he wants a gold medal.
considering he was the only man on the TeamGB track rosta at 2008 that didn't get a medal, and after the tactical mis-judgement farce that was the 2012 road race, I can see why he sees it as something of a gap in his palmarès...
That's precisely the point. Failure to complete stage 8 means that you can't compete in stage 9 but your record in stages 1-7 will still exist. If it was designated a 21 race Championship over three weeks then that's fine but it's not, it's a tour.....one race....and so non-finshers should have their records expunged.As to the "acknowledgement of participation" - well - that IS the case with the Green Jersey competition - you HAVE to finish to get the jersey. Sagan could crash on the final stage, fail to finish and not get the award....
That's precisely the point. Failure to complete stage 8 means that you can't compete in stage 9 but your record in stages 1-7 will still exist. If it was designated a 21 race Championship over three weeks then that's fine but it's not, it's a tour.....one race....and so non-finshers should have their records expunged.
Bob
If you fail to complete a stage through illness, accident or speed....you're eliminated, you can't start the next "race"I disagree the tour is bigger than that and caters for all, the GC is the best man out of essentially all the races put together, but the stages themselves are individual road races each with a winner.
"Bigger than the rules".....If that's what the sport has become then go luck to it. Lets all hope that most of the other riders don't "do a Cav" and clear off on Saturday evening, leaving Froome, Yates and a few sprinters to ride into Paris on Sunday.
The Tour might respect his departure for better things but, you're right, I don't. I believe that if you enter a competition then you should give it your best shot out of self respect and respect for your opponents.
Bob
I didn't specify anybody by name, I stated that I thought it was disrespectful to abandon the race to pursue another activity. If that applies to Contador (or any other rider) then, yes, I think that he/they have been disrespectful to their fellow competitors and the organisers. It's you who seem to have decided that Cavendish was the sole target of my criticism.what a load of donkey guff, contador got off and got in the van becuase the victory was lost and he is a sore loser but you aren't moaning about him are you?
I didn't specify anybody by name, I stated that I thought it was disrespectful to abandon the race to pursue another activity. If that applies to Contador (or any other rider) then, yes, I think that he/they have been disrespectful to their fellow competitors and the organisers. It's you who seem to have decided that Cavendish was the sole target of my criticism.
Bob
I'm not sure why having a precedent makes something acceptable and even less sure why quitting to pursue a personal goal is seen as "giving a lot of respect". Sagan could have had an easy day of it today and coasted along at the back of the peleton but (and kudos to him) he's bigger than that and was prepared to expend a lot of energy helping his teammates.To be fair, old time sprinters like Mario Cipollini used to just ride the Tour for the first week's worth of sprints and then promptly headed off to the beach so Cav and the others have given the race a lot of respect.
2053924907_5f258f0c5f_z by Pete Johns, on Flickr"Bigger than the rules".....If that's what the sport has become then go luck to it. Lets all hope that most of the other riders don't "do a Cav" and clear off on Saturday evening, leaving Froome, Yates and a few sprinters to ride into Paris on Sunday.
The Tour might respect his departure for better things but, you're right, I don't. I believe that if you enter a competition then you should give it your best shot out of self respect and respect for your opponents.
Bob
It seems so but I'm not going to sacrifice my morals to join the majority.your on your own bob
It seems so but I'm not going to sacrifice my morals to join the majority.
On a sad note....
Gérard Holtz, the TdF commentator on French TV has announced that he's standing down. He's commentated/presented the race for the past 31 years and is a true gentleman being both enthusastic and, more importantly, impartial. He was to cycling what Murray Walker was to Formula One and it won't be the same without him.
Thank you Gérard.
Bob