If you come off….
…. just get right back on.
If you come off….
…. just get right back on.
Thanks to Inrng.com for the heads up on Twitter.
I just noticed a new page on the Strava website.
http://app.strava.com/stand-with-us
It is certainly an interesting addition. I wonder what is driving it?
Seems like an odd time to being doing this post, given the news about Lance Armstrong today, but here goes.
It is now less than one month until I head off on the Tour de Kids Plus 2012 charity bike ride.
This is going to be hard yakka. 850km in 6 days. I love a challenge, but this is going to be hard work.
Donations can be made at this address. http://www.kidsplus.org.au/donate?view=donation
See below for a guide on how to fill it out. Be sure to choose the Tour de kids Plus 2012 as the Campaign and mention my name in the comments.
Any donations are greatly appreciated by myself and all the people involved at The Kids Plus Foundation.
Tell your friends. Retweet it on Twitter. Like it on FaceBook.
Thanks for reading.
The final Grand Tour of 2012 kicks off tonight in Pamplona with a Team Time Trial that looks like a courier run through the city.
Check out the preview over at Inrng.com.
Jane Aubrey has a terrific piece at cyclingnews.com that previews the complete race.
Looking forward to some late nights. SBS are showing 8 stages live.
For the ones that aren’t shown live, head on over to steephill.tv or cyclingfans.com for online streaming.
Update : The TTT starts at 3AM in the Eastern states of Australia. Grab a coffee.
Earlier this year I posted a list of my goals for 2012. Amongst them were these 2.
#1 : As I have done the last 2 years, I have a goal of 6000kms for the year. Not the most difficult goal to achieve, but one that is important to me and the 6K Club.
#2 : Do 12 x Century rides (100+kms) in the year.
Well today, on a very windy day in August, I managed to place a tick next to both of them. I rolled over 6000kms quite early in my ride, and I managed to eek out 100kms before getting off the bike this afternoon. It was a pretty tough ride at times because of the wind. Luckily it was coming over my shoulder for most of the last 30kms.
So there we go. Last year it took me until about December 23rd to get to 6000kms, and the year before I didn’t even make it. This year I have done it in just over 7 months.
If all goes well in September, there will be another 6 100km rides in 6 days, so there is a good chance I could manage to get to 20 100km rides this year. Something I would never had thought possible a couple of years ago.
All this on a day that one of my favourite riders struck gold in London.
Congratulations to Anna Meares. A world class athlete and an even classier person. Kudos to her.
Terrific news from the Scotsmen at Velocast. They will be doing a Vuelta special the same as they did for the Tour de France this year. This is a paid subscription service, but even I, such a tight arse I must have some Scottish blood, thought the Tour de France was great value. Get on board here. This from the web site.
The Velocast provided daily Tour de France podcasts during the 2009, 2010 and 2012 events. By very popular demand we’re bringing you news and opinion every day for the 3 weeks of the Vuelta 2012. The 2011 edition saw Chris Froome come to prominence and the British rider will be keen to win the event after supporting Bradley Wiggins’ Tour De France triumph. Also setting his sights on the Spanish GT title is a returning Alberto Contador. It’s sure to be a great end to the Grand Tour season for this year!
These daily shows will be the only episodes of the Velocast that will be produced during the Vuelta.
John (@sofaboy) and Scott (@velocast) are both worth following on Twitter if you don’t already.
Disclaimer : I am no way affiliated with Velocast, John or Scott.
If there is anything that can get the cycling community in a larger lather than Vino going up hill, it is the mandatory helmet laws. Australia is one of the few places in the world that has them, and it is blamed by the anti helmet lobby for slashing the number of people who cycle. Well overnight, after a cycling was hit and killed by a bus in London, Brad Wiggins had this to say…
Wiggins spoke at a press conference shortly after the male cyclist was fatally injured in Hackney, east London.
He said: “It’s dangerous and London is a busy city and a lot of traffic. I think we have to help ourselves sometimes.
“Cycling is a dangerous sport. I know there are a lot of people out there who ride bikes who abide by everything, the laws the lights and things.
“But there are a lot of cyclists as well who don’t help themselves, riding along with no helmets on, iPods on, this, that and the other on those Bojo things.
“There’s got to be laws that protect both parties. Things like legalising helmets, making them the law to wear. They shouldn’t be riding along with phones and iPods on, shouldn’t be riding without lights.”
The full article is here.
I will be watching what comes of this with plenty of interest. I am not really for or against mandatory helmet laws. The sympathetic side of my brain says it is a good idea to protect people from accidents. The nasty side of the brain says lets Darwin’s theory sort it out. I wear a helmet 99.99% of the time. Last time I didn’t was after adjusting my re mech and rolled up and down the street. My street is a dead end, so traffic is virtually nil.
I have been hit by a car and ended up sliding down the back of the hatchback onto my head. I saw with my own eyes what happened to my helmet. I’m glad it wasn’t my head.
As usual, I would love to hear peoples thoughts in the comments below. Please play nice. 🙂
Update : Apparently Wiggins did his victory lap sans helmet. I will dig up a photo if I can later, I’m off for a ride.
This may come as a shock to some people, but I genuinely feel for Mark Cavendish. He put aside aspirations of a Tour de France green jersey to help Sky team mate Brad Wiggins win the coveted maillot juane. Who can forget this image from this years Tour?
Humping bidons in the rainbow jersey. Not something you see to often.
So Cav plays the ever faithful team mate in the Tour de France, knowing full well he would be repaid at the Olympics. So he thought.
There was lots of talk before the race that Team Great Britain would drag Cav over Box Hill 9 times and then onto the final bunch sprint. Here, Cav would do what he does, and blow the field away and Great Britain would go mad. Now I am no road cycling genius, but even I could see that there was only one way to combat Cav, make sure he wasn’t there at the end in a bunch sprint. The way to do that, make sure the break stays away. And guess what, the break stayed away, and Cav was no where to be seen. Just after the race, Cavendish was reported to have said…
“The guys all sat there in the tent absolutely spent. We did everything we could. The crowd was tremendous the whole way around, but the Aussies just raced negatively.” Now, I am willing to let that one go through to the keeper. The realisation that a gold medal that he probably thought was a near certainty, had gone to Alexander Vinokourov, was just sinking in. He had just ridden 250kms. The blood was still coursing through his veins. He was hyped up. It will be interesting to see what he says in the next few days.
Now, what Daniel Lloyd said, I will dissect. It is reported he had this to say after the race…
“They needed more help, they should have got it from Germany first and foremost because they were only here for the sprint,” Lloyd told the BBC.
“Mark mentioned Australia, he was right, Stuart O’Grady was in that early move, some very big names went across, he’s a class act, he’s won some huge races in his time but he was never going to win the gold medal at the end of it – or very [doubtful] – so you could say also they should have gotten behind and had a little go at a medal with Matt Goss, he’s an amazing sprinter, second in the world championships. They were let down a little bit by other teams.
Ok, so Team Great Britain needed more help? Really? Has he lost his mind? Who is going to help the strongest team in the race? Who also have the fastest sprinter! Why would the Aussies chase, they had a man in the break!
Stuart O’Grady was never going to win a gold medal. He got a hell of a lot closer than any of team GB. And I am willing to bet that if you had told Lloyd it would be Vino taking gold pre race, he would have laughed in your face.
Cavendish also said …
“The team were incredible. They left everything out on the road. I am so proud of them. We didn’t expect any help. We rode the race we wanted to ride. We couldn’t pull the group back on Box Hill. Other teams were content that if they didn’t win, we wouldn’t win. We expected it. If you want to win, you’ve to take it to them.”
So they knew what was going to happen, and yet they are complaining they didn’t get any help? You can’t have it both ways boys.
I have a few theories as to what killed off the Team GB chances.
1. No race radios. There is a hell of a lot of talk around pro cycling and race radios. The riders want them apparently. The teams want them. But I think we saw last night just what can happen when there is no coaching from team cars. An interesting comment from Stuey O’Grady…
“I was telling the guys [on the Australian team] last night, ‘Without radios, most of those blokes are just sheep. They haven’t got a director telling them what to do.’ They are at the Olympics … I was using a bit of experience and keeping them motivated.’’
There were a few times last night you saw O’Grady talking to the guys in the break. That is what experience gets you.
2. Smaller teams. It was always going to be difficult for Team GB to control a 250km road race with only 5 men in the team. And only 4 of them doing any work at the front. It isn’t the Tour de France where you have 9 riders in a team. The fact that first Froome and then Wiggins blew up shows just how hard they had to work.
3. Arrogance. This one caused some firey tweets last night, but I stand by it. I think up until the last climb up Box Hill, Team GB just assumed they would reel in the break, just like they had done at will in the Dauphine and Tour de France. Up until that point it was the usual tempo riding by Team GB. You could nearly tell when they realised they were in strife. Suddenly heads were starting to bob and shoulders were starting to roll around. It was like they were saying “oh oh” with out vocalising it.
The reaction on Twitter as the race finished was interesting as well. There was quite a bit of rubbish about a doper winning the gold. Sadly, Vino is one of the guys that has served his time and come but, but with out any contrition. He never addresses dopeage. He deflects the questions. Much like Brad Wiggins did a few times in the Tour de France, but with out the foul mouthed tirade attached. I pointed out to one English fan in a flurry of DMs on Twitter, Team GB has an ex doper in their team. The reply, “He didn’t win!” Sweet baby jesus.
So, good luck to Vino. He showed so panache and won gold. I should point out that I made some comments about him doing a deal with Rigoberto Urán on the run into the finish. I was just having a laugh after the business with Vino doing a deal to win the 2010 Liège–Bastogne–Liège. In hindsight, it probably wasn’t the best time to do it. Vino was a worthy winner last night.
So, now to watch the womens road race tonight. Shorter at 140kms and smaller teams, 3 maximum. It should be a cracker. Lets just hope the TV coverage is slightly better. Last nights coverage was a dogs breakfast!
Getting down and dirty!
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