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  • .LnB

    titán

    válasz dom1n0 #191 üzenetére

    Én mindig csíptem. Meg egyébként se utálok nagyon senkit. A mostani mezőnyből is max Gaudu, Vlasov, Jasper Philipsen akik nem a kedvenceim. :)

    „A kerékpározás első szabálya, hogy szenvedned kell, és senki más nem teheti meg helyetted. Semmilyen számítógép vagy edző által kitalált program nem tudja elérni, hogy kevésbé fájjon.”

  • avl

    aktív tag

    válasz dom1n0 #191 üzenetére

    ezt ismered ?

    In his book, Sagan wrote that as they came off a cobbled sector, “I could immediately feel something was wrong. I looked down. Shit. My stem and handlebars were pointing north-west and my bike was going north. They were out by about 30 degrees.”
    Guessing that the stem bolt had come loose, Sagan believed he risked crashing on the next sector should the handlebars swing round more, while the narrowness of the road plus the groups of riders behind meant there was no chance of his team car reaching him for the time being. Nor was taking a neutral service bike an option, since the time taken to swap over and remount would effectively end his challenge.
    “Shit shit shit. I can’t let anyone know,” Sagan wrote. “If word gets back to the chasers, it’ll be all the boost they need. If these two realise, they’ll either drop me or give up. Neither looks good. But I won’t be able to chase, to corner, to stand up, to sprint … what to do?”
    The only solution, Sagan realised, was to try and straighten it himself but obviously while riding, there was no way of holding the wheel steady while he tried to make the adjustment, which is when the idea came to him of using Wallays’ rear wheel to do the job for him.
    “Now, if I were to touch his wheel unexpectedly in this situation, I would almost certainly crash and he would be fortunate not to. But planning it? That would be different, right? A quicck sharp tap, straighten the bars up, and off we go like nothing had ever happened. Right?”
    The first attempt didn’t work and drew a “Godverdomme!” [Goddamni!] from Walllays, and Sagan – whose apology drew a shrug from the Belgian – deciding he hadn’t hit his rival’s wheel hard enough. So he did it again. Three times in rapid succession.
    “Bang! Bang! Bang!”
    “What the fuck Sagan? What are you fucking doing?” demanded Wallays.
    “’Oh man, sorry, just tired, sorry, it’s okay,” Sagan replied.
    “There’s no friendly shrug this time, just a stream of under-his-breath invective and total confusion,” wrote Sagan. “Poor guy; 200 kilometres at the front of the world’s biggest one-day bike race and now some idiot is pranking him. This is a man at the end of his tether.
    “Worse than that, it didn’t work. Shall I get off? Twist it straight? Ask the other two if they happen to be carrying Allen keys and try not to get a Lottoi-mitted punch in the face?”
    Fortunately for Sagan, the cavalry arrived in the shape of his Bora Hansgrohe team car with sports director Jan Valach, who said, “Going good, Peter. Need a drink, some food?”
    “Got a four-millimetre Allen key, Jan?” was the reply.
    “Everyone loves a four,” Sagan wrote in his book. “It’s the one you get free with Ikea furniture. A minute later and we’re back in the game.”
    The unfortunate Wallays would be dropped shortly afterwards, eventually finishing 14th, more tjhan two and a half minutes after Sagan had beaten a spent Dillier in the sprint on the velodrome track in Roubaix.
    Belgian newspaper Het Nieuwsblad (link is external) reports that it was only on the Wednesday following the race that Wallays learnt the real reason why Sagan had repeatly bashed his wheel.
    “I received a message from my team-mate Marcel Sieberg,” he said. “He asked me if the story was correct that he had heard from his compatriot Marcus Burghardt [a team-mate of Sagan’s]. I said, ‘Yes, Sagan touched my rear wheel at least five times. It was super-ambitious.”
    Jelllys continued: “I threw a lot of West Flanders curses at Sagan, but he didn’t give a damn. I told Sieberg, ‘What an idiot he is!’ I’d never dare do that. I’d have ridden to the finish [with the handlebars] askew, because it was particularly dangerous for him.
    “In his book he says he will apoligise, but he hasn’t done that yet. I’ll talk to him next year about it,” he added.

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