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#1 |
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Guest
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Celebrating individual stage victories is just another sign that the
sport is Dry Humping The Gorilla http://velonews.com/photo/76771 |
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#2 |
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On May 28, 10:46*am, Snack <sn...@snackshack.com> wrote:
> Celebrating individual stage victories is just another sign that the > sport is Dry Humping The Gorilla > > http://velonews.com/photo/76771 Ah, but isn't it nice to know that an albino can grow up to win a stage in the Giro rather than becoming a cold-blooded killer for Christ? Yeah, try thinking of it that way. ABS |
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#3 |
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In article <8930f83d-e533-4b79-a592-baf146f08eb6@f24g2000prh.googlegroups.com>,
alanstew@sbcglobal.net wrote: > On May 28, 10:46*am, Snack <sn...@snackshack.com> wrote: > > Celebrating individual stage victories is just another sign that the > > sport is Dry Humping The Gorilla > > > > http://velonews.com/photo/76771 > > Ah, but isn't it nice to know that an albino can grow up to win a > stage in the Giro rather than becoming a cold-blooded killer for > Christ? > Yeah, try thinking of it that way. > ABS I wonder where he gets the sweat-resistant SPF 250. -- tanx, Howard Whatever happened to Leon Trotsky? He got an icepick That made his ears burn. remove YOUR SHOES to reply, ok? |
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#4 |
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"Snack" <snack@snackshack.com> wrote in message
news:HJidnaaXWcKxBqDVnZ2dnUVZ_ozinZ2d@comcast.com... > Celebrating individual stage victories is just another sign that the > sport is Dry Humping The Gorilla > > http://velonews.com/photo/76771 Is there something about riding a bicycle that causes people to write things like this? -S- |
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#5 |
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On May 29, 9:42*am, "GoneBeforeMyTime" <F...@EuroForums.com> wrote:
> Riddle me this, is cycling a individual sport or a team sport? > > Big snip < Axel Merckx pulled for Floyd Landis in the TdF on the big comeback... and a few years before Floyd did the same for Lance. Patton won some battles, but Eisenhower gets credit for winning the war. Winning stages ISN'T stupid, it's just part of a bigger picture. Since they're all there anyway, why not spread around some glory to stage winners? ABS |
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#6 |
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alanstew@sbcglobal.net wrote:
> On May 29, 9:42 am, "GoneBeforeMyTime" <F...@EuroForums.com> wrote: >> Riddle me this, is cycling a individual sport or a team sport? >> >> Big snip < > > Axel Merckx pulled for Floyd Landis in the TdF on the big comeback... > and a few years before Floyd did the same for Lance. > > Patton won some battles, but Eisenhower gets credit for winning the > war. > > Winning stages ISN'T stupid, it's just part of a bigger picture. > Since they're all there anyway, why not spread around some glory to > stage winners? > > ABS Hell, winning stages is the only thing that counts. Stage racing is stupid except for the fact that every day is a new race. Crossing the line first... that's what bike racing was meant to be. |
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#7 |
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"Geraard Spergen" <GeraardSpergen@spammagnet.net> wrote in message news:028ad879$0$25015$c3e8da3@news.astraweb.com... > alanstew@sbcglobal.net wrote: >> On May 29, 9:42 am, "GoneBeforeMyTime" <F...@EuroForums.com> wrote: >>> Riddle me this, is cycling a individual sport or a team sport? >>> >>> Big snip < >> >> Axel Merckx pulled for Floyd Landis in the TdF on the big comeback... >> and a few years before Floyd did the same for Lance. >> >> Patton won some battles, but Eisenhower gets credit for winning the >> war. >> >> Winning stages ISN'T stupid, it's just part of a bigger picture. >> Since they're all there anyway, why not spread around some glory to >> stage winners? >> >> ABS > > Hell, winning stages is the only thing that counts. Stage racing is > stupid except for the fact that every day is a new race. Crossing the > line first... that's what bike racing was meant to be. I enjoy cycling much more from a philosophical standpoint then from a logical standpoint, where helps to me to tolerate all the shortcomings, but for me, cycling will always be an individual sport. GBMT |
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#8 |
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GoneBeforeMyTime wrote:
> > I enjoy cycling much more from a philosophical standpoint then from a > logical standpoint, where helps to me to tolerate all the shortcomings, but > for me, cycling will always be an individual sport. > Is that because nobody wants to ride with you? |
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#9 |
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GoneBeforeMyTime wrote:
> "MagillaGorilla" <magilla@zoo.com> wrote in message > news:qKCdnTz4Bp9DEKPVnZ2dnUVZ_ofinZ2d@ptd.net... > >>> MagillaGorilla <magilla@zoo.com> wrote: > > >>That's the mentality that's destroying the sport right there. >> >>Magilla > > > Riddle me this, is cycling a individual sport or a team sport? > > Cycling is a team sport. Magilla |
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#10 |
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Geraard Spergen wrote:
> alanstew@sbcglobal.net wrote: > >> On May 29, 9:42 am, "GoneBeforeMyTime" <F...@EuroForums.com> wrote: >> >>> Riddle me this, is cycling a individual sport or a team sport? >>> >>> Big snip < >> >> >> Axel Merckx pulled for Floyd Landis in the TdF on the big comeback... >> and a few years before Floyd did the same for Lance. >> >> Patton won some battles, but Eisenhower gets credit for winning the >> war. >> >> Winning stages ISN'T stupid, it's just part of a bigger picture. >> Since they're all there anyway, why not spread around some glory to >> stage winners? >> >> ABS > > > Hell, winning stages is the only thing that counts. Stage racing is > stupid except for the fact that every day is a new race. Crossing the > line first... that's what bike racing was meant to be. Hey dumbass, The best racers in a stage race don't even contend for each stage. So winning a stage during a stage race is stupid because 50% of the peloton isn't even going for the win. So when some guy crosses the line first, why is so happy? It's the equivalent of a NASCAR driver celebrating every lap he wins before the final lap. It's stupid, and assinine. Magilla |
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#11 |
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GoneBeforeMyTime wrote:
> "Geraard Spergen" <GeraardSpergen@spammagnet.net> wrote in message > news:028ad879$0$25015$c3e8da3@news.astraweb.com... > >>alanstew@sbcglobal.net wrote: >> >>>On May 29, 9:42 am, "GoneBeforeMyTime" <F...@EuroForums.com> wrote: >>> >>>>Riddle me this, is cycling a individual sport or a team sport? >>>> >>>>Big snip < >>> >>>Axel Merckx pulled for Floyd Landis in the TdF on the big comeback... >>>and a few years before Floyd did the same for Lance. >>> >>>Patton won some battles, but Eisenhower gets credit for winning the >>>war. >>> >>>Winning stages ISN'T stupid, it's just part of a bigger picture. >>>Since they're all there anyway, why not spread around some glory to >>>stage winners? >>> >>>ABS >> >>Hell, winning stages is the only thing that counts. Stage racing is >>stupid except for the fact that every day is a new race. Crossing the >>line first... that's what bike racing was meant to be. > > > I enjoy cycling much more from a philosophical standpoint then from a > logical standpoint, where helps to me to tolerate all the shortcomings, but > for me, cycling will always be an individual sport. > > GBMT Then you may want to tell the riders who win and thank their teammates "for whom my victory wouldn't have been possible" to stop lying. Magilla |
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#12 |
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"MagillaGorilla" <magilla@zoo.com> wrote in message news:LLydnTiJrPVkdaLVnZ2dnUVZ_szinZ2d@ptd.net... > GoneBeforeMyTime wrote: > >> "Geraard Spergen" <GeraardSpergen@spammagnet.net> wrote in message >> news:028ad879$0$25015$c3e8da3@news.astraweb.com... >> >>>alanstew@sbcglobal.net wrote: >>> >>>>On May 29, 9:42 am, "GoneBeforeMyTime" <F...@EuroForums.com> wrote: >>>> >>>>>Riddle me this, is cycling a individual sport or a team sport? >>>>> >>>>>Big snip < >>>> >>>>Axel Merckx pulled for Floyd Landis in the TdF on the big comeback... >>>>and a few years before Floyd did the same for Lance. >>>> >>>>Patton won some battles, but Eisenhower gets credit for winning the >>>>war. >>>> >>>>Winning stages ISN'T stupid, it's just part of a bigger picture. >>>>Since they're all there anyway, why not spread around some glory to >>>>stage winners? >>>> >>>>ABS >>> >>>Hell, winning stages is the only thing that counts. Stage racing is >>>stupid except for the fact that every day is a new race. Crossing the >>>line first... that's what bike racing was meant to be. >> >> >> I enjoy cycling much more from a philosophical standpoint then from a >> logical standpoint, where helps to me to tolerate all the shortcomings, >> but for me, cycling will always be an individual sport. >> >> GBMT > > > Then you may want to tell the riders who win and thank their teammates > "for whom my victory wouldn't have been possible" to stop lying. > > Magilla That's often the problem with race reports, why riders complain about reports on some of the main cycling sites, often they are furious because the wrong people are getting credit of who did what on what team, which led to the outcome of the race. I have heard this directly from a number of riders about race reports. Cycling as a team sport has some interesting and intriguing aspects, but the more sophisticated and integrated it becomes as a team sport, the more watered down it becomes as an individual sport, and thus rankings and various types of individual stats become more and more meaningless. I would of liked to have seen Lance and everyone else in one of the tours he won, to ride it strictly as a indvidual riders tour without teams, every man for himself, and then see if Lance still wins, and just as interesting would be who came out on top in the top ten. There are many instances over many years where riders have won races without the help of a complete team, for whatever reasons, bad team, missing or riders who didn't finish or riders like Longo who rode without a team. My point is if cycling were purely an individual sport without teams, then the rankings would be a better measurement of a rider's abilities and cycling would be much more accurate to those who see it through the lens as an individual sport, as sports writers often write with glaring headlines that Cycling is an individual sport! Cycling shouldn't be circus acrobatics or a high wire act where one rider depends on all the others to stay on the wire. I like the concept of the pure athletic performance, without too many technical maneuvers or team science, IE-Science of Lance. I want to know who the best man is on an equal and fair playing field, and teams destroy that concept. Since racing is won by an individual winner, bike racing should be run as an individual sport so that the winner, is truly who the winner should be. The more and more sophisticated and scientific winning by a team becomes, the more and more vague and meaningless the individual winner becomes. You can't even get a true winner in the worlds or the Olympics, since this concept of teamwork or nationalities comes into play. I would like to see a big one day race like the worlds run as an individual race, where the winner was really the best rider on the day, and not some sort of relay race. In track, we know who the best are, except the relay races, but in cycling we don't really know. That's why I like what Merckx used to do by dominating from the front, which is pretty much a statement about the fact that he was the best rider out there, and no team will overshadow his prowess. I know you don't like Merckx as the Babe Ruth of cycling, but its just an example of what riders have done to make such statments about who is really king in the sport. Indurain did it too on one stage during the tour, making a statement that he is the best, and breaking the will of the peloton. Luperini did it in many races between 95 and 98, riding way off the front solo many times making the concept of winning by teamwork totally irrelevant. Lemond won pretty much without the help of a good team in 89. That's what makes racing exciting, the individual winner is truly the valid hero in this respect, and fans want to identify with who the true winner is, not the team. There is so much in cycling that often reflects the amazement of the individual effort, and the winner should reflect the pure highlights of those individual efforts. When you have a challenge like Mount Hamilton or Mount Evans, you get the true winner, but if a team is involved as in a mountain stage, you get the team nursing the leader close to the finish line, and then he climbs the last little bit. That's not bike racing to me. GBMT |
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#13 |
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"Kyle Legate" <legatek@hotmail.com> wrote in message news:6a9n55F35uib5U1@mid.individual.net... > GoneBeforeMyTime wrote: >> >> I enjoy cycling much more from a philosophical standpoint then from a >> logical standpoint, where helps to me to tolerate all the shortcomings, >> but for me, cycling will always be an individual sport. >> > Is that because nobody wants to ride with you? Take one of those German sausages and shove it up your butt. |
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#14 |
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Kyle Legate wrote:
>> Is that because nobody wants to ride with you? GoneBeforeMyTime wrote: > Take one of those German sausages and shove it up your butt. Yummy, andouillette. |
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#15 |
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On May 30, 9:38 am, Donald Munro <fat-dumb...@hotmail.com> wrote:
> Kyle Legate wrote: > >> Is that because nobody wants to ride with you? > GoneBeforeMyTime wrote: > > Take one of those German sausages and shove it up your butt. > > Yummy, andouillette. No no no. "Andouillette flavored." Big difference. You've heard of bratwurst? This would be "worst brat". |
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