The Rules are about cultivating a passion for riding our bikes to gain the maximum enjoyment possible. This requires humility, for one thing, and devotion, for another. It requires a balance between focusing on progress and enjoying the journey. It demands a reverence for our history paired with a hunger for evolution. The Rules teach us balance, to embrace the contradiction of opposing forces for the positive that each can bring us.
And so it could be said that The Goldilocks Principle is one of the fundamental tenets of Rule Holism. Along our journey to La Vie Velominatus, we will swing like a pendulum from left to right before we find our resting place somewhere between two extremes, whether in our training, our position, or kit, or even our very commitment to Cycling itself. No one can tell another where this balance lies; the path is for each of us to walk, we can only be shown The Way.
My STRAVA account is a good example of this. A beautifully designed service, this is a powerful training tool that lets you measure yourself against your previous performances and those of others. And therein lies the rub: since my return from Belgium, each ride I’ve been on I’ve buried the pin going after a KOM or personal best on a particular segment. This, of course, is the principle danger in training by numbers and flies in the face of Training Properly. But the tool is new to me, and I will allow myself this dalliance on the condition that I learn to cope with the pressure of having a computer that is recording my ride for future analysis. Failing that, the computer will be relegated to use only on those rides where I wish to test myself. Balance.
But the Goldilocks Principle also applies to wearing of the kit – in particular the length of sleeves, shorts, knickers, and socks. We have seen a dangerous trend of late – spearheaded by the English-speaking population of the Pro peloton, into the realm where shorts flirt with becoming knickers, socks threaten to become shin guards, and short-sleeves portend to their supposed fate as three-quarter tees.
As Velominati, it is our duty to band together and provide guidance to the rest of the Cycling community of which we are part: boundaries give us definition, and definition distinguishes us from the savages. Looking at the peloton and my peers on the road, it is clear to me that it is our obligation to issue a refresher on The Goldilocks Principle as it relates to cycling kit fit:
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Who is the current pro who rocks the shortest bibs? It's gotta be Hoogerland, yes?
@xyxax
I have a teammate, Merckx bless the guy I love him. Our kits are mostly white, helmets white, glasses white (all with red trim). But while I ride a black bike, and most of the rest of the team ride other variations of not white ones, his race bike is a screaming white Fuji with red trim. And white shoes.
Kinda too much. Though he does look "pro" and is fast. Just not something I'd do.
@VeloVita
Check the guns though:
@scaler911
It's like in the TdF, when the entire leader's kit plus bike is yellow, or even worse, has come down with the measles. Too much matching is bad.
However, to @xyxax's photo, I think the white shoes/socks/helmet is quite good. As long as the entire bike and kit isn't also white.
@xyxax
No, there is not. That is perfect. Well done, my son. You are on your way.
@VeloVita
Yeah, that or Voekler. But check out the V-eins on Hoogie via @DerHoggz! My Merckx in heaven, no wonder he bled so much!
@frank
maybe Pippo wins the shortest shorts award? Sorry for posting this. I should know better.
@Ron
No way, the wristwatch look is proper oldschool style.
And now for the fugliest race jerseys in history.
"Hey, let's make it look like they are wearing their bibs over their jerseys!".
Only in America.
@Marcus
I think they are trying to pay some sort of homage to the Castorama kit: