Gobbles already violated Rule #95 this year when he became the first rider to celebrate winning a Monument by lifting his bike over his head as if he were some kind of savage; not a Belgian road Cyclist, the most civilized of the Cycling Breed.
But Rule #49 is another matter altogether. It astounds me whenever I see a bicycle helplessly turned upon its handlebars and saddle while the pilot optimistically leverages every muscle in their face to inspect the vehicle for evidence of its mysterious ailment. (Surprise ending: It’s the rider, not the machine.)
We, the Velominati, we see the Cycling world through a different lens. We see Cycling through the rose-colored lense of our passion and our reverence for the history, culture, and etiquette of our sport.
Hence, I find myself in disbelief to find none other than The Prophet himself, cluelessly riding alongside his team car in 1976 with a spare bike on its roof inexplicably turned upside down. This was the Year of My Birth; I feel a little bit sullied knowing that such an atrocity occurred while I was in gestation. (It also might explain a few things about my temperament.)
It just so happens that 1976 was the year in which Merckx began his irrevocable slide towards retirement; perhaps his failure to spot the upturned steed was an early sign that the fire in his breath was starting to temper.
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@KogaLover
Keep your cages clean.
@KogaLover
Yeah, I watched the vid. Janssen and Zoetemelk were both there. Classy move all around! (BTW, that's Joop next to Tom.)
@ErikdR
Funny you should say that. I've always been amazed at how poorly a lot of bike mechanics swap out wheels. I know the F1 teams practice like crazy to save just a few seconds on a pit stop., You'd think each year, pro team mechanics would go through some boot camp of switching out wheels. It should involve riders too - as it would certainly speed up the whole process if the rider, upon stopping for, say, a puncture, dropped the chain onto the smallest cog.
@RobSandy
Which means I must stop riding?
@wiscot
Ha! You may well have exposed me as one who watches wáy too little pro cycling nowadays. (I try to convince myself that it's because I'm 'too busy').
I don't have much (or any) evidence to support my claim - other than the fact that I have seen (or at least: I seem to remember having seen) pro mechanics switching rear wheels - and sending riders on their merry way again with a frantic push - in a matter of seconds. Conversely, I myself have been known, after puncture repairs, to fiddle with my rear wheel for what felt like minutes (and still not get it quite right sometimes, as I would discover upon re-mounting the bike). Maybe I'm just setting the bar pretty low.
Good point about dropping the chain to the smallest cog, by the way. In fact, I would have expected pro riders ALWAYS to do that? (Even I am usually smart enough, once I've become aware of a rear puncture, to push the shifter for the rear mech all the way forward before dismounting...)
@wiscot
That's an interesting picture. As a devote follower of Zoetemelk's career, I can say that I have never seen Joop look so ecstatically happy in any photograph - not even those that document his own TdF win in 1980.
As Krabbé said: few have taken the job of being a professional cyclist more seriously than Joop Zoetemelk.
@ErikdR
And wasn't it until his 38th that he finally earned to wear the rainbowjersey? I can still remember the thrills in 1985from when I was young eventhough I wasn't into cycling yet.
And on the TdF: other riders have had more than 16 starts, but none has yet matched Zoetemelk's record of actually completing the event 16 times.
@KogaLover
Yes, yes, goodness yes - I'll never forget that as long as I live. 1985. 38 years old (Not me; Joop. I was 27 at the time). Thirty-eight! A strong field including Greg LeMond, Moreno Argentin, Stephen Roche... Joop sneaking off on the left side of the road, out-foxing the lot of 'em - and Mart Smeets, the Dutch sports commentator, utterly losing his shit. Good times. (I must have been peeling a lot of onions at the time, because there was a very distinct trace of salty liquid in the corners of my eyes when Joop crossed the line that day...)
@ErikdR
Totally class move inviting Zoetemelk and Janssen to the shindig. Joop's WC was an awesome win - as was his compatriot Gerrie Knetemann's win in the 1985 Amstel Gold race. I was apparently peeling onions during the latter race . . . . Knetemann was also world champ in 1978. Both Knetemann and Zoetemelk rode for TI-Raleigh too.
@wiscot
Re Knetemann's Gold Race: Yep - that was another memorable victory. And that time, it wasn't so much the reporter(s), but Knetemann himself who cried his eyes out, if I remember correctly?