There was a lot of coverage on 3 Day Eventing. It was on one of the "other" channels. Oxygen? USA? Something. I saw a lot. Gina Miles, the silver medalist, is from Davis.
I saw a lot of dressage yesterday.
There was a lot of coverage on 3 Day Eventing. It was on one of the "other" channels. Oxygen? USA? Something. I saw a lot. Gina Miles, the silver medalist, is from Davis.
I saw a lot of dressage yesterday.
Frends know gud humors when dey is hear it. ~ Da Crockydiles of ZZE.
I just watched the team final for dressage on the streaming feed. About the only way I was going to be able to see it.
I love that Equestrian sports are co-ed.
I didn't get to see all of the race - our coverage cut back and forth from cycling to 3 or 4 other sports that were happening at the same time, but from my experience I'd say that it is not unusual for a long race to unfold that way. Women do tend to race a bit more tactically and a bit less on brute strength than the men do. Even in men's races long breaks generally succeed, not because the people are that much stronger, but because the peleton either miscalculates the catch or (in a stage race) doesn't care to chase them down.
The olympics is a little different too - the most on any one "team" are 3 people and it really changes the dynamics of the race (Kristen Armstrong was even talking about this before the olympics). It's hard to act as a team when you only have 3 people, so its kind of like a perpetual break away situation. (Women though, you would think, unfortunately would be more accustomed to this situation...)
Normally an early break or lots of attacks early in the race aren't even intended to win the race. Unless you are much stronger than the majority of the field or the event has some serious climbing early on, then its unlikely that you'll stay away. Lots of attacks early on usually is a tactic to wear down the other teams - make them chase , keep them on their toes so that when you really do send out your A racer that they can stay away. With the small teams and the lousy weather I would guess that no one wanted to risk that not working out and then having no teammates for help later on. Who knows - there may have even been some rivalries within country/teams - would you want to be the person who says - we are riding for me to win the gold, to the others.....
"Sharing the road means getting along, not getting ahead" - 1994 Washington State Driver's Guide
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Ah! Thanks for that insight! I had been wondering if they even really rode as a 'team' in the Olympics. It seems it is more of a 'every man/woman for themselves' kind of a deal.
I think some countries were riding as a team. Kathy Bates of Australia and Vera Carrera of Italy were out the front covering any breaks and setting the pace. I don't think either of these girls finished the race I think they did the job they were meant to do and were spent before the finish. This may not have worked for Australia but Italy got a bronze.
I loved watching Vera Carrera ride she just looks so good on her bike.![]()
The most effective way to do it, is to do it.
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Thanks for entering into this debate, spokewench. The more I watch of road racing, the more I wonder why the difference is so huge.
You say women are smart... in this instance (road racing) I beg to differ. To me smart would be understanding that any televised event is show-casing women's cycling, and if they treat it as a "tootle" then time and money will not be invested. Therefore "smart" would be to mix it up, to make a break, to chase a break... to me, that would be the smart move. Do you see where I am coming from and what has me so bugged?
Racing should be about courage - the courage to have a go... to risk everything for glory. Thats what a race is fundementally about - whether you are racing others for gold / a yellow jersey... or whether you are racing yourself for a personal best.
If men didn't take risks, then names like Armstrong, Evans, Hushovd, Dean and Contador would not be household names... household names to even non-cycling folks.
By the "smartness" measure, the men who make it to Paris-Nice, to Le Tour, to the Giro, to Paris-Roubaix etc etc etc are pretty damn stupid, right? Of course not. They calculate, they form alliances, they communicate contantly and above all they take risks, they are willing to give everything in order for a small chance at something. They are truly smart, because they know that if they give everything, it just might work, and if it works, money and job security and possibly immortality are theirs.
Without having to pause and think, how many of us could name more than 5 of the women who raced the 2008 Olympic RR?
Too easy? OK - here's a toughy... name 10 women who raced in the last Olympics - or in one of the womens protours...
I bet if most of us thought about the men's RR or one of the pro-tours, we could find 20 mens names with less effort than it took to find 5-10 womens names?
Why? Because men have courage. They will take risks. They will lay everything on the line, and come back tomorrow and do it again...
Why do women at this level lack courage? How do they learn it and demonstrate it? When will see it from more than just a handful of our top female representatives?
But the break and the chase is what is exciting. And while some of these women tried attacking a few times, we didn't really see the attack/attack/attack/attack/attack/attack/attack/attack we would see in a men's race. No, instead I saw a few attacks in the first part of the race, but they didn't even begin to work because no-one took up the challenge.
But even without teams, people make alliances. And I know there is a language barrier in some instances. But you talk with your support crew, your coach etc about who might help you on the road and then you make a friend out there and you try together. Alot of these women would know each other from other international racing events. Surely there was potential for alliances in the absence of full teams...
Yes, very valid point... but still, there would be "friends" of sorts within that peloton. In my pitiful nowhere-near-Olympics races, we attack often. Well, about half of the men in my grade and me and one other woman. I have been chosen for a team in a team TT this weekend because I attack (or try to), because I am strong (for my grade)... not because I sit in and seem to be strong. No team-mates would be tough, I absolutely agree. But the Olympics is a chance to showcase womens cycling to an international audience which includes sponsors and event managers. I really believe these women had huge responsibilities on the shoulders - its a shame that perhaps they did not know how to rise to that.
In the Olympics it should be, if you have same-country team-mates, wahts the best way to get our country gold. Or, if you have to form alliances - whats the best way to my country a medal.
But as you say, Eden, unfortunately human ego can get in the way of so many things - including good racing. We have seen it time after time within TdF teams.