Every time I’ve ridden the Roubaix pavé, I’ve peed the next few days like I got VD from some dirty cobble. That might not really sell the non-believer on the pleasure of riding the sacred stones, but there truly is nothing like it anywhere else in the world. Here in Seattle, we have cobbled climbs and they are by all rights legitimately rough. But they pale in comparison to the brutality of the Flemish kasseien, and the Flemish kasseien pale in comparison to the French pavé.
When riding the cobbles, I sometimes find myself almost having an out of body experience, amazed at the fact that bicycle and rider are carrying on in a generally forward progression. On one occasion, I even found myself staring at a bidon that had ejected from my Arundel Mandible bidon cage, which itself says something about how rough the ride was. The bottle seemed to hang in the air for a moment as time slowed and I wondered firstly how the bidon had found its way past my top tube, and secondly whether I should fight the strangely strong urge to try and catch it.
Several of our V-Community brethren are over in Lille as we speak, riding the cobbles with our friends William and Alex from Pavé Cycling Classics and swilling Malteni like fools. They are over there because the thrilling sensation of savage shaking when you hit a secteur at speed from the smooth tarmac followed by the sense of overwhelming relief when the shaking stops as you return once again to the smooth pavement is an itch you have to keep scratching.
Sunday is Paris-Roubaix, the Queen of the Classics. And this time, it really does look like it’s going to be muddy and raining. Thank Merckx. Recall that Tom Boonen is the only favorite in the Peloton who has raced Paris-Roubaix in the wet, in 2002. Fourteen years since a muddy edition. Fourteen.
Will Boonen make it an unprecedented V wins? Or will Faboo come good and tie the record to join Boonen and de Vlaeminck? Or will Pinchy do the double and take his second monument? My money is on rain and an upset winner.
Don’t forget that the VSP Series winner takes home a custom Don Walker and that the runner-up gets a set of handbuilt Café Roubaix CR Wheelworks Arenberg wheels. Third place get a V-Kit. So start your prognostications on the start list, pray to whatever deity that melts your butter, and get your picks in by the time the timer goes to zero.
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Linky:
http://www.cyclingweekly.co.uk/news/racing/spectator-captures-moment-elia-viviani-struck-motorbike-paris-roubaix-video-220464
Well, I'm crushed for Boonen, but I can't complain in terms of VSP results.
@Mikael Liddy
So much to like about this win. He's a genuine tradesman. I snapped him as he came to the last turn at Carrefour. He looked dropped. At least 8 lengths. I gave him an earful. The mood afterwards was very sombre. Even the French were hoping for Tommeke's V. Stunning win.
I can't believe how disappointed I am for Boonen, while being pleased to see such a long standing hard working Dom like Hayman win. Just gutting for TB to have got that close to the record.
I think it's a good thing Boonen didn't win.
There's something more heroic about a record that is shared among greats. It shows how hard it is to dominate and to my mind actually enhances the achievement.
Should Boonen eclipse RdV? Would it be fair for Cancellara to be spoken of as the greatest Ronde winner ahead of Boonen, Museuuw and Magni? In the Tour, surely a podium step shared equally between Anquetil, Hinault, Merckx and Indurain is more satisfying, and allows us to indulge in debate and speculation.
That the Giro equates Coppi, Binda and Merckx shows the flip side, where to leave out Bartoli from the discussion seems wrong.
Quite aside from the fact that he was a COTHO I felt when Armstrong became the sole record holder it distorted the picture.
Merckx has sole ownership of Liege and San Remo and Coppi of Lombardia.
That is as it should be.
@ChrisO
Can't fault that logic
@Teocalli
Nope, good point very well made.
@ChrisO
I was thinking that too, better that it be unattainable. But he came awfully close. What a monster race.
I need to come down.
What a beauty of a race and a really nice win for a journeyman like Hayman. He's only (only?) won 8 races in his 13 years as a pro and at age 38 makes PR his number 9? Only 6 weeks removed from a broken arm? In a break against one of the greatest classics racers of all time? I smell a screenplay some where in this story.
EBH, Stannard and Sep rode a great race and Tommeke managed them in the break perfectly giving a performance worthy of his legendary status. Today was a day that second place could not be called first loser, if this was his last race he can walk to the showers head held nearly as high as if he had won.
But all that said my MVP of the race has got to go to Tony Martin. The massive pull he took starting in sector 19 to distance the Spartacus/Sagan group should go down as the stuff of legend. He absolutely turned him self inside out to keep Boonen and the others on track and nearly singlehandedly made the final selection of riders. If you ask me the three podium finishers should chip in to send Martin a bottle of Dom, because without his work the chasers most likely bridge and who knows what could have happened.
This race is the heart and soul of cycling, and today's edition was one for the ages. Can't wait for next year.
In the tradition of "Boom Shake the Froome", "That's Nibali" and Elextrci Six's lesser known "Stybar" I've now got a slightly adapted Suffregette City stuck in my head.
"Hay-Man, don't care 'bout no broken bone.
Hay-Man, he's gonna win on the stones..."