2013 was The Year of the Anti-V. In every other year, the Velominati Cogclave to decide the V and The Anit-V awards is full of curses and thrown pint glasses, usually in defense of each of our chosen V-Moments. 2013 saw the same scene, except this time it was for us having too many competing Anti-V Moments and when it came time to discuss the V-Moment, we sat around, staring at our cogs like we were first learning to shift gear.
Was there actually a V-Moment of the Year this time around?
It was a year that started strongly with The V. It flowed through the early season races, and as we made our way to the first Monument of Milan Sanremo, it unleashed its fury upon all those who dared start the race. The V can be an intangible thing, manifesting itself in other Rules as it did that day in the form of Rule #9.
As The V is wont to do on some occasions, however, its ferociousness drove back the intensity of the racing and the finale was almost anti-climactic to the scenes witnessed during the race. Then we were into the cobbled classics and again we were witness to the iron fist of The Nine, though this time in the form of cold but dry weather. Brett and Frank were there along with Pavé Cycling Classics and the Keeper’s Tour 2013 attendees to feel its awesome might first-hand. Cold cobblestones are less forgiving than warm ones, in the sense that the Emperor is less forgiving than Darth Vader.
The classics closed with excellent but forgettable racing in the Ardennes Classics, even if Dan Martin won a magnificent Liege. But then the season faltered; first with the Giro which was a complete snooze-fest, starting with Brad Wiggins guzzling a bottle of expired Anti-V before riding a slip-n-slide down a mountainside, then with Nibali riding so well we had not choice but to resent his dominance.
Then the Tour warm-up races passed under the radar as they normally do before Froome put us all to sleep at the Tour in the same manner Nibali did at the Giro. Both Nibali and Froome’s wins came at no fault of their own, but let me momentarily show some dirty Schlecky Love and state that both those brother better meditate extensively on the V and Nibali better show up fit at the Tour because the lap around France really needs some competition for the top step – I’m tired of resorting to watching the fight for second and third to try to find anything interesting.
A few mid-season races followed before what would have been an absolutely gripping Vuelta were it not for the fact that it was the Vuelta and only a handful of us even noticed that a 41-year-old American wound up winning. A Pacific-Northwestener, no less. That gives the good ol’ You Ess of Aye a win in every Grand Tour. But because of its unfortunate nature, no one gives two shits about the Vuelta – not even enough enough shits to garner the victor a contract for 2014.
Then the Worlds rolled around and the Anti-V was once again in full bloom. The Brits, whom you would think could ride in the rain, all fell off and called their mothers to bid them a good day before retiring to the team car. Then the Spanish had things dialed in before they all dropped the soap and let a Portuguese rider become the least-deserving World Champion since Ale Ballan.
I don’t want to sound too negative, but that’s a lot of Anti-V, right there. Loads of it.
In the final analysis, it comes down as usual to the Cobbled Classics. I was buying frites in the field by the Oude Kwaremont when I looked up and saw Boonen riding a wheelchair out of a hospital. Bugger that, I thought. Probably some sappy retrospective. Nope, Tom boned a fucking signpost and ruined his season. But then Fabs and Sags went shoulder to shoulder on the Paterberg, which was a pure, unadulterated showing of the V. Two men well versed in suffering and pain, drag-racing up a near-vertical cobbled lane. After the race, Fabian stated that he didn’t really attack Sagan; they had both gone full gas up the hill – he had just gone full gas for longer. That’s an “Instant Classic Hardman Quote” if I’ve ever heard one.
Then it was on to Roubaix the next week. Fabian crashed a few times in training, which is really embarrassing, especially if you’re Swiss and you know chicks are looking at you. The race itself saw an awesome fight, with Faboo off his best and the field knowing it. They took the fight to him, and he was outnumbered all the way. Omega-Pharma Quickstep entered the critical Carrefour de l’Arbre with two riders – Vandenbergh and Stybar – in the four-man group with Fabs and Sep Vanmarcke each to fend for themselves. Sadly, the drunken crowd accidentally intervened and knocked both OPQS riders out of contention.
From the Carrefour emerged two riders, and they fought it out in the famous Roubaix velodrome.
We are often witness to Cancellara laying down the V, but we are rarely witness to him laying on the ground after an effort. He was Off Form but On V that day; he raced with his mind and used it to get what he needed from his body. Into the Velodrome, he didn’t lead as is customary for him. He played cat-and-mouse like every other intelligent rider might. He waited. He even used the banking of the velodrome to his advantage.
He had an imperfect body that day, but he was more determined than any other rider to win. And, through a near-crippling application of the V, he prevailed against stronger riders who had the courage to take the fight directly to him. That, my fellow Velominati, was the V-Moment of the Year.
And, Coppi New Year to everyone.
The Runner-Up Moment: Fabs drops Sagan in a drag race up the Paterberg.
I know as well as any of you that I've been checked out lately, kind…
Peter Sagan has undergone quite the transformation over the years; starting as a brash and…
The Women's road race has to be my favorite one-day road race after Paris-Roubaix and…
Holy fuckballs. I've never been this late ever on a VSP. I mean, I've missed…
This week we are currently in is the most boring week of the year. After…
I have memories of my life before Cycling, but as the years wear slowly on…
View Comments
Thanks for a superb refresher of all that went down in 2013, Frank! I had forgotten some of those things.
But not the British squad all pulling out of the WC.
Here is a nice year end review, hopefully not already posted. From PEZ
@Dan_R
It still blows my mind that we wrote a book.
We just finished the US edition - with new (additional) Rules and (hopefully) all the mistakes corrected - and I shipped it off to the publisher this morning.
It was very strange, as the FedEx guy typed in the address, he said something like, "Oh, WW Norton, I just shipped another manuscript off to them just before the holiday. Is this your own book?"
It was too hard to explain that there are V of us Keepers who wrote it, so I just said, "Yup." As a lifelong technologist and professional fuckup, I have a hard time accepting the fact that I might be a writer.
@Tobin
He only gets a lifetime achievement award. But don't worry, he's in good company - right there alongside the late Peter O'Toole, who delivered the ultimate V-Line:
Best actor of our generation, and never won the most prestigious award given out by the most obnoxious douchebags in the industry.
Its a perfect analogy, really.
@Dan_R
Maybe it has something to do with the sentimental value of you investing every cent you've ever earned into opening a bicycle studio named after the event, sending a set of wheels to some dickhead on the internet who had a Cycling tour to ride the cobbles that year, getting the same dickhead to get the Lion of Flanders to sign your jersey, the publicity of which causing you getting sued by a company who owned a false trademark on the name, then winning a social media campaign against them to be allowed to keep trading under the name?
There is so much V and Anti-V boiling in there that I'm not sure what to do with it. Its like being at a frat party and drinking the punch. Did Mike do right? Did Velominati, through trying to help you, actually hand you the soap after dropping it themselves? Merckx knows, but hopefully it wound up at least neutral for you.
Happy 2014 mate.
@Gianni
PEZ is like a competent version of Velominati.
@frank
Doo-ood. R U serious? I taught literature and composition at the university level for two decades--published, did the peer review thing, the works. You write like a bastard, obviously, so you can dial down the modesty effect and get back to doing that semantic V-oodoo that you do.
(My VMH is also a lifelong technologist and also writes--and reads--really, really well. People who learned to write code early in adult life probably learned the difference between clarity and logic, on one hand, and vague nonsensical bullshit, on the other.)
I look forward to ordering the US version. Ongoing congrats to all you Keepers.
@PeakInTwoYears
These other four, they're the writers. I'm the fuckooff - which is consistent with my message above.
But seriously, that's high praise. And when you guys get close to Seattle, let us know because we'll have the two of you over for dinner. Your VMH is a firecracker and so is mine. That should prove interesting.
Also, you - the literary prof or whatever - said "R U" instead of "Are You". Kinda dilutes the message, FYI.
Twenty-five hill repeats for you. And given where you live, I mean that to be Hurricane Ridge.
@frank
Yeah baby, I agree that P-R was so intense because it was hard, hard, hard then finally decided in the last 50m. If Fabs had ridden away with two secteurs to go it would not have been as great. He had to ride smarter than he has in other races. Being a favorite is no huge benefit when there are no teammates around.
Regarding Rui Costa, I'd agree with Harminator, though I was only watching shiet video after the fact, Costa seems a tough bastard and used his head, more than J-Rod. I doubt Costa had any teammates nearby either. I think he won that one well by making the perfect move and putting two Spanish teammates in a spot of bother. Genius.
@frank
I could play the pedant and identify the rhetorical trope you're using here, but you already know what you're doing. This is my point.
I'm speaking for Her--in this case I'll risk it--when I say that we would love to get together.