- May 3, 2010
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ToreBear said:Yep, we are all looking for the sky doctors while the ones we should really have a look at are the team tailors.![]()
I think a requirement of being a British cyclist is that you have to dress like a ****
ToreBear said:Yep, we are all looking for the sky doctors while the ones we should really have a look at are the team tailors.![]()
Mrs John Murphy said:I think a requirement of being a British cyclist is that you have to dress like a ****
Freddythefrog said:Well of course he did but he never was convicted of a positive test and was not caught in possession.
Compare and contrast with the garbage put out about the Olympic Team Sprint. Hindes admits team GB broke the rules. GB management knew they broke the rules. But, exactly like Lance, they were not convicted.
Not caught, so nothing done wrong.
And it was not an insignificant event. Mess up at the start or the changeover in this event and it is "game over". That is the race. It was game over.
OK so if they had put their hands up, the gold would have gone to France and they had also twisted the rules and backdated a penalty so their doper (sorry, exactly like Longo - not a doper but person who missed a scheduled test) could ride. So taking the comparison of sins (what a sh*t hole to be in) Hindes' deliberate fall was a lesser sin than that of the French Federation in squeezing Bauge the ride. So that makes it ok ?
But then in the debate, Steve Peters Brailsford and Sutton, when they discussed the pros and cons of "mea culpa" that afternoon in the velodrome, what happened to morality? I suggest exactly the same thing that happened to morality when discussing employing Barry, Leinders or Yates. Brailsford knew exactly what he was taking on and payed the odds. And in doing so entered a game of "not being discovered" as opposed to "doing it right". Therefore only "degree" differs between the GB gold in the team sprint in London for Sir Chris and Lance's Tour wins, after all, just like the French, weren't the rest cheats as well ?
The fact that the whole lot is a sack of trash, is the true sign that there can be no place for Pat or Hein. If it stinks at the top it is not going to clean itself on the way down. The decision to ride the comms at London and "they have not got the bottle to kick out two GB teams in 10 minutes and rob the Nation of Sir Chris's dream AND give it to the cheating French", was as morally bankrupt as letting cancer Jesus off in 1999. They were both wrong. And both taken by the men at the top. Arise Sir David Brailsford.
JimmyFingers said:I think Wiggins may support Froome, he does ride for others well called on. I think he wants to fill out his palmeres so may target the Giro and the Worlds in the coming season.
Libertine Seguros said:I hope you mean the Worlds TT, because if Wiggins were to win the Worlds RR in 2013, this thread would explode to an extent even greater than the Tour win.
Libertine Seguros said:Wiggins has never really shown any ability in one-day racing ... has little to no real explosivity...
Wallace and Gromit said:Re one-day racing, a decade of showing no form in stage racing didn't prove to be an insurmountable handicap to winning this year's Tour, though given his age now, further striking developments are not that likely, one would think.
Wallace and Gromit said:Re explosivity, I'd agree that he's never shown any on long uphills, but a guy who has excelled at the TP and won a sprint finish in a stage race must have a fair amount of acceleration to draw on. I guess the issue is how explosive he is with 200 hard kilometers in his legs.
Wallace and Gromit said:Re one-day racing, a decade of showing no form in stage racing didn't prove to be an insurmountable handicap to winning this year's Tour, though given his age now, further striking developments are not that likely, one would think.
Dear Wiggo said:They haven't been to the wind tunnel yet. I am sure they could add that marginal gain and boost him another 5% at least...
Being able to outsprint people after a few days leg-sapping riding is all about recovery and not the same as doing it the first day (ala a one-day race). If he wins the worlds in anything but a TT, we will have to revisit the Tim Kerrison program of prepratore with perhaps somewhat greater disbelief.![]()
roundabout said:The sprint which he won was on the first road stage in the Tour de Romandie.
That said, I think in a small group sprint where the acceleration really counts he will still have problems.
JimmyFingers said:I read he wanted both, not necessarily this year. He talked about the Tour being like the Olympics for him, something to be targeted every few years, I think he's happy with having won one. He talked about wanting to add the Giro and Paris Roubaix and the Worlds to his palmeres.
Are you saying a rider of his style couldn't win the world RR, or just the 2013 parcours? We saw him win a sprint in the Tour of Romandie, he's a handy six-day/Madison rider. Cav would win the sprints and Bradley would take the lap, not explosive but able to TT away from the bunch, on the track granted.
Telmisartan new said:This thread is descending into farce now.Wiggins a possible for Worlds RR? Paris-Roubaix? There is more chance of Cav winning a summit finish at the Tour,its fantasy stuff,Wiggins at the hell of the north riding everyone off his wheel and just TTing away from the field,maybe somewhere around Mons-en-Pevele and cruising into the Roubaix Velodrome after riding 60k solo,do me a favour,the known cobbles master Wiggins? I know who started this stuff a few posts back and i am not surprised.At least its been treated with the scorn and derision it deserves.Wiggins, you'd think he invented the sport the way some people go on.A guy posted a while back what is Wiggins apart from a f**king boring rider with a bad attitude. Couldn't have put it better myself.
thehog said:Reminds me of the "Hincapie for the Tour" threads back in '05.
William H said:Do you think Wiggins not targetting the Tour next year suggests he's decided to quit while he's ahead?
BroDeal said:I think it makes his TdF win look even more suspicious. If he legitimately won the Tour, climbing with the best, then why not try again. Even with a route that might favor Froome over Wiggins, there are lots of things that can go wrong with Froome's attempt. There is everyting from crashing to being off form to a reappearance of his blood disease. There have been so many crashes of contenders the last couple of years that it has become a bit of a crap shoot for a rider to reach the mountains still in contention.
It is hard to escape the feeling that Wiggins doped to his eyeballs to win one Tour and is now playing it smart by not trying to tempt fate.
Dear Wiggo said:It'd be like winning a world champs and one Olympic medal in IP and saying, meh think I'll round out my palmares with a points race medal next.
I thought the Italian mountains tended to be steeper and stuff? Wouldn't that knock Wiggins for 6?
BroDeal said:I think it makes his TdF win look even more suspicious. If he legitimately won the Tour, climbing with the best, then why not try again. Even with a route that might favor Froome over Wiggins, there are lots of things that can go wrong with Froome's attempt. There is everyting from crashing to being off form to a reappearance of his blood disease. There have been so many crashes of contenders the last couple of years that it has become a bit of a crap shoot for a rider to reach the mountains still in contention.
It is hard to escape the feeling that Wiggins doped to his eyeballs to win one Tour and is now playing it smart by not trying to tempt fate.
BroDeal said:Steeper mountains in the Giro and the Vuelta, and lots more of them than the Tour. The Tour's climbs rarely go over 10% grade, and the racing style used at the Tour favors a diesel-like rider. Then again, Basso (post 2005), Menchov, and Hesjedal all managed to win the Giro.
Dear Wiggo said:Ah yes there's a good list of cleanliness right there...
I don't recall Wiggins getting out of the saddle once during the TdF. Wow. He didn't even sprint out of the saddle at Romandie. When Froome was smashing himself in one finish, out of the saddle, Wiggins was sitting on his wheel, then crossed the line hardly breathing. Froome was smashing himself.
FellOff said:Wiggins has never got out of saddle, that's his style of riding, he's famous for it, it's his trademark. Surprised people here are unaware of that.
He said during this years TDF that he would support Froome next year, so another thing to not be overly surprised about.
Saying Wiggins was hardly breathing is rewriting reality: he was clearly rescued by Froome more than once. The truth is, the others weren't strong enough (or doped enough?) to put him under pressure when it counted.
Perhaps you missed the TDF this year?
FellOff said:Wiggins has never got out of saddle, that's his style of riding, he's famous for it, it's his trademark. Surprised people here are unaware of that.
He said during this years TDF that he would support Froome next year, so another thing to not be overly surprised about.
Saying Wiggins was hardly breathing is rewriting reality: he was clearly rescued by Froome more than once. The truth is, the others weren't strong enough (or doped enough?) to put him under pressure when it counted.
Perhaps you missed the TDF this year?
The Hitch said:I remember seeing wiggins out of the saddle at the annency tt, in the early parts, way before the hill. I remember because that very day i went for a cycle for the first time in years and was wondering whether going out of the saddle was a good thing to try and copy.