I rode in mid-afternoon today. The sun almost directly overhead seemed to keep racer boy inside so it was mostly a pretty nice ride. Except for the 40ish helmetless guy on a comfort bike who latched onto my rear wheel near Summit and Fairview and seemed determined to hang there as I rode leisurely up Summit towards the Cathedral. I could hear him back there clicking through his gears on every slight uphill.
Finally at the corner of Dale he decided that he had won the race and he cast a triumphant sideways glance at me as he rolled by on the right while I waited for the light to change.
Those of you who watched the end of Stage 19 can visualize what happened next. I assumed the role of Chavanel of Cofidis, he was Roy of Francaise de Jeux. It is downhill away from Dale and I rolled up onto his rear wheel, finding as I did the gear that I wanted for what was coming next. The street turns back uphill and racerman started clicking his gears again. As soon as he was in a gear in which he could not accelerate I took advantage of being in a gear in which I could accelerate, and did so.
These little victories are so puny, I feel ashamed and diminished to have taken such glee in blowing his fenders off.
A bit further along I detoured into the parking lot at the big church to get both of our city's big stone buildings into a single photograph.
Le Tour did not invite Team Astana this year as a way of making a statement against doping. Astana insisted that they are clean, that only the sponsor is the same, that team management and all of the riders are changed from old Astana, and that leaving them out deprived the race of its defending champion. I think that I have already expressed my personal belief that the defending champion has some explaining to do before we accept that he rides without the aid of pharmaceuticals. Race organizers apparently feel the same and they held firm, deciding that they have already had enough Astana drug scandals, thank you.
Today, just in time for the final stage of the Tour, Astana announced that they have fired a team member. The announcement seems to be some sort of bid to be seen as a team that is clean, a team that is ridding themselves of dopers from within. But what strikes me as high irony is that if Astana had been invited to the race, the announcement today would be that they were throwing an Astana rider out of the Tour and the Tour would have had an Astana doping incident for its third year in a row.
I do not believe the Tour is clean.
2 comments:
Me either.
I fear that Sastre dug deep into his suitcase of pharmaceuticals.
Congrats to the Look and its rider on all those miles --
I was passed by a 40ish woman the other day -- I was on the road, she was on the path. At first I thought she was a FCOACB (fat chick on a comfort bike)but riding behind her I decided I was wrong. Not fat -- baggy t-shirt, and she had well defined calves, the baggy basketball style shorts that the young riders wear instead of lycra, and fairly skinny tires on her hybrid. No shocks or extra dead weight on the bike. Probably a regular rider. So I narrowed the gap some -- and as we came up to a series of 'rollers' I pulled up just behind her, catching her at the top of the hill. (Thinking, as I did so, that Gino would approve of my timing.) I didn't pass, either. I just held there off her shoulder, and she now knew it was a race. She tried to speed up, but I matched her. 15, 16, 17 mph. (I know, pathetic.) We both quit at about the same time and she turned down a side street. I have no clue why I would do such a thing, but have to say that it was fun to 'catch and release' someone so much younger than me.
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