Categories: Six Days Of

Pink or Yellow?

photo by pedale.forchetta

We’re into day four of the Six Days of the Giro series, let’s talk trash. 

Yes the Tour de France started a few years before the Giro and has always been credited as The Tour to win. You win the Giro, you are a stud. Win the Tour and you are a stud for life. Why is that? Is the Tour longer, tougher, more murderous, more beautiful? In the 2013 edition, the Tour is a mere 25 km longer. The number of stages are the same. The Tour has earned a prestige it will never willingly cede. The Tour is it. Teams send their best riders. No one uses the Tour to train since the world championships were moved to September.

Obviously the maglia rosa is better looking than the maillot jaune, no argument. There is no arguing about podium girls; let us never argue about podium girls. Unless they are dudes, like that overly-politically correct scene where guys were pushed onto the stage a few years back. Either go Chippendale dancers or nothing if you can’t handle beautiful women on the stage. The Giro trophy is much hipper than the Tour fruit bowl. Is a leader’s all pink bike nicer than an all yellow bike? If not tarted up too much a De Rosa pearlescent pink paint job is beautiful. The same can be said for a beautiful yellow frame, but when the hubs, spokes and everything else on it matches the paint, arguing which is nicer is a lost cause.

Is France a more beautiful country to race through? From the rider’s perspective, they might not opine. They are looking at the jersey 1.5 meters in front of them or the next hairpin corner coming up fast. Day to day they might not even know which country they are in. From the high definition helicopter shots it would be a hopeless argument: both countries are incredibly varied and beautiful, like the podium ladies. Pastries, France, café, Italy. Before the advent of traveling team chefs, riders were at the mercy of whichever overworked, disgruntled chef was employed by the hotel. The French are renown gastronomies and renown for the terrible pasta they would serve Tour racers. If one was always fueling up on pasta and rice, one was much happier in the Giro.

What the Tour defiantly has over the Giro is Paris. Yes it is a parade but what a parade route. Riding into Paris and doing laps on the Champs Élysée; that’s how you end a Grand Tour. The Giro doesn’t always end in Milan, like this year’s finish in Brescia. They know the ride around Milan is not something to always be repeating. The Italians are more inclined to send the Giro route over strade bianche, gravel and dirt passes and up viciously steep ski station goat paths. Sometimes they go too far but they deserve credit for their craziness. The Giro has unfortunately always been about long transfers. Couple that with Italian inefficiency and riders may often eat too late and sleep too little. The French can whisk teams around the country in hours on the TGV. The Tour routes are more conservative, hitting the familiar climbs, avoiding the active volcanos. 

If the Tour is the big show it’s partially because more money flows there, in almost all directions. There is a long standing fight about how little of that money flows towards the riders. The Giro has started to improve the team’s TV revenue sharing. It’s a smart move, if it benefits the teams financially, they will want to always be invited, they will take it more seriously, the Giro will improve. This could eventually put both the Giro and the Vuelta on a level with the Tour. Then we would really have something to argue about. 

Gianni

Gianni has left the building.

View Comments

  • @frank

    @itburns

    All three national "loops" are like children - each different but you love each one.

    The stronger, more team revenue making the Giro becomes, the better. ASO has the Tour and Vuelta locked up.

    Yeah, and just like children, you love one more than the rest. And I love the Giro more.

    Are the other siblings jealous of the Bianchi?

  • @scaler911

    And lets not forget the Tre Cime di Lavaredo. That climb is so brutal, I named my hardest training loop in Seattle the Tre Cime because it hits the three of the "lumps" in Seattle.

    Merckx's only concession to the snow and cold? Gloves.

    And some more love.

    [dmalbum: path="/velominati.com/wp-content/uploads/readers/frank/2013.05.11.15.49.47/2/"/]

  • One of my all time favourite photos. Year of Hampsten's epic on the Gavia, to see him in pink looking so utterly cool, let alone fabulous, as he waited to start the time trial is a vivid memory for me.

  • Il Giro e la maglia rosa para me, grazie.  La Tour is a bigger deal; I won't argue that.  But I'm an italophile from a young age: I'd rather eat italian than french, I aspire to Campagnolo, not Mavic, my first good bike was a Bianchi, not Peugeot, and I'd personally rather ride in Italy than France.

    It doesn't hurt that I got serious about cycling in '87, just after LeMond's accident, so Andy's win in '88 imprinted on me like any good young puppy/acolyte.

  • @Jay

    My biggest wish is that there was some way to watch the Giro on TV rather than relying on steraming video feeds. Oh well, perhaps someday if the Giro organizers play their cards right...

    Hell yes, me too. I actually found a channel buried in a "sports package" that carried some of each day's Giro. Oh, I'm ready, $8 a month. Sign me up. Of course nine of the ten channels all work but the one I need. I could watch collegate softball all fucking day long but no Giro. Had a tech truck come up to trouble shoot. He never gets out of the truck. No, you can't get that channel on this island. FFS! The amazing thing was once he was told this was the Giro (which meant nothing to him) he remembered another guy a few months ago tried to get the same channel, told the tech he had raced in it last year. So we know Ryder is Not recording the Giro on his DVR.

  • @Jay

    @Gianni

    I think it is more the networks screwing up then RCS.  I think beIN Sport has rights in USA for RCS races, but actually finding them is impossible.  And they wonder why we resort to (illegal?) internet feeds.

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