DexterMorgan
Well-Known Member
He's the Barry Bonds of cycling. But he has helped raise millions of dollars for cancer research so people mistakenly think he's a nice guy.
Fixed
He's the Barry Bonds of cycling. But he has helped raise millions of dollars for cancer research so people mistakenly think he's a nice guy.
any cyclist, to a man, will tell you that he outworked them all, out trained them all. legendary.
all the rest of the 'stuff' is circumstantial, at best. did he? didn't he? he passed every drug test and won all the cases against him, even with the 'mountain' of circumstantial evidence 'again' him.
the usada has an agenda. the usada has no jurisdiction on international cycling. they are assuming (hoping to god) that the UCI backs them up here.
So Cycling is now pro wrestling?
Everyone's on steroids, nothing that happens is real, and good guys and bad guys switch character intermittently.
He is of the same ilk as Bernie Madoff. Both are frauds and both deep down know it yet they took short cuts to for temporary gains.
Ok, I'm a cycling guy and at one time was somewhat fanatical about it. I've done bike trips with the tour where we road the same rides as the pro riders and in many cases get on the course 3-4 hours ahead of the tour riders during the stage. These rides are set up through Trek bike tours during the tour de france. It's fantasy cycling at it's best. Trust me, going up the Col De Tourmalet with a million people on the mountain is quite a rush.
That being said, Trek also set up former pro riders to ride with us for a day or half a day depending on the ride. Two of these riders were former Armstrong teammates on US Postal. They never implicated Armstrong once mind you, but they did give us insight into what doping really means in the sport in particular the use of EPO.
Here's the quick skinny. Let's say the first 30 of the top riders in the Tour De France are absolutely clean and use no performance enhancing drugs. Then let's presume rider number 31 decides to cheat. Our question was, "where would he finish if everyone ahead of him is clean." They stated..."he wins, and it's isn't even close." So if the 31st most talented rider in the race can make that big a leap...deductive reasoning will tell you...they are all cheating. There is too much evidence to think otherwise.
Now, Jon made a similar point. If they are all cheating...Armstrong was still the best rider. I agree with this premise. You could say he had better drugs or understood doping better than others, but the point becomes...everyone's cheating...he just trained harder, is genetically a freak, and therefore is the champion we think he is.
That being said, I would never direct my son to become a cyclist and would tell him to steer clear of the sport. I love the adrenaline and the sport immensely...but if you take it seriously as a profession...you will end up doing things that still aren't clear as to the long term effects.
He is of the same ilk as Bernie Madoff. Both are frauds and both deep down know it yet they took short cuts to for temporary gains.
“You figure they cheat at the ballpark, they'll cheat on the golf course, they'll cheat in business, and anything else in life. Players may laugh about it and say it's funny, but right down in their heart, they don't think it's funny at all, and they have no respect for a person who cheats.†Bob Feller
I don't want my kids looking up to cheaters like Armstrong.
To the previous poster...cycling has a lot of avenues. You have to remember that the Tour de France level of cycling consists of the best 225 riders in the entire world. Cycling is a very popular sport worldwide, so only a small number in that 225 are even American. The point is that your son shouldn't have to worry about competing with the LAs of the world unless he is genetically gifted. He could still do the sport and never come near PEDs.
“You figure they cheat at the ballpark, they'll cheat on the golf course, they'll cheat in business, and anything else in life. Players may laugh about it and say it's funny, but right down in their heart, they don't think it's funny at all, and they have no respect for a person who cheats.†Bob Feller
I don't want my kids looking up to cheaters like Armstrong.
I'm kind of surprised (and disappointed) at reading so many "it's ok to cheat as long as you don't get caught" sentiments.
C'mon Hawk fans - we're better than that.
He's the Barry Bonds of cycling. But he had cancer so people mistakenly think he's a nice guy.
He is of the same ilk as Bernie Madoff. Both are frauds and both deep down know it yet they took short cuts to for temporary gains.
My point was, that I would discourage my son from wanting to be a professional. Honestly, I would encourage anyone to take up the sport...the health benefits are amazing and it's better than any other cardio driven endeavor...all without the pounding of running, etc. It's such a unique sport...as the battle is all within you mentally. You decide how much you pain you can take and how much you decide to challenge yourself each ride. It's also very, very humbling. The minute you think you are pretty good...someone dusts you at the top of a climb. I love the sport...just would never want my kid to be a pro.