial doping fan craps on you is it?
Libertine Seguros said:2010 Giro. 2012 Tour.
It doesn't, but typically super talents are recognised early. I know Richie came from tri, but so did Armstrong and he was already a World Champion on the road long before 25. People who turn pro late and hit the top very quickly are of concern, but no more than any other rider who makes huge and sudden strides.
When did I say it was a sign of limited ability? It was a sign of not being as good a climber as Nibali, who is older than him by a monolithic two months.
But even so: Nibali is a guy who has shown top tier talent from a very early age. As a 21-year-old he was 2nd in Coppi e Bartali, 3rd in a mountain stage and 2nd in the long ITT in the Österreich-Rundfahrt, won Plouay, podiumed Eneco and top 10ed Poland. By the time Richie turned pro Nibali had finished top 20 in 3 GTs and top 10 in another. Nibali is a guy who has been connected to the most notorious doping doctor in the sport. And can we really use the "oh yea but everyone was doping then and isn't doping now" argument that keeps being trotted out tiresomely to explain why Wiggins and Froome made such preposterous leaps in performance, when Nibali is riding as strongly as he ever has (including when he won a GT) and has moved to the notoriously clean Astana squad?
So why do Sky have guys (plural) who can beat him clean? The guy is a major talent, and is likely doping, yet these guys who were nobodies until a couple of years ago have just unlocked the secret of better training? That these clean guys who were being stomped all over and could barely make the top 100 of a GT a few years ago suddenly, in the course of a few months, were able to, without recourse to any substance abuse, unlock something that made far greater performance enhancements than the most successful doping doctor has managed to find in a career spanning 32 years? If that's the case, they're total geniuses, to a man, because they've confounded the combined intellects and abilities of an entire globe's worth of sports scientists, doping doctors and management teams, and all without taking a single shortcut while they've been taking every single shortcut available.
Galic Ho said:No it really was pure accident and some darn manufacturing fault that a bike that retails for more than $10K drops a chain.
I cannot remember the last time I dropped a chain. Then again I know how to shift and to boot I am not riding expensive or even semi epensive gear. Heck it's not even really well maintained and I do not drop chains or have shifting issues.
