The rider's tribute ride to a colleague and friend: Giro d'Italia Stage 4

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Feb 4, 2011
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CatsNK said:
Where are the pics in the gazetta? Sorry, the commentators are talking about them - mentioned here - is the only place to see them if you are holding the paper? Thanks.

it's on the paper... but it's online also (somewhere). It's not a nice picture, but you can't see the face of the poor Wouter... you can see some blood and part of his body...
 
May 25, 2010
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Riding at a certain tempo like they are is at least a bit practical as well as commemorative in that the riders wont go onto the next stage with a completely interrupted routine. Not trying to say its all about the racing but at least tomorrow if they want to give it their all they wont be completely stuffed as they might have been from a day of no racing (and limited riding).
 
Jul 3, 2009
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They are almost at 37km/h average for the day. They will have to take it very easy on or after to climb to make sure no one is dropped.
 
Feb 15, 2011
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Very respectful and touching moment at the start today.

Impossible to imagine what the family, friends, teammates and fellow racers are going through right now, as it was hard enough for me, without knowing the person besides his racing.
 
Jul 27, 2010
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Don't know if this has been posted before, but Bonnie Ford had this to say about the dangers of cycling:

The risks in road cycling at this level are truly beyond comprehension for those of us who don't do it for a living. We tend to focus on the strength, endurance and tactics required in the climbs and the reflexes it takes to survive and prosper in bunch sprints because they easily translate to television, which is how 99 percent of us see races.

But there is absolutely no way to convey what these athletes do when they go downhill. The speed, the body control, the fluidity, the instinct and science of picking a line -- they make it look easy. Some of them even revel in it. We talk about "making up time" or "catching back on" in descents as if it's routine, but five minutes as a passenger in a team car in the Dauphine Libere race in the Alps years ago was enough to convince me that it is the most underappreciated aspect of the sport.

And I didn't know this about Tyler Farrar:

Farrar, whose surgeon father Ed lost the use of his lower body in a bike-car accident three years ago, has already endured more than his share of heartache.

http://sports.espn.go.com/oly/cycling/columns/story?columnist=ford_bonnie_d&id=6515689
 
Mar 11, 2009
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As the memorial procession rides closer to it's conclusion, it is noticeable that the commentary is subtly becoming a little less somber.
Perhaps, starting to try to look ahead, rather than just to reflect.
 
Mar 11, 2009
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Rai have a presenter who sits on a laptop and reads comments from Facebook and the like, he was just on these forums and read out the last couplet of the poem someone posted in the memorial thread.
 
Jul 28, 2010
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Those are some very nice pictures of the fans on the road.
Any other day, that climb would be a nightmare. Glad it's not today.
 
Apr 20, 2009
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I'm a bit late to the game on this thread, but...

It's interesting and appropriate that they are making a memorial of this stage -but doing so at a very high pace. The peloton's not dropping the hammer, but they are certainly flying right along. For whatever reason that feels quite fitting to me.