While the The V Moment of the Year is the moment during the season when the sport demonstrated the most pure example of spirit of The V, the Anti-V Moment of the Year similarly acknowledges the moment in which all those things that make The V great were ignored. This is more than just cheating or climbing into the broom wagon; this is reserved for under-handed tactics, or wheel-sucking to the win, complaining about dangerous descents, canceling races for bad weather.
The Anti-V is a virus. It starts small, as a nagging doubt perhaps about form or willingness to suffer that day. It replicates and feeds on itself; giving in to doubt is easier when you’ve done it before, and the more you do it, the easier it gets. It manifests itself in an absence of those things we love most about cycling: a combination of guts, class, and panache.
Before I go any further, I’d like to point out that we had even more trouble deciding on the Anti-V moment than we did the V Moment. Bretto made the case for les Fréres Grimpeur, but couldn’t dial in on a specific incident of Anti-V and kept repeating, “Every time they looked around, or when they mounted their TT bikes!” We did the only thing we could do, and had CERN crunch the data for us. They confirmed the Schlecks spent the equivalent of three full weeks rubbernecking and nearly a quarter as much working on their time trialing – too much to mathematically isolate a single moment. Sometimes the best decision in the midst of indecision is simply to make one, and that’s exactly what I did.
At the very instant when Johan Van Summeren was doing a reverse 270 cannon ball into the deep end of the V-Pool to bring us the V Moment of 2011, Jonathan Vaughters was clutching his shoulders as he gingerly waded into the kiddie pool – dragging a handful of race favorites with him.
The race was shaping up beautifully for Garmin-Cervélo. Van Summeren had read the race and left the favorites at the Trouée to join teammate Gabriel Rasch up the road in the day’s breakaway. The plan was to keep Johan in reserve at the front while the Garmin team worked to bring the break back, giving Thor Hushovd an armchair ride to the finish with the considerable advantage of having teammates in the finale. A beautiful plan, and I love it when a plan comes together.
But Garmin’s firepower wasn’t quite enough to bridge up in time, and Faboo wasn’t thrilled about the prospect of riding into Roubaix with Thor getting a leadout from three teammates. In typical style, he took the race into his own hands and left the others to their own devices. Hushovd, Flecha, and Ballan came along for the ride and the four made huge inroads on the gap with Cancellara doing the bulk of the work.
And here the sticky tentacles of the Anti-V set in. Faboo started doubting whether he should really be hauling such a fast finisher as Hushovd up to his teammates and sat up when the gap had gone down to within arm’s reach.
At this point, Garmin’s plan wasn’t as solid as it had been a few dozen kilometers before:
The plan was in need of some quick-thinking to maintain the upper hand, and everyone knows driving while strategizing is dangerous. So, for safety reasons, Vaughters called in Garmin’s pocket Timid Tactician: His Turtleneck Sweater. New plan:
Cancellara, Hushovd and Vaughters all had their hand in making this the Anit-V Moment of the year, but Vaughters takes the bulk of the blame not only because his was inflexible and unimaginative thinking, but because he was playing both sides: the rider up front can’t work if he’s got a rider coming up, or the rider coming up can’t work because he’s got a rider up front. Pick one.
But worst of all, there is nothing more Anti-V than two riders within a chance of winning riding along gesturing to each other as they both refuse to take a pull for fear of dragging the other to the win. Certainly, a rider must be sure not to do too much work and place themselves at a disadvantage, but this should never come at the risk of losing the opportunity to win the race in the first place; I’m sure we can all agree it is much more in the spirit of the V to fight and get beaten into second place than to never fight at all and throw your chance away. In this, Cancellara and Hushovd each had a hand in the pie, but Vaughters and his Sweater were were the masterminds behind the stalemate.
We truly love what Vaughters is trying to do with Garmin by making it their mission to race clean, but racing clean is no excuse for uncorking an entire case of Vintage 2011 Anti-V. Vaughters races his team like they are weak with nary a chance to win, when in fact they are one of the strongest teams in the sport. It is time to wrap the bars in white tape, set aside the underdog tactics, and start racing like leaders. And by all means, fire the Sweater.
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
@itburns
That is wrong on so many levels. I may not be able to sleep tonight. Chapeaux.
@itburns
jesus christ, this will haunt me in my dreams for quite some time. Nice one. Me and Fronk chillin' in da uberbus.
@frank
I'm late to the party, and no eggspert on all these here taktiks, but I'm with Gianni on this one. JV may indeed be the ultimate douche if for no other reason that that shitte at the '09 tour, but when JV made the call on not chasing and sitting on Faboo, JvS was indeed up the road. He was playing the cards he was dealt. Indeed, perhaps JvS dealt off the bottom of the deck, but I see a Garmin/Cervelo jersey on the winner.
As to that shen in the '09 tour, that was uber-bullshiat. I think they had counted on disguising their tactics in killing the time gap to "Thor needed the points" argument, but cav and HTC/HR were not driving the pace. Time matters not in the point classification. Driving the chase was pure spite. Liggett called exactly right: it was the double cross. Garmin fuckers even tried to point at LA/Astana. So yeah, JV needs a permeant anti-V labeel. But not for this. Just like Clenbutador is a doper - but not for what they caught him at.
@frank
What happened to my VSP winner jersey?
@Buck Rogers
I'd give a V-award for just this. Fuckin' spot on, mate!
Gosh, there is nothing more fun that poking Frank with a stick. You'll get a complete description of how tough some dutch dude was in the 70s, and he'll bust out not only a picture of DanDerWhathisname killing it, but have a complete play by play description of the tour de Obscureamuur to go with it.
All hail the Keepers!
@Nate
Wow, just...wow. That bug was in production for less than 7 minutes. I can prove it from the SVN logs. And you noticed.
Like I said, wow. I love you guys. An entire community of people possibly more detail-obsessed than me.
@eightzero
+1!
@itburns
I'll be disappointed if I meet Gianni in person and he doesn't have a big black nose and a combover.
@frank
I've grown very attached to that jersey. Seeing something else there came as a bit of a shock!
@itburns
Now if you could adjust this one to show @frank and the elder Schleck staring lovingly into each others eyes...
@frank
Will we be transported to and from events on the keepers tour in a bus as majestic as the uberbus?
fortunately Der Unst Unst Unst (German techno) is timeless... Der Uberbus could roll on for all eternity.