Tour De France 2013

Started by bennydorano, June 26, 2013, 02:01:31 PM

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Aerlik

"MAYO FOR SAM" seen on the road from about 1.8kms left. 
To find his equal an Irishman is forced to talk to God!

ballinaman



CiKe

Quote from: Billys Boots on July 18, 2013, 04:00:06 PM
Dan Martin in trouble on Alpe d'Huez today.  Froome attacking again on last climb.

Lost some amount of time alright. Hope he was just saving himself for potentially another stage win but doubt it - hopes of top 10 well and truly over.

maddog

Quote from: Tony Baloney on July 18, 2013, 04:14:09 PM
Amazing number of attention seekers and general arseholes on these mountain stages. The cyclists should be allowed to carry a truncheon.


Seems to be a worsening trend over this last 5 years, and worse than ever this year. Apparently a few on dutch corner were letting themselves down badly according to a tweet by Robbie McEwen.

red hander

Why are the British going apeshit about a Kenyan born rider who was brought up in South Africa? Leaves you almost pining for the days when Sean Kelly and Stephen Roche were regularly described as "English-speaking riders" on Channel 4

magpie seanie

Quote from: red hander on July 21, 2013, 09:16:47 PM
Why are the British going apeshit about a Kenyan born rider who was brought up in South Africa? Leaves you almost pining for the days when Sean Kelly and Stephen Roche were regularly described as "English-speaking riders" on Channel 4

Well he claims to be British and then there is of course the team he cycles for.....an organisation not known for underplaying things!

theskull1

Quote from: red hander on July 21, 2013, 09:16:47 PM
Why are the British going apeshit about a Kenyan born rider who was brought up in South Africa? Leaves you almost pining for the days when Sean Kelly and Stephen Roche were regularly described as "English-speaking riders" on Channel 4

Now that is funny  :)
It's a lot easier to sing karaoke than to sing opera

bennydorano

It probably grates more that they cant claim hm as English rather than British.

theskull1

It's a lot easier to sing karaoke than to sing opera

bennydorano

Did Irish fans on Alpe d'Huez abuse Team Sky? Irish journalist David Walsh thinks so - Sticky Bottle

A thinning peloton snakes up Alpe d'Huez last Thursday led by Team Sky. Sunday Times journalist David Walsh and fellow Irishman Dr Alan Farrell, who works as Team Sky's doctor, have painted a picture of abuse directed at the team on the climb. And both have said some Irish fans were among those involved.

Riders and officials from Team Sky were abused on Alpe d'Huez during last Thursday's stage of the Tour de France and Irish fans were involved in some of the abuse, a report in The Sunday Times has alleged.

Writing a feature piece in Sunday's edition of the respected broadsheet British newspaper, journalist David Walsh quoted Team Sky's Irish doctor Alan Farrell saying when he drove up the climb in one of the team's cars he felt under siege, as did the occupants in the team's other vehicles.

Walsh reports that eggs were smashed against the team's cars, that beer was thrown at them and when the vehicles slowed down enough on some points enabling some fans by the roadside to rock the cars from side to side, that's what happened.

"The abuse was worst at those parts of the climb populated by Irish and Dutch fans," wrote Walsh, before adding that one large sign on Irish corner read "Froome dope".

That sign was a reference to the doping allegations levelled against Sky leader and race winner Chris Froome because of the strength of his performances.

The sign is the only reference in the piece to Irish corner. Stickybottle understands the sign had not been placed there by any Irish fans.

Walsh reports that Sky's Irish doctor Farrell met some Irish fans the morning after the Alpe d'Huez stage and that he, Farrell, told them he was "disappointed" at the way Froome and the team had been treated.

Walsh suggested Farrell was very upset as he relayed the story, saying there were tears in his eyes as he spoke.

Walsh also reported that a number of members of an Irish cycling club sought out and found team principal Dave Brailsford and apologised, apparently for the behaviour of some of the Irish fans on the climb.

He added that a Dutch journalist he spoke to had reported feeling ashamed at the behaviour of Dutch fans on the same ascent.

Walsh has been "embedded" with Team Sky on a number of training camps and races this year including the Tour de France and has given them a clean bill of health in his reports in relation to doping.

He alleges that all the way up the climb last Thursday fans screamed at Sky riders and many mimicked the action of injecting into their arms.

Walsh quotes Froome in the piece saying that at one point fans ran alongside him with a giant syringe filled with an unknown substance and squirted it at him at such close range and with such accuracy that some of the liquid went into Froome's mouth.

There is no reference in the story suggesting the nationality of those fans with the giant syringe or those who mimicked injecting.

It should also be stressed that there is no suggestion whatsoever of any orchestrated protest or abuse by Irish fans on the mountain.

What Walsh describes is alleged to have taken place over long sections of the climb between base and peak. The allegations centre on what could be described as individual fans – some alleged to be Irish – at different points along the climb. However, Walsh suggests that activity was most intense among some groups of Irish and Dutch fans.

Froome told Walsh the ascent of Alpe d'Huez reminded him of one episode in his childhood in Kenya when he was with his mother in a car as they drove into a protest in a dangerous township and the protestors rocked their car with the young Froome worried what was going to happen next.

If you were on the climb, please let us know what you saw, or indeed did not see.

magpie seanie

Boo hoo.

Are Team Sky paying Walsh?

Hound

Quote from: magpie seanie on July 24, 2013, 09:47:13 AM
Boo hoo.

Are Team Sky paying Walsh?
Well either directly or indirectly he'll be getting something out of it.

I haven't read much of his work this year, but its seems fairly ironic for him to be critising the booing of cyclists given all he's written over the years on the subject. A lot of the protestors would probably give him the credit for opening their eyes on the subject!

screenexile

Quote from: magpie seanie on July 24, 2013, 09:47:13 AM
Boo hoo.

Are Team Sky paying Walsh?

Rupert Murdoch is paying both of them!!!

bennydorano

Scummy behaviour is scummy behaviour, isn't tolerated in any sport, why do fans think cyclists are fair game? (That would be my reading of the situation anyway), Walsh's paymaster is irrelevant in this case imo.

Interesting that Walsh has said he's took more abuse for ensconing himself with Sky than he did from trying to expose LA.