thehog
BANNED
- Jul 27, 2009
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El Oso said:like July 26th![]()
Read the comments below this article:
http://velonews.competitor.com/2010/04/news/leipheimer-abbott-win-gila-opener_113582
Classic.
El Oso said:like July 26th![]()
Dr. Maserati said:Write it down...... May 8th!
This is how Lance is going to win the Tour.
![]()
thehog said:Read the comments below this article:
http://velonews.competitor.com/2010/04/news/leipheimer-abbott-win-gila-opener_113582
Classic.
Publicus said:Absolutely hilarious.
thehog said:Read the comments below this article:
http://velonews.competitor.com/2010/04/news/leipheimer-abbott-win-gila-opener_113582
Classic.
thehog said:Read the comments below this article:
http://velonews.competitor.com/2010/04/news/leipheimer-abbott-win-gila-opener_113582
Classic.
thehog said:Its bizarre logical that some are applying here. Its doesn’t take a rocket scientist to work out if your race form all year has been close to diabolical then your major race goal of the year probably wont be achieved. Yet expert fans suggest; “ The form rule applies to all bar Lance who knows himself very well and can peak at the right time”.
If I was gunning for the Tour and I could barely finish a Euro race in the grupetto and get dropped by US-Semi Pros I’d be worried. But no. This is just indication that the year is well on track and its only March.
Thoughtforfood said:I miss the old days when fanboys were brave enough to post regularly on forums. Dang, good times, good times.
BroDeal said:With the Paceline dead and Daily Peloton on its last legs, the fanboys appear to have congregated to Velosnooze. There are fequently some real howlers posted as comments to Velonews stories. After you read them you sit there for a moment, stunned by the sheer stupidity. It is like some of these people are completely incapable of independent thought.
Thoughtforfood said:Yea, it seems their only safe harbor...well, that and RBR, but that place is dying too. It is one of the reasons I anxiously await the day he retires for good. We will keep watching cycling and commenting, and the fanboys will go the way of the dinosaur. I bet VN goes tits up within a couple of years after his retirement.
BikeCentric said:Lance only races hard in the one race he cares about, and that's the Toor-Day-France, the biggest and bestest bike race in the whole wide World. The Toor-Day-France is the only good thing the cheese-eating surrender monkey French people have ever created, and now all French people hate excellence and people who win. Lance is so super-human jacked up on awesomeness that he can soft-pedal all year long untill TDF time where he will crush all the haters by pedaling at a higher cadence than everyone else - all the other stupid pro cyclists have simply never tried spinning their pedals faster like Lance does. At the same time Lance is crushing the haters up the mountains of France he will also kill every remaining cancer cell that exists in the world with laser beams that shoot out of his eyes.
If anyone doubts this let me remind you that it's only April. Lance gifted the win to Levi yesterday in the Gila just like he did to Marco Pantani in 2002 because Lance is the most generous man who has ever lived. Viva Saint Lance!
thehog said:This stuff is gold:
[
- .I would say base on the fact that he was back at the team car, a good two min.s from the break at the bottom of the Mogollon and was able to ride through 180 plus riders and bridge to the break, then set up the winning move for Levi……he looks pretty good.
altark123 said:Is this true?
BroDeal said:With the Paceline dead and Daily Peloton on its last legs, the fanboys appear to have congregated to Velosnooze. There are fequently some real howlers posted as comments to Velonews stories. After you read them you sit there for a moment, stunned by the sheer stupidity. It is like some of these people are completely incapable of independent thought.
Berzin said:I love the Velonews site. Some of those guys take it very personal that I hate Armstrong and love Contador and Vino-very easy to get under the skin of the teabaggers over there.
But overall a nice group of posters.
nvpacchi said:So Lance drops out of MSR takes two weeks off then puts in a respectable Top 30 finish in Rvv.
Then he drops out of the Sarthe, takes another few weeks off enters the Gila then struggles to finish 21st in a national event.
Am I missing something or is this strange to anyone else? Lance is nowhere near a man for the cobbles, yet he does just as well or better than former podium finishers in RvV, after taking two weeks off the bike.
And now he can't even put a top 10, let alone a top 20 in a watered down National field, where he should undoubtedly excel??
Lance claims the altitude caused his struggles in the Gila, but it doesn't add up. He finishes top 30 in a cycling monument after two weeks off, but can't ride in altitude for the Gila? Something just isn't adding up for me.
Publicus said:Not to mention that he was in Aspen for the last couple of weeks, which I hear is at altitude.
It looks like his girlfriend/baby mamma is pregnant again. That's gotta be great for his focus and concentration.
thehog said:Does any of this make sense?
“People can talk about domestic or American races, but I don’t think that’s necessarily accurate,” Armstrong said. “The field is fast and American pros are strong. The other key thing here is that it’s an altitude race and there are a lot of guys that live at altitude so it’s not a big adjustment for them. Us lowlanders come up here and definitely pay the price for being at five, six or seven thousand feet and making efforts, it’s difficult.”
“It’s only been a few days but yesterday was not a good day, I was off,” Armstrong said. “Today I felt a bit better and we will see about tomorrow, although I feel a little tired after today. We all know the main goal here so I just have to build that up step-by-step. This is important, California is important and whatever [race] we pick in June will be the most important when it comes to preparation and then the Tour.”
“I was on the front and then all of a sudden the little guy attacked around and I said, ‘OK, that’s good, I’ll sit up now thank you very much’,” Armstrong said. “He’s strong and it’s in good time for Cali.”
nvpacchi said:So Lance drops out of MSR takes two weeks off then puts in a respectable Top 30 finish in Rvv.
Then he drops out of the Sarthe, takes another few weeks off enters the Gila then struggles to finish 21st in a national event.
Am I missing something or is this strange to anyone else? Lance is nowhere near a man for the cobbles, yet he does just as well or better than former podium finishers in RvV, after taking two weeks off the bike.
And now he can't even put a top 10, let alone a top 20 in a watered down National field, where he should undoubtedly excel??
Lance claims the altitude caused his struggles in the Gila, but it doesn't add up. He finishes top 30 in a cycling monument after two weeks off, but can't ride in altitude for the Gila? Something just isn't adding up for me.
cyclopeon said:Clearly this must mean that the competition and racing are harder in the US of A.![]()
Publicus said:I heard the Tour of California is on par with a Grand Tour.
