I have been around. Unfortunatley in our US CULTURE WE GET A LITTLE PROVINCIAL. We miss the comfortable thing in our country,(actually which I disdain, like micky Ds, comfort food, Venice Beach, comfy roads in Colorado, you know the typical American white bread culture.)
So to be a top rider in Europe, like Gilbert, Evans Cantador, ya gotta live the culture.
Nothing bad about Tjs riding. It is the American culture which hurts him.[/QUOTE]
Are you employing the Royal "We" when you describe US "culture"? Since you disdain some selected provincial pitfalls we'd be led to assume your cultural standards had something to do with actual experience. That sort of generalization made toward any Euro culture would certainly net some outrage.
The assumption that TJ labors under the same unenlightened cultural exposure that riders in the 80's, early 90's experienced is quite a leap. While you may assume US racing isn't as hard (you'd be dead wrong) most any credible current day rider is aware of travel hardships. Ability to travel and adapt is a key talent to any big-league athlete wherever they come from.
Horner's inability to "adapt" had more to do with being outside of F de J's program of preparation than his diet. He's clearly overcome that adaptation process.
By the way...most folks claiming a cultural advantage know how to spell...or at least use Spellcheck.