I’m confused !

204

 

 

(Lance Armstrong in Clonmel during the 2009 Tour of Ireland)

 

Everywhere you look cycling is making headlines at present, and the racing season in Europe hasn’t even begun yet. But of course it’s not the racing thats grabbing headlines, it’s Lance Armstrong and his recent ride up the Col de public opinion on Oprahs wheel.

Everywhere I go people say ‘What do you make of Armstrong?’. Not just cycling people but many who wouldn’t know a Dura Ace Di2 lever if it jumped up and lodged itself in their right nostril.

My stock answer is ‘I think it’s a tactical play on his part, he didn’t go on Oprah for the good of mankind, just the good of one man in particular, himself. In cycling terms he has been dropped from the bunch but is trying to get back into the cars !’ This usually satisfies their desire for an answer and confuses them enough to nip a big discussion in the bud.

Why am I trying to avoid the big discussion ?

Because I’m confused within myself and don’t really know what to think and what to feel.

A guy who enjoys paying to see a singer perform on stage drunk and high as a kite, who watches WWF wrestling with his 7 year old son and who has a Real Madrid soccer jersey on his back tells me he is totally disgusted with the carry on of those druggy cyclists ! What can I say to change his opinion of what I consider to be the most beautiful sport in the World ?

Many cyclists are enraged about Armstrong and his cohorts and proclaiming their anger to all and sundry.

I want to feel angry but can’t get rid of a niggle in the back of my mind.

If I take on board the idea that Armstrong cheated me out of my enjoyment of cycling does that mean that the memories that I have of standing on the side of French roads, in front of Podiums and inside railings next to the US Postal team car with a tingle down my spine from the whole spectacle and the electric atmosphere should be wiped from my memory ?

Was the thunderous roar of the crowd something false that is not worth remembering ?

Those few days that stand out in memory as times when I felt so alive and so far removed from ordinary day to day living, are they now something to be ashamed of ?

I honestly don’t know how I should feel.

Is Armstrong a nice guy ? Obviously not to 90% of people who had dealings with him. He has serious personality flaws and is probably missing the empathy gene. But does that mean that I should not for one second wonder what it is like to be in his shoes at present ? Would that not make me the same as him ?

From what I can see the big difference between Armstrong and his peers like Ulrich etc. was the way he treated people. It is right that there should be no place for someone like that in cycling. They were all doped but is going after all these other retired guys now and their predecessors really going to help cycling ?

Or will it’s only achievement be the contamination of beautiful memories that cycling fans have of moments in time that are frozen within their minds and that bring a smile to their faces when thought about on a cold wet November morning ?

When a bike comes in for repair with a problem, the first thing I do when I put it up on the workstand is pinpoint what the problem is. Then I quickly figure out what caused it and then work out how I can fix it. A lot more time is spent on figuring out how to fix the problem and then fixing it than time spent on the cause. Cycling at present is all about the cause and what caused that and what other problems can we find too than about how to fix the problem and then getting on with the job.

I saw a cycling journalist on Twitter recently getting stuck in to how bad cycling is and how there is no hope for it. Taking a step back and looking at the big picture one might say that negative storeys and headlines sell at present but they have the knock on effect of discouraging supporters and sponsors. This leads to less races and teams which leads to less for the cycling journalist to write about and less advertising in their magazine which leads eventually to them being out of a job. But if they don’t write the story then they are part of the ‘Omerta’

The cyclists themselves see this big picture all the time. There is a survival instinct that is deeply ingrained in all who have had to fight to get onto that wheel in the gutter, in a crosswind with the rain lashing down whilst knowing that if they let go of the wheel there will not be enough money to eat that leaves its mark. It’s the reason Kimmage, Lemond, Vaughters and many more never spoke out whilst they were still racing.

Cycling is now the cleanest sport for a teenager to get involved in. A man bigger than cycling itself has been taken down so no young cyclist can feel that they will get away with doping. Cycling is the only sport at present that can realistically say that if you dope you will be caught at some stage.

Moving forward I would love to see a test that proves a rider is clean being created. Drug tests to catch cheats are a good deterrent. But they are worthless in proving to Joe Public that Bradley Wiggins or Cadel Evans are clean. Saying that they never tested positive only generates the response that ‘Armstrong was tested over 500 times and never tested positive either’. Surely there must be some scientist out there some where who could devise a way to prove an athlete is 100% clean and natural. Perhaps it could be as simple as every pro cyclist who wants to prove that they are clean taking an advanced lie detector type of test two or three time a year.

Innocent until proven guilty is all well and good but in the publics eyes at present all professional cyclists are guilty first. Wouldn’t it be great if cycling could lead the way into a 100% clean and fair sporting era.

I’m still confused about how I should feel about some of my cycling memories but the one thing I’m not confused about is how much I enjoy getting out on the bike myself and that’s one thing that’s never going to change !

Barry

www.thecyclingblog.com

12 COMMENTS

  • Pat Scanlon

    Hi Barry, I think a of people feel the same as you, but cycling is bigger than Armstrong, what is brilliant to see is the amount of people of all ages out cycling out on our roads and doing sportifs, and enjoying the bike and thats what about enjoying the bike.

  • Adrian O'Beagáin

    Barry, articulate and hits what many of us feel, long gone are the schoolboy days 🙂 but the sensations of a freezing cold morning heading out whilst all are still warm in their beds, or the mucky spray of your compatriots and rivals back wheel hitting your face, contrasted with the days when the sun in your face and the wind at your back, all such days equally rewarding to those for whom two wheels turn in their souls! Sometimes a big Star must fall and fall hard so those that follow will not be tarnished by those gone before them. Without Shay, Sean or Stephen, the two wheels may never have found me, I just hope the young kids who found two wheels during the LA era, continue their love of the two wheels 🙂 Adrian

  • worldwidecycles

    Pat – Absolutely, Cycling is much more about ordinary people out enjoying all that it has to offer than any one person !
    Adrian – Very well described, hopefully those that found cycling through LA will have realised all it has to offer .

  • Ben Keane

    Barry, as a guy late to taking part in this fantastic sport it is indeed a shame. I like so many others had hoped against hope that he wans’t guilty.

    One point you make, about how come they are not getting caught at the time I believe is down to the Chemists they use. In the Internet World top Banks, Companies & Goverments often recruit the Hackers to protect them from hackers. Would it be possible to get these Chemists and use them & their expertise?

    Just a thought?

    From a Sunny Qatar and don’t forget the TDQ is coming up in a week and a half :-).

    Ben

  • worldwidecycles

    A very good idea there Ben. It would make sense to get the poachers to turn gamekeepers.
    The Sun is grand but I’d say you’re missing all the wind and rain back here in Clonmel 🙂

    • Joe Mcgee

      Maybe the testers were the gamekeepers!

  • worldwidecycles

    Could be right there too Joe !

  • Jonathan Flynn

    March 17 2013,Switch on the tv, Rai overhead chopper shot pans the Italian landscape, as the peloton snakes towards the Cipressa and Poggio. Tactics,Anticipation,Nerves…………the beautiful sport. Bigger than any controvery that you can throw at it. Many more moments to enjoy!!

  • Mick Kelly

    Well written Barry , at least Armstrong went on TV and admitted he done wrong , will we ever see any of our famous politicians,bankers, or builders who have left this country in so much debt come on the TV and admit how wrong they were to leave such a millstone around our children and grandchildren for years and years. Next Sunday morning I will head out on my bike at 9am to meet up with Bernard and the rest of the chain gang ,and for 3 hours or so cold and wet , we shall do out own TDF and long may that last . 

    • worldwidecycles

      Jonathan – I’m looking forward to that already 🙂
      Mick – Spot on, there are crooks in every walk of life but what matters is being able to do what you enjoy with an easy mind. Hope Bernard has the yellow jersey for Sunday 😉

  • anthony ogorman

    i hope this big mess gets sorted sooner than later, i know cycling has got a bad name from this but any one who raced in ireland on our domestic scene are pretty far removed from all this doping culture.the most important aspect of a sport is not just the winning or loosing as it is more often,but the social aspect ; the comradery the friendships the crac the banter. people have made friendships for life met wives lovers whatever.in our modern world [rat race] all those daily worries go out the window on a sunday when you are chasing some dude in the road for first or40th who cares ‘hanging on like a mangey dog ,he weve all done it some are beter than others who cares ;but we all came back nexy sunday for more brain clearing;

  • worldwidecycles

    Thats really the core of what cycling is all about Anthony. See ya Sunday for some more brain clearing 🙂

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