Should look at women's peloton as well. I remember Mara Abbott being repeatedly blocked and chopped by Rabo-Liv on a climb in a race in Italy. The 3 others in the break knew she was a better climber and intimidated her. Giro Rosa 2014 Stage 9 Madonna del Ghisallo.
It's unbelievable because it is. Hayden was by fare the strongest in the break and the other rider said he wouldn't sprint if Hayden towed him to the line.
I think you're confusing stupidity with bad sportsmanship in the Filip Maciejuk incident. You also left out Moscon's alleged other racist/ violent incident, plus Moscon holding onto the team car at the World Championships, and also Nibali's car holding escapade that pulled him across to the next group up the road at the Giro... and there's so many more... Lance Armstrong getting into a break to force a rider out of it for talking about doping... etc.
I'm not a Contador fan, but I wouldn't blame him so much for unsportsmanlike behavior in this case. For two reasons. 1. he didn't continue his attack and didn't push hard, otherwise Sanchez and Co wouldn't have caught him before the summit, he and Schleck were too good in this Tour. Furthermore, Schleck had almost closed the gap at the summit. So it was mainly on the descent that he lost time and not through Contador's attack. By the way, Armstrong waited for Ullrich in 2001 until Beloki had caught up with him. Beloki then set the pace and Armstrong sat on Beloki's wheel. Ullrich then had to make a considerable effort to close the gap to this group. So it's not unusual to stop the attack and then join the next group and not wait or allow other riders who weren't waiting to go. 2. the situation should not be assessed without considering what happened at the beginning of the 2010 Tour. On the second stage, Schleck was left behind due to crashes on the wet descents in the Ardennes and his teammate Cancellara neutralized the peloton so that Schleck did not lose any time. One day later, the race took place on cobblestones. Here Contador lost contact due to crashes and a broken shoe but Cancellara pushed the pace at the front. Why was there no neutralization on this stage? Contador lost 1:13 minutes. That's more than he gained on stage 15.
The finger pulling one the guy who won is lucky it wasn’t the 80’s or earlier, he’d have a couple of black eyes for what he did. He sat on McCormicks wheel and promised him he wouldn’t sprint if McCormick towed him to the line (obviously happy with 2nd place - I’ve been there before and done the same deal) the guy then went against his word and sprinted. Which is a smart tactic to win on the day but you won’t end up very well liked and risk getting punched after.
How about Fasso-Bartilo rider punching another rider near mtn top finish in the Basque country. Rumor had it victims relative in helo that caught action.
too many gray areas. hard to justify waiting for a rival who paid for taking more risks, be it equipment or lines taken, etc. Different if due to a fan
During the 2015 Giro in stage 16, Astana and Katusha attacked stage leader Contador on the run up to the Mortirolo climb after his mechanical. Contador used his whole team to bring them back after going solo on the Mortirolo.
Renshaw incident was Deans fault and he should have been penalised. Julian rode alongside and deliberately leaned on him and got is elbow in their. Renshaw was only making room, kept riding straight
What about MVDP shoving GIrmay and making a hole for Philipsen to sprint for win in 23 TDF. Van Der Poel was relegated but it gave Philipsen the win . Then Philpsen boarded GIrmay to win another sprint. No relegation.
Headbutting is a safety mechanism while you’re being pinched out so that you can keep both of your hands on the bars. Calling something that happens on the track violent seems a bit like low hanging fruit.
Andy Schleck attacked, messed up his shifting and he expected his arrivals to abort their response to his failed/fumbled attack? Had they all been just riding as a group and Schleck dropped his chain would have been a different story.
@@ShadowboostA flat tire is misfortune. A fumbled shift in the midst of an attack is operator error which shouldn’t lead to being the responsibility of his rivals to abort their own response to his failed attack. The Schleck’s were well known for their tactical incompetence evidenced by their clueless escort of Philippe Gilbert to his victory at La Doyenne.
@@Shadowboost You have an obligation to your sponsor, your team, and your family to ride the fooking bike. You DO NOT have an obligation to competitors or to virtue signaling nitwits who misunderstand good sportsmanship.
@@user-cx2bk6pm2f you wouldn't understand sportsmanship if it hit you in the face. I don't give a shit if the yellow jersey had to stop to take a dump for twenty minutes on the side of the road. You do not attack when you clearly see an issue with the bike
It's ridiculous how the cycling world seems to have forgotten that Contador is a PROVEN doper and an asshole. Even inviting him to commentate on major cycling races and events and asking for his "respectable and reputable" opinions. These same people continuously shame Lance armstrong
I'm not a Contador fan, but I wouldn't blame him so much for unsportsmanlike behavior in this case. For two reasons. 1. he didn't continue his attack and didn't push hard, otherwise Sanchez and Co wouldn't have caught him before the summit, he and Schleck were too good in this Tour. Furthermore, Schleck had almost closed the gap at the summit. So it was mainly on the descent that he lost time and not through Contador's attack. By the way, Armstrong waited for Ullrich in 2001 until Beloki had caught up with him. Beloki then set the pace and Armstrong sat on Beloki's wheel. Ullrich then had to make a considerable effort to close the gap to this group. So it's not unusual to stop the attack and then join the next group and not wait or allow other riders who weren't waiting to go. 2. the situation should not be assessed without considering what happened at the beginning of the 2010 Tour. On the second stage, Schleck was left behind due to crashes on the wet descents in the Ardennes and his teammate Cancellara neutralized the peloton so that Schleck did not lose any time. One day later, the race took place on cobblestones. Here Contador lost contact due to crashes and a broken shoe but Cancellara pushed the pace at the front. Why was there no neutralization on this stage? Contador lost 1:13 minutes. That's more than he gained on stage 15.
Haven’t seen the whole video but I hope Philipsin entire 23’ TDF is here
UCI: "What are you talking about?"
Glad you showed so many angles of pictures or videos. Nice job. Learned something about the 1979 RVV
Mark Renshaw learned his attitude from the other Mark.
Should look at women's peloton as well. I remember Mara Abbott being repeatedly blocked and chopped by Rabo-Liv on a climb in a race in Italy. The 3 others in the break knew she was a better climber and intimidated her. Giro Rosa 2014 Stage 9 Madonna del Ghisallo.
Ahhh cheers if there is enough can do a second one as well
Coming into the final - "Are you going to sprint?" Dumbest question ever?
It's unbelievable because it is. Hayden was by fare the strongest in the break and the other rider said he wouldn't sprint if Hayden towed him to the line.
AVV vs D Vollering, pgate.
Also maybe a video about sporting moments would be cool.
Yeah good idea
What's the reference here?
@@SanderIOSgamingAVV attacked in Veulta while Vollering stopped for a nature break. Demi tried to chase back on. Not a happy day.
I think you're confusing stupidity with bad sportsmanship in the Filip Maciejuk incident.
You also left out Moscon's alleged other racist/ violent incident, plus Moscon holding onto the team car at the World Championships, and also Nibali's car holding escapade that pulled him across to the next group up the road at the Giro... and there's so many more... Lance Armstrong getting into a break to force a rider out of it for talking about doping... etc.
Oh yes you are right
We are looking forward to your commentary on the Grand Tours in 2024.
I'm not a Contador fan, but I wouldn't blame him so much for unsportsmanlike behavior in this case. For two reasons. 1. he didn't continue his attack and didn't push hard, otherwise Sanchez and Co wouldn't have caught him before the summit, he and Schleck were too good in this Tour. Furthermore, Schleck had almost closed the gap at the summit. So it was mainly on the descent that he lost time and not through Contador's attack. By the way, Armstrong waited for Ullrich in 2001 until Beloki had caught up with him. Beloki then set the pace and Armstrong sat on Beloki's wheel. Ullrich then had to make a considerable effort to close the gap to this group.
So it's not unusual to stop the attack and then join the next group and not wait or allow other riders who weren't waiting to go.
2. the situation should not be assessed without considering what happened at the beginning of the 2010 Tour. On the second stage, Schleck was left behind due to crashes on the wet descents in the Ardennes and his teammate Cancellara neutralized the peloton so that Schleck did not lose any time. One day later, the race took place on cobblestones. Here Contador lost contact due to crashes and a broken shoe but Cancellara pushed the pace at the front. Why was there no neutralization on this stage? Contador lost 1:13 minutes. That's more than he gained on stage 15.
The finger pulling one the guy who won is lucky it wasn’t the 80’s or earlier, he’d have a couple of black eyes for what he did. He sat on McCormicks wheel and promised him he wouldn’t sprint if McCormick towed him to the line (obviously happy with 2nd place - I’ve been there before and done the same deal) the guy then went against his word and sprinted. Which is a smart tactic to win on the day but you won’t end up very well liked and risk getting punched after.
Theo Bos throwing Daryl Impey into the barriers is far worse than any of these.
LMAO THAT HEADBUTT PHOTO
ITS LITERALLY MIDOUSUJI VS IWAIZUMI IN YOWAMUSHI PEDAL THATS HELLA FUNNY
How about Fasso-Bartilo rider punching another rider near mtn top finish in the Basque country. Rumor had it victims relative in helo that caught action.
Chain falling off is usually due to bad shifting. It's an execution error. It's part of the sport IMO. Attack all you want.
Most unsportsmanlike? armstrongs entire career.
Julian rode into Renshaw so Mark was justified imo.
Why was the rider Tony M rode into disqualified?
You should watch the clip, after that they had an altercation.
too many gray areas. hard to justify waiting for a rival who paid for taking more risks, be it equipment or lines taken, etc. Different if due to a fan
During the 2015 Giro in stage 16, Astana and Katusha attacked stage leader Contador on the run up to the Mortirolo climb after his mechanical. Contador used his whole team to bring them back after going solo on the Mortirolo.
Femke Van De Driesche - motor doping in the first U23 CX World Championships in 2016 at Zolder......
I mean you gotta talk about „peegate” from '23 women’s vuelta
Renshaw incident was Deans fault and he should have been penalised. Julian rode alongside and deliberately leaned on him and got is elbow in their. Renshaw was only making room, kept riding straight
What about MVDP shoving GIrmay and making a hole for Philipsen to sprint for win in 23 TDF. Van Der Poel was relegated but it gave Philipsen the win . Then Philpsen boarded GIrmay to win another sprint. No relegation.
How 'bout Roberto Gaggioli swinging a 2X4 at Jonny Sundt...?
Try reading cyclocross conduct history… makes these guys look like cupcakes. -U10
Headbutting is a safety mechanism while you’re being pinched out so that you can keep both of your hands on the bars. Calling something that happens on the track violent seems a bit like low hanging fruit.
Julian suffered severe diaphragm damage from laughter.
Andy Schleck attacked, messed up his shifting and he expected his arrivals to abort their response to his failed/fumbled attack? Had they all been just riding as a group and Schleck dropped his chain would have been a different story.
Failed/fumbled attack? If he didn't had that mechanical issue, he would have destroyed the whole peleton including Contador.
If your chain breaks, that sucks for you, yellow jersey or not. Get a better mechanic or pray for better luck. Nobody should stop and wait.
High disagree. Shit happens, but you should not try to win purely on misfortune.
@@ShadowboostA flat tire is misfortune. A fumbled shift in the midst of an attack is operator error which shouldn’t lead to being the responsibility of his rivals to abort their own response to his failed attack.
The Schleck’s were well known for their tactical incompetence evidenced by their clueless escort of Philippe Gilbert to his victory at La Doyenne.
@@Shadowboost You have an obligation to your sponsor, your team, and your family to ride the fooking bike. You DO NOT have an obligation to competitors or to virtue signaling nitwits who misunderstand good sportsmanship.
@@cycleoflife565 There was no attack. He was in front and Schleck wasn't attacking
@@user-cx2bk6pm2f you wouldn't understand sportsmanship if it hit you in the face. I don't give a shit if the yellow jersey had to stop to take a dump for twenty minutes on the side of the road. You do not attack when you clearly see an issue with the bike
It's ridiculous how the cycling world seems to have forgotten that Contador is a PROVEN doper and an asshole. Even inviting him to commentate on major cycling races and events and asking for his "respectable and reputable" opinions. These same people continuously shame Lance armstrong
If they didn't invite dopers, there would be no one commentating at all.
All people dope.
oh, silly me... I thought the whole idea of racing cycles was to... erm... I dunno... RACE, n not stop if someone has to go wee wee or loses a chain!
Music completely ruins this bideo
Contador's selfish character is unforgivable. He should have decelerated pedaling until he made sure Schleck was back on track. Sad!
I'm not a Contador fan, but I wouldn't blame him so much for unsportsmanlike behavior in this case. For two reasons. 1. he didn't continue his attack and didn't push hard, otherwise Sanchez and Co wouldn't have caught him before the summit, he and Schleck were too good in this Tour. Furthermore, Schleck had almost closed the gap at the summit. So it was mainly on the descent that he lost time and not through Contador's attack. By the way, Armstrong waited for Ullrich in 2001 until Beloki had caught up with him. Beloki then set the pace and Armstrong sat on Beloki's wheel. Ullrich then had to make a considerable effort to close the gap to this group.
So it's not unusual to stop the attack and then join the next group and not wait or allow other riders who weren't waiting to go.
2. the situation should not be assessed without considering what happened at the beginning of the 2010 Tour. On the second stage, Schleck was left behind due to crashes on the wet descents in the Ardennes and his teammate Cancellara neutralized the peloton so that Schleck did not lose any time. One day later, the race took place on cobblestones. Here Contador lost contact due to crashes and a broken shoe but Cancellara pushed the pace at the front. Why was there no neutralization on this stage? Contador lost 1:13 minutes. That's more than he gained on stage 15.
Contador had a perfect right to carry on after Schleck shipped his chain. After all, he was reacting to Schlecks attack.
He wasn't, he reacted the moment Andy had the mechanical issue.
Contador is a shame for Spain.
Gianno Moscon should be out of the peloton...too much things have happened
If they allowed professional cyclists to go full contact, I'd watch alot more.