In the interest of full disclosure, I feel it is my responsibility to warn you that this article might accidentally make you a better cyclist. Even though it breaks protocol, the subject of this edition of Look Pro involves the power of the mind, not just aesthetics.
As we established previously, The Rules can be transcended if the rider has the proper mentality. Take, for example, the sweat band that Hinault is wearing in this photo. Though he gets off on a Rule Violation through a technicality (no Rules about sweat bands), the way that thing is creeping up past his hairline, you might think he just stepped out of a special session with Richard Simmons. That said, from a technical perspective, calling it a “sweat band” is erroneous, since sweat bands don’t work for Badger Perspiration (pure Iron) and that it is actually a device used to absorb your opponent’s anguish and convert it directly into hardonium, the core element of The V. The point is, he pulls it off because he’s the Badger, and the Badger can do whatever he damn well pleases. Lame sweat bands and all.
A good deal of The Rules focus on the little details of good taste and style that help you look Pro, such as how to wear sunnies, the proper length of socks and bibs, positioning on the bike, and the accessories that are and aren’t allowed. But try as you might to Look Fantastic, unless you apply liberal doses of Rule #5, nothing you do will go far to help you avoid the Gyllenhaal Syndrome.
The good news is that Rule 5 is not measured in absolutes, but by relative increments. Whether you are throwing your leg over a top tube for the first time, a recreational rider, a racer, or a Pro riding a bike around a track for 60 minutes, to observe Rule #5 means that you push yourself beyond a level you previously thought possible. This is the crux of becoming a better cyclist; your limits are dictated more by the mind than by fitness; to push beyond your limits is to will your lungs to breathe a little deeper, demand a bit more from your legs, and to steel your mind against the constant pleas from your lungs and legs to mercifully halt the effort.
The bad news is that the work in pursuit of Rule #5 is never done, for every step closer you come, Rule #5 takes a step farther away. As your fitness increases and your body learns to cope with the demands you put on it, the bar creeps ever higher (see Rule #10).
In your pursuit of Looking Pro, keep these guidelines in mind:
A-Merckx.
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
@Rob
Too cool! I started racing in VT/NH/ME and Mass in 1988. I agree, I never saw anything rough in my races but when you are alking about the old pro's, in the tough days of yesteryear, it was a different story!
@Oli Brooke-White
Ha! I'm flattered that you assumed I put enough effort into it to do that much research. Sadly no. I had, however, completely forgotten about that period where it was Renaul-Elf-Gitane. Thanks for the reminder. Great picture. Any chance you have one where he's showing the full jersey?
Hmm, no sorry. The best I can do are these - the first is the Teams list from Tour 82...
...and this one from the 1982 Giro podium shows the Cycles Gitane logo that was below the Elf logo on the jersey and is the first photo (after extensive searching!) I have of him wearing the headband.
Dammit!
And...
And finally one of him in yellow in the '82 Tour. By the way, I don't regard Wiki-ing as "effort" or I'd be fit as lol.
Once you begin to meditate upon The V, signs appear everywhere (brochure from my hotel last week)
@sgt
NICE!
I recently failed on a hill in Victoria's mornington peninsula. The rules immediately entered my mind and I was so ashamed of stopping I went back down and rode it again.