Mambo95 said:
What my veiled point was, is that there are many cycling fans on here and elsewhere that over romanticise this sport, probably having read flowery prose about the greats of the past. And they use this romaniticism to elevate themselves above the 'July Fan', for want of a better phrase, because they understand the soul of the sport.
In reality, it is, and always has been, a very cynical sport. And a simple sport - first across the line wins. The likes of Txurruka and Hoogerland aren't daring dreamers that many like to think they are. Their riders who know that can't win but getting on TV will get themselves publicity and more money.
This is professional sport. Winning is what counts. How you win is only of interest to a small minority.
Respectively disagree with all.
First of all under that logic most sports are simple. Team with most goals wins. Person who jumps highest wins. Person who throws furthest wins. And theres of first over the line wins.
And GTs arent neccesarily first over line wins. Lowest accumulated time over 21 stages - time bonuses + time added by race official trying screw you because they like andy schleck and evans better. Not so simple now is it?
Second of all it is a romantic sport. Its main staging points are the areas most associated with romance and beauty. Paris. The Alpes. French viniards. Northern Italy. I dont think any other sport offers that.
And considering the pain barriers faced, falling in love with the sport is necessary to success.
And I think there is a lot there to be romantiscised. The Bartali and Coppi stories for 1. A hero who used his cycling to save lives and contribute to war effort. A national icon who fell too young. The achievments of Mercx, the ferocity of Hinault, the personality of Indurain.
And these guys were not rock stars, or actors or footballers. They all rode through countries and mountains, rain and snow and sun, armed with nothing more than a bicycle.
I also think that those of us who follow the sport all year round, care about its protagonists, care about its history, have a right to elevate ourselves above July fans. I dont see anything wrong with elitism. I certainatly will look down on anyone who tries to say Lance is the greatest rider of all time because he won 7 tdfs and the best before only one 5.
Thirdly, how someone wins is very important. A heroic 30k effort stays far longer in the memory (collective fan memory so to speak) than all those stages Cav won into wherever the **** other than Bordeaux and Paris.
Ive seen a clips or pictures of Mayo crossing Alpe finish line 8 years ago more times than i have seen Greipel victory in this years edition (and no i have not gone looking for Mayo videos on youtube or any other sight).
The only Champs Elysee finish ive seen before 2004 was Bernard Hinaults victory. Why? Because it was an epic solo. And i think a lot of people would agree with me that that 1 victory was worth more than all of Cavs Champs wins combined, even if he wins another 3 or 4.
And what is the one Champs Elysee finish you get hordes of fans calling for an attempted repeat of, every year come the end of July? Cav 09? Benati 07? Mcewen 2002?
Due to your admittedly very impressive cycling knowledge, I can safely assume that i don't need to write the answer down. You know which year and rider im talking about.