Indurain kills it with puny calves up some Merckxforsaken Pyrenean climb. Photo: Cor Vos/Cycling Tips

I’m not too proud to admit to having multiple phobias against various things. That’s phobia multiplicity. Having a phobia against something is very simliar to having a normal phobia, except that in addition to being irrationally scared of something, you also harbor a stifling grudge against it. Also possibly irrationally.

For example, I have been diagnosed with a phobia against having small calves. This is a condition where one hates how small calves look, which is further heightened by being aware of how puny their calves are. When I say “diagnosed”, I really mean “teased”.

I am pleased, however, to see how many Tour contenders have fuckall calves. Miguel Indurain, for example, had calves exactly like mine except his made his bike go batshit fast. Similarly, Chris Froome is letting all kinds of V out of the box with his puny calves. It lightens the heart to see fellow calfless riders perform so well.

But this, inevitably, brings up the question as to whether a rider can compete without calf-doping. Evidence is rampant, but the UCI stands idle in its fight against calf-enhancement. Johnny Drama bravely broke the Omertà and admitted to getting calf implants. Since those days, we’ve been taught to look beyond the beautifully shaped calf and ask, are those magnificent strokes powered by bags of saline? Our own Gianni should be investigated, hosting some of the biggest calves known to exist; I could fit two of my quads in one of his calves. Brett, to his enduring credit, is under no suspicion whatsoever of using calf-doping. The jury is out on Marko, and if Jim ever shaved his guns, we might make a reasoned decision on him. (Yes, there is a Keeper among us with hairy guns, but trust us, he lays the hurt down a-plenty. Still, as soon as we get him drunk enough, we’ll hold him down, shave his guns, and Sharpie a penis on each of his quads.)

The days of Pharmstrong and team riding at the front of the Tour for three weeks while controlling affairs with steadfast diligence has taught us it is prudent to be suspicious. As the Doping Saga of the days gone by unwinds, the one lesson that stands out from the past is that when one team makes a show of force, it means they are on something that the rest of the bunch isn’t. In that light, we are right to see a team at the front, controlling affairs and to raise an eyebrow in response. I am among the most skeptical, having supported and loved this sport through thick and thin for the better part of three decades. Suspicion is isn’t cynism – it’s realism.

Still, I find my attitude shifting. Just as it was unfair to the clean riders to claim a “level playing field” during the Doping Era – if it has indeed passed – it is similarly unfair to accuse the clean riders of doping in the Clean Era – if it has indeed arrived. There are a lot of if‘s, passed‘s, and arrived‘s in there, but nevertheless, it is a turning point in my thinking. On Saturday, Froome was marching into the pain cave, and you could almost watch the flashlight drop from his hand and everything start to go dark. It was glorious to see the unabashed suffering of a rider on his way to Yellow. Not having him look like he was on a Sunday stroll is a good sign, and if Sky is doping, they didn’t get Porte’s programme right the day after his spectacular ride to second place on the stage and G.C – or it was a clever ploy to deflect suspicion.

This isn’t my first rodeo, and I’ve been stung for giving the benefit of the doubt in the past. But on balance, believing is more fun than doubting, and hopefulness is more fulfilling than cynism. I am a fan, not a professional; “fun” is the reason I spectate – not for the empty satisfaction of having been “right” or having “known” someone was cheating. Some people have a phobia against being duped, but this is thankfully one I have managed to avoid; my view is that if I am cheated, that says more about the cheater than it does about me.

In that vein, I choose to believe that what we see today is a cleaner race than what we’ve seen in the past, and that perhaps Froome and Sky’s performance might have been impossible during the Armstrong Era. Even in purposefully optimistic paragraphs as the ones that precedes this one, I see my language hedging bets against itself. It is a sign of the times. But still, I choose to believe.

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

  • @Marcus

    @meursault ah, how did Kerrison revolutionize Australian swimming? Wasn't he just Jodie Henry's coach?

    Who the hell is Jodie Henry?

    It boggles my mind that anyone is able to digest any information at all about sports outside Cycling. I occasionally watch them, but it all goes in one eye and out the other.

  • @frank Yeah, that wasn't my only point (your honour, the defence rests....)

    I was trying to elaborate that new ideas are challenging the way it's always been. Some things have been that way for a good reason, and that's fine, but if you have the imagination to challenge the old order, then why not?

    A different sport again, but I read Clive Woodwards book on how he transformed England rugby. He created an elite environment, down to the smallest details, and surrounded the team with the best coaches available. Before that, England rugby was mainly amateur in it's outlook.

    Anyways, all good fun speculating as you say.

  • @piwakawaka

    Apparently this guy can be a contender, he just has to drop 4 kilos, this is my phobia...

    Yes, I just won a stage of the 100th Tour de France and all I got was a shitty Power Bar plastic 'trophy". Sorry if I'm stuck on this issue but it really sucks that this is the best ASO can come up with.

  • @meursault

    @frank Yeah, that wasn't my only point (your honour, the defence rests....)

    I was trying to elaborate that new ideas are challenging the way it's always been. Some things have been that way for a good reason, and that's fine, but if you have the imagination to challenge the old order, then why not?

    A different sport again, but I read Clive Woodwards book on how he transformed England rugby. He created an elite environment, down to the smallest details, and surrounded the team with the best coaches available. Before that, England rugby was mainly amateur in it's outlook.

    Anyways, all good fun speculating as you say.

    I have seen Woodward after dinner speaking and his is very good.  He made a series of simple change and forced players to do it his way or not get selected to play.  He had to battle the governing body....ring any bells?

  • @pakrat

    A few weeks back the wife noticed my calves twitching. I never noticed it before and I can't feel it but when I cross one of my legs my calf looks like some parasitic worm is wrestling a badger in there. Freaks me out! Am I alone here?

    I get that twitching muscles sensation in ams and legs now and again after a series of tough rides, especially in summer. Apparently it's down to a magnesium deficiency and the best wáy to counter is a magnesium spray (10 short sprays onto bare skin after a shower). A couple of applications on consecutive days and job done. Repeat now and again to keep the twitching away.

  • @Marcus

    Sounds like there are a lot of fat cunts around who don't know the difference between calves and cankles

    Someone's got PMS. What's wrong sugar, got a run in your stockings? Hairdresser not get your bangs right?

  • @frank

    @Marcus

    Sounds like there are a lot of fat cunts around who don't know the difference between calves and cankles

    Espresso snorted.

    @ChrisO

    But yes it was impressive from Froome, and Porte.

    Despite my stated optimism, it is always worrying to me when good climbers come close to TT specialists. It was a short race, though, and the shorter the race, the smaller the differences would be.

    Always a lottery and I'm sure Tony 'Who Ate All the Sausages" Martin has lost timetrials the same way through rain or other changing conditions.

    And punctures.

    hey I thought the C word was banned by the language polis ? Anyway, the Panzerwagen deserves many kudos for his ride given he missing half his skin still, chapeau.

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