Love the donkeys in jerseys!
http://www.google.com/imgres?hl=en&s...9,r:0,s:0,i:77
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Love the donkeys in jerseys!
http://www.google.com/imgres?hl=en&s...9,r:0,s:0,i:77
Wow...faster than a speeding bullet; it's a bird; it's a plane...
No, it's a cycling legend!
The aftermath was very briefly shown early on in the nighttime broadcast as well. The actual close encounter with canine was never shown in the US broadcasts.
It may impact Phillipe Gilbert's Olympic hopes
We saw riders on the ground, One ticked off rider going to yell at the dog owner, who had placed a child in front of himself and the dog. The dog was like a big black Newfoundland or something, as big as a bear.
http://www.sbs.com.au/cyclingcentral...ses-tour-spill
Scroll down to a still pic of angry Gilbert restrained by his manager.
Okay I will say it, I think this tour has been boring.
Usually I have little interest in the sprinters' stages in the first week, but this year that turned out to be the most interesting part, with Sagan and Greipel lighting things up.
Since then, having the #2 guy on the same team as the guy in yellow has taken the excitement out of the mountain stages. Liquigas tried to attack, but when you know the guy in second has no intention of riding as fast as he can, it's just dull. It would have been way better if Froome was on another team.
I thoroughly enjoyed this year's tour. The scenery; the daily stage battles; the bright young stars like Sagan, Van Garderen and Pinot; Voeckler in polka dots; Bradley Wiggins proving to be a very worthy winner; Jens Voigt's attacks, David Millar's stage win; Fabian in yellow; ... and on and on. Everything!
I have to say that I totally agree with you. The early stages were by far the most exciting this year, which is unusual. The mountains were a bore, except for the scenery, which was gorgeous.
I was happy for Voeckler, but I really didn't have anyone to strongly root for or against this year, which also took some of the fun out of it. There were a lot of riders I didn't know at all since I don't follow pro cycling very closely. It was a lot more interesting when the Schlecks and Contador were battling it out, and before that Lance, Ulrich, and the other "old timers". To me anyway.
At least we have Jens. He was awesome again today.
Well this is terrible -- injuries suffered by one of Vaconsoleil's riders in stage six. I hope he's able to recover fully.
http://www.cyclingnews.com/news/poel...-hospital-soon
My husband and I also thought it was a rather boring tour.
I read that. After the crash, as he was being put into the ambulance at the scene, he got off and remounted his bike, with all those injuries. He abandoned 10km down the road. I just could not believe he did that when I read it. Crazy.
Overall, I have mixed feelings about this tour. I must say, I missed Contador and that I do not miss the Schlecks -- they just complain too much. The sprints were fun to watch. The mountains, not as exciting, but it was fun to see Nibali attacking repeatedly, until a muscle strain in his right calf got the best of him. I was disappointed by Gesink (why did he drop out?) and Van Den Broeck. And it was nice to see the up and coming generation: Sagan, van Garderen, Pinot... Rolland I am not too fond of... stuck to Contador's and Samu Sánchez's wheels in the Alpe d'Huez stage last year, then attacking twice during the tack incident this year.
I am curious now about how the teams will reconfigure for next year. And looking forward to the Vuelta... :cool:
I should also add -- I'm still bummed at the thought of no more tour on TV every day. ;)
Next race on NBC Sports is August 20, in Colorado. I'm also hoping we'll be able to watch the Olympic races on tv, even if we have to rely on late-night DVRing. Go Chris and the T's!!!