- Jul 6, 2010
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Alpe d'Huez said:I feel your pain. And I'm an admin here.
I'm not really looking to be done with all of it, and I'd guess you aren't either, but it's become nearly impossible to watch racing when every single time you think there's some sense of hope for integrity to where someone clean actually has a chance, the rug is pulled out underneath you and you're kicked in the gut, or lower.
Where left do we turn to admire the beauty of the sport?
I still ask the same questions as before. Would you want your child to get into competitive cycling today? Would your business sponsor the sport? If you ran a broadcast network, would you cover the sport? Do you think you could even get a sponsor for the broadcast?
At the rate we're going, pretty soon there won't be much money left, crowds will remain, but diminish and be jaded, and the talent pool of young athletes is going to dry up.
Haha! You're right... I can't be done with 'all' of it. I'm a multi-generational bike racer, and have the beauty of the sport too deeply ground into my genes to honestly drive it out of my life entirely. Although I'm feeling a bit more jaded and spiteful about the scene in general.
As to admiring the beauty of the sport? It was great in the pre-EPO days, but then that ended. It used to be the amatures at the big games etc., then the pros got in... It used to be U23, then that got corrupted by the pros... It used to be the jrs., then they started allying themselves with the pro teams and getting popped...
If my kids really want to give cycling a shot, I'll support them. That's how I got into it - I gave it a shot after running through a couple of other sports, and it was there, my dad did it, and I thought I could do it. I'm also prepared to be honest with them about it, and I'll be there with my shoulder to cry on when they get their idealistic dreams smashed.
Fortunately that can still be a valid lesson from sport - cheating is cheating, life's NOT fair, and chances are that it'll kick you in nuts at some point.
My problem is that I really am an idealist. A previous poster mentioned that sport is supposed to vicious, and I totally agree. The ideal of sport is that your viciousness should be played out in an arena of explicit fairness. That's not to say that sport's fair, it's not - someone wins, everyone else is beaten. It's to say that the ideal of sport should be that you are standing (or riding) there with nothing but what nature has given you. Then the gloves come off, and what happens happens. Disparaging that beautiful nature of sport through doping does nothing good for anyone, and can really be destructive to the psyches of the cheaters - providing they give a sh*t.
Would I sponsor cycling? From a corporate standpoint, of course! There's no such thing as bad advertising, you're still getting your name out to millions of fans and the few thousand ****ers and moaners (present company included) really don't ammount to much in the end...
Am I sounded bitter enough, yet?