Categories: General

Riders on a Storm

Hamilton races to victory in Liege-Bastogne-Liege

Tyler Hamilton’s win in La Doyenne in 2003 was one of the highlights in what was generally a fantastic season. A great Spring campaign, a great Giro, a great Tour, a great Fall; unpredictable races, and closely-fought battles littered the events. But, with the luxury of 20-20 hindsight and a quick cross-reference of results listings to doping scandals, it’s safe to assume that season landed smack in the middle of an era of jet-fueled racing that rivals the 1990’s in their indulgence.

It’s a tough time to be a cyclist. Death, doping scandals, corruption in the organizing bodies of the sport. We test our athletes more than any other sport, but the tests are flawed and incomplete, and rumors persist that teams and riders pay off not just the labs to surpress positive tests, but also the UCI. Hamilton’s confession on 60 Minutes this week is the latest in an unsettling chain of events that keep peeling back more layers of the onion. I was a big fan of Tyler’s and part of me even believed in his innocence. He seemed like a genuinely nice guy – much too nice a guy to get involved in cheating. But there he was on television, talking openly about the magnitude of drugs-taking within the USPS team.

On the other hand, I’ve never been a fan of Armstrong’s. I find him to be arrogent, controlling, manipulative. His Tour wins were too formulaic; in sharp contrast to his fight with cancer, his racing showed no element of humanism. I have taken it for granted that his wins came with considerable assistance from a carefully planned and executed doping regimen. But these beliefs were woven together by a thread of doubt, and the possibility always existed that his were clean wins.

Hearing Hamilton talk of the seemingly nonchalant attitude towards doping at USPS and, in particular, by Armstrong, is surprising not in the content of the message, but in how hard the message hit. I expected the words. I had read them. I have even written many of them myself. But there was always a tangible element of speculation about them. For me, that element is now gone, and it feels strange to say the least.

Even as someone who generally accepts that doping is commonplace in the peloton, it hurts me every time another allegation of doping comes out. It takes me days to recover from it. But even if the worst happens, if Professional Cycling as we know it today falls apart, cycling will continue. Because cycling is more than watching others race bikes. It’s about racing or riding the bike yourself. It’s about overcoming your own limitations. It’s about the rider and the machine working together. It’s about cleaning, caring for, thinking about your bike. It’s about taking photos of it so you can look at it when you’re away.

Cycling rides through a storm today, but we will always have the bike. We will always have la Vie Velominatus.

 

frank

The founder of Velominati and curator of The Rules, Frank was born in the Dutch colonies of Minnesota. His boundless physical talents are carefully canceled out by his equally boundless enthusiasm for drinking. Coffee, beer, wine, if it’s in a container, he will enjoy it, a lot of it. He currently lives in Seattle. He loves riding in the rain and scheduling visits with the Man with the Hammer just to be reminded of the privilege it is to feel completely depleted. He holds down a technology job the description of which no-one really understands and his interests outside of Cycling and drinking are Cycling and drinking. As devoted aesthete, the only thing more important to him than riding a bike well is looking good doing it. Frank is co-author along with the other Keepers of the Cog of the popular book, The Rules, The Way of the Cycling Disciple and also writes a monthly column for the magazine, Cyclist. He is also currently working on the first follow-up to The Rules, tentatively entitled The Hardmen. Email him directly at rouleur@velominati.com.

View Comments

  • Correct, frank, as per the norm.

    Professional cycling will survive - regardless the buffoonery in Aigle and the chemistry in the field.

    Take a couple of kitted-out pros into a school room - watch the eyes of those kids light up - and you'll understand what I know.

    Kids will always want to ride. Some will always want to be the fastest. Racing will continue.

    Perhaps, next iteration, someone with the organizational and business development skills of, say, Bernie Ecclestone will hold the reins.

    That would be nice.

  • Didn't realize he grew up skiing and didn't realize he was from MA.

    He did seem to be pretty upset about coming clean.

    It's always a shame when this comes out, especially on such a widely watched U.S. news program. It pains me that all many Americans see regarding cycling is about doping. Ugh, there are so many other beautiful aspects that never, ever get brought to light.

    I'll keep riding though, and need to clean my bartape and bike tomorrow. No time tonight, hate going to bed with them dirty.

    And excited to watch more Giro.

  • Tyler's interview was heart breaking to watch. I watched it through Cycling Tips blog, which had linked outtakes from the interview and in those outtakes Tyler was VERY reluctant to finger lance specifically, always insisting that it was part of the trade, and you can see the effect on Tyler of laying out things that for decades he'd kept secret. It was watching someone divorce themselves from something that's been a part of their whole life, and he knew he was doing that. It's hard to back any sport that would make demands like that upon a person. No one else I know has to lie to their family about their trade, and the effect of that on Tyler was very sad to watch, and no doubt he's far from the only one who's found himself in that position.
    As for cycling as a whole, I think cycling is taking repeated body blows over this and is in denial about how serious those blows are.

  • Marko:

    What does inspire me on rides? At the risk of sounding trite, it's knowing there's a bunch of other OCD dickheads (read Velominati) out there in all corners of the globe doing the same thing I'm doing. Trying to have fun, stay fit, talk shit, obsess, and balance cycling with life and knowing all the while that cycling is life.
    And that's all Tyler, Floyd, LA, Bertie, Uli, et. al. are doing, they're just doing it at another level and the steaks (see what I did there?) are higher.

    A+1, Mate.

  • @Jeff in PetroMetro
    @G'phant
    What is scary is that JiPM found that article. WTF were you doing reading health articles at the livestrong site?

    I only went to the article because I thought it might have some thinly-veiled reference to the Retired-Cyclist-now-Stool-Pigeon-formerly-known-as-the-Hard-Man-From-Marblehead.

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