- Nov 12, 2010
- 4,253
- 1,315
- 18,680
Afrank said:By the way Hitch, Nibali disagrees with you.
![]()
All hail the new CAESAR
Afrank said:By the way Hitch, Nibali disagrees with you.
![]()
The Hitch said:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NflrLwKVb5Y&feature=youtu.be
Nibali meets papa shark and mama shark in amongst fans.
For the moment, Nibali will set that bike aside, having made a promise to his new wife, Rachele. Mrs. Nibali is waiting for The Shark to hang some curtains at their home in Lugano. The Giro celebrations, plans for the future, and everyone and everything else can wait.
The Hitch said:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NflrLwKVb5Y&feature=youtu.be
Nibali meets papa shark and mama shark in amongst fans.
Parrulo said:AWESOME!!!! It seems like the Italians trully love Nibali, during the last k's of the tre cime climb all you could hear were "Vincenzo" shouts!
Question for the Italians on the forum. What do the Italians think of Nibali and what do they expect of him?
SafeBet said:Well it's not easy to speak on behalf of the whole population. What I feel is that the general opinion about him has truly changed throughout this Giro.
He was perceived as a strong and brave rider before this race, but maybe not exactly a champion, not someone who could represent italian cycling for years to come. Now it's different. Three consecutive front pages on Gazzetta speak for themselves. Even the average Joe can tell you who he is.
Not a legend like Pantani was. Probably still not a national hero. But approaching that level if everything keeps going this way. Sure I haven't seen such enthusiasm for an italian rider since Ivan Basso pre-ban.
Miburo said:Nibali needs to try and do the double, will never succeed imo but just for trying it the italians will love him even more (i think)
He'll be eventually (if not already) more popular than Basso.
Miburo said:Just a question but if Basso didn't have that ban would he have attained the legendary status Pantani had or at least be close to it?
Parrulo said:NO, the italians will love him more if he wins the worlds in Italy later this year.
SafeBet said:Not a chance.
Nobody will ever get close to that.
Sorry to give you the bad news: records are meant to be broken.SafeBet said:Not a chance.
Nobody will ever get close to that.
cineteq said:Sorry to give you the bad news: records are meant to be broken.
You need to read between the lines, that's the thing.Arnout said:It's not about records, that's the thing.
cineteq said:Sorry to give you the bad news: records are meant to be broken.
Miburo said:Not even close? Even if he won the tour that year? Ok not the same status...
quoted for truthSafeBet said:This is not a record. It's not a fact.
It's something much deeper.
Pantani alone could challenge soccer as the national sport if he kept winning that way.
People would stop working just to follow his races.
When he got busted in Madonna di Campiglio I remember streets being unusually quiet. People mourned for days as if a relative had died. Most of those fans literally stopped following cycling because of that, and they haven't come back.
You really have no idea how big of a social phenomenon Pantani was.
Parrulo said:AWESOME!!!! It seems like the Italians trully love Nibali, during the last k's of the tre cime climb all you could hear were "Vincenzo" shouts!
Question for the Italians on the forum. What do the Italians think of Nibali and what do they expect of him?
SafeBet said:Pantani alone could challenge soccer as the national sport if he kept winning that way.
Parrulo said:AWESOME!!!! It seems like the Italians trully love Nibali, during the last k's of the tre cime climb all you could hear were "Vincenzo" shouts!
Question for the Italians on the forum. What do the Italians think of Nibali and what do they expect of him?
Miburo said:Was he at that point even more popular than guys like Maldini and del piero?
I always thought he was by far the most popular cyclist in Italy but challenge football in Italy is quite a feat
