Velominati Super Prestige: Liége-Bastogne-Liége

We’ve all watched bike races, that’s a given, but how many of us actually listen to a bike race? It’s at this time every year that I’m reminded of something;

The Ardennes Classics sound different.

How does a bike race sound exactly? In the case of L-B-L, it’s the low buzz of the TV helicopter that is ingrained in my psyche. The subliminal hum of the rotors, droning away, overlaid with the monologue of Phil and Paul (or some Dutch or Spanish guy), also droning away, is a trance-inducing concoction not even the likes of Ken Kesey ever experienced.

Be warned, if you’re a Vietnam Veteran watching (and listening to) this clip of Argentin taking his fourth Doyenne may lead to flashbacks.

While the cobbled northern Classics elucidate a mien that takes hold of our hearts and can’t really be explained, the hillier races in the last week of the Spring campaign offer their own charms for us to appreciate. The fragile climbers, who’ve avoided the rough and dirty roads in weeks previous, mix it up alongside a smattering of the Big Men of the Stones who make the crossover to give it one last crack, or to simply help their grimpeur buddies get a slice of their own pie. These are races that can go to any number of riders who are having an on day.

Which doesn’t make picking a winner in this, the final Spring edition of the Velominati Super Prestige any easier. Will a Schleck, any Schleck, stand up (or be countered). What will the reactions be if Veino repeats, will he still be the villain, or is a year a long time in cycling and he’ll be forgiven, cheered and revered?  PhilGil could make his own history and take not only the triple crown of Amstel, Fleche and Liége, but the quadruple with his Brabanste Pijl win thrown in for good measure. Whichever way the cards fall, or whoever plays them right, it’s always a worthy winner who rolls across the line first in Ans.

All that’s left to do is take a look at the start list, use your Powers of Deductionâ„¢ to decide your Top V, fill in the blanks and pick up an Obey The Rules bumper sticker for your trouble. It’s a prize older and more coveted than any other cycling-based-website-race-tipping-competition-bumper-sticker-giveaway.

Maybe listening to your heart is the way to go on this one.

Best of Belgian to you.

Brett

Don't blame me

View Comments

  • VSP PICKS:

    1. Andy Schleck
    2. Samuel Sanchez
    3. Phillipe Gilbert
    4. Robert Gesink
    5. Sylvain Chavanel

  • So, an octopus picked the winner of the 2010 World Cup, a Spanish cow picked the winner of the 2010 TdF, and now Gil the Croc has picked the winner of the last two spring classics.
    Why fight Mother Nature?

    VSP PICKS:

    1. Gilbert (not the reptile)
    2. Rodriguez
    3. Vinokourov
    4. Schleck, A.
    5. Sanchez, S.

  • I like the new right-way-around header pic. That's Fons de Wolf in the red Boule d'Or kit on the left and the Peugeot rider still awheel is good old huntin' and fishin' Duclos-Lasalle. De Wolf would win that year's Giro di Lombardia and the follwing year's Milan-San Remo, and Duclos-Lasalle was of course famous for winning consecutive editions of Paris-Roubaix in '92 and '93 in his late 30s...

  • Tiny Tony is due a good race

    VSP PICKS:

    1. Gilbert
    2. Chavanel
    3. Nibbles of Nibali
    4. Vino (not Caldirola)
    5. Tiny Tony Martin

  • VSP PICKS:

    1. Sylvain Chavanel
    2. Schleck the Elder
    3. PhilGil
    4. Jay-Purito-Rod
    5. Vino

  • VSP PICKS:

    1. Sylvain Chavanel
    2. Schleck the Elder
    3. PhilGil
    4. Jay-Purito-Rod
    5. Vino Sange Rouge

  • VSP PICKS:

    1. Frank Schleck
    2. Philippe Gilbert
    3. Jakob Fulsang
    4. Alexander Vinokourov
    5. Sylvain Chavanel

  • VSP PICKS:

    1. Chavanel
    2. Gilbert
    3. J Rod
    4. Vincenzo Nibali
    5. Schleck the Elder

  • @frank
    Scarponi is under investigation, but I always want to believe what I'm seeing is genuine. However, I think more riders than not are clean now and the new kids on the block like Bobridge, Meyer, Phinney, Farrar, and Cavendouche are showing that it's possible to win without doping.

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