- Jul 23, 2009
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I agree, the results to date don't match those statements. But he has to think of himself as the best or he won't stand a chance of winning. He's never struck me as being arrogant so I wish him good health and good luck.
ludwig said:I get irritated by fans dissing Danielson for not scoring Top 5 in the Vuelta, or failing to be the next Lance, or being a head case etc....
Sigh. Look if he was Top 5 in the Vuelta, wouldn't he be castigated as a doper in The Clinic? Isn't it possible that we fans aren't aware of the full context behind Danielson's performances or failures to meet expectations? I think there may be something more than stomach bugs or illnesses involved here. The guy might be trying to play it safe, he might be trying to keep it (relatively) clean. There might be a lot more variables involved here than Danielson's mental attitude.
People need to keep at mind that the first time Slipstream tried to compete in Europe (in Catalunya and Portugal) they got stomped--only a few of them finished each event. That's how hard these events are for clean(ish) teams. It might be good to remember these facts before castigating a rider like Danielson for not being the next Armstrong (or more accurately, the next Landis or Hamilton).
Cobblestones said:He's back until the season starts, then the rubber of ambition will meet the road of reality. Sadly the last chapter of the drama will play out in the autobus.
Hubris, nemesis and catharsis.
Alpe d'Huez said:Yes, exactly. And whether it's part of his own, or others doing, he's repeatedly been heralded as someone on the cusp of doing something really big. This has gone on for several years now, with one disappointment after another after another. And many of his these letdowns have been for odd excuses, right after he was expected to finally bloom.
Cogombre said:... The thing with Tom is that he's giving constant excuses about his performance, instead of saying "guys, I tried, but I can't", and now he comes with that statement.
auscyclefan94 said:I would like to see TD go well as he is not a lucky cyclist.
Mountain Goat said:Unfortunately, saying "I can't" doesn't get you a professional contract next year. He has to be positive, as soon as he gives up, his career is over (Periero is a recent example of giving up)
I think despite what everyone is saying here, he actually has some pretty good results. Top ten in the Vuelta more than once is pretty impressive in my opinion.
I wish Tom all the best for 2010 and hopefully he gets a role in the tour team as a mountain domestique for VDV. Get through a GT as a helper, and then maybe focus on the Vuelta top 5 or podium if he feels he can.
As long as the guy never says the words "I can't" and always says the words "I can" I will respect him more than most other cyclists. To me TD is a clean rider who has one or two bad days every three weeks. A GT is very tough to finish, let alone rider for GC, so I think it's acceptable really.
He has been praised for so long now, but that's not his fault. He has talent, he has the fitness, and one day he will put the talent and the fitness together with the 3-week endurance and crack a top 5 in a GT.
Thoughtforfood said:Seriously? Tommy D has a thread started on the 28th of October and is still on the first page on November 6th? Dude, either cycling is in the toilet, or not having a race to discuss just makes people stupid.
Cogombre said:You misunderstood me, or I expressed wrong. I didn't say that he should give up and become an average rider. He can achieve very good results in the GT, as he's a good climber and TTer. What I meant is that, instead of giving excuses for not winning, he could be proud of his good results, as you pointed out, and of course be optimist for the next years. I really look forward to see Tom improving in his GT skills, but I don't think he should give more excuses. It's the excuses what I criticize, not his ambition.
ludwig said:He's racked up a nice palamares...
Alpe d'Huez said:He has, Luwdig, for a UCI Continental level rider. Problem is, he's always being pushed as a ProTour level rider, and a potential GT contender. To say "as good as anyone in the world on any given day" doesn't equate with races like Pamona Valley or Vuelta Borgos.
This is why I often compared him to Scott Moninger. A fellow American a few years older, who won many, many races. Many more than Tom ever will, on a fairly similar level, though I doubt Scott could have pulled a top-10 at the Vuelta. But Scott was very durable, and won way more than anyone ever imagined. But no one ever said he was the next great American, or could win the Tour, or was as good as anyone in the world on any given day. He just quietly kept winning.
Mountain Goat said:Perhaps I misunderstood a little there.
I guess the issue that bothers me in these kind of threads (re: Cadel threads too) is that people are quick to point out that someone is making excuses for their performances
Personally, I don't view these as excuses, but rather reasons, for why their performance suffers.
At the end of a bad day, the interviewer will inevitably ask "What what wrong?"... Now if TD had a stomach complaint, or if Cadel coughed up plegm etc etc, then answering the interviewers question is not making excuses, it's just a reason for what happened.
I think people are taking these responses in a negative way and labelling a rider as a whinger or always making excuses. From where I am sitting, if a rider feels there was a problem that was out of their hands, then why shouldn't they respond to the interviewers questions with that problem?
I really do think the internet cycling media takes rider's perspectives out of context, which is why whenever I read a quote from a rider, I read it with caution as it is very difficult to establish their emotion and context behind their response.