Not unlike last week, it seems that the news was around Jens Voigt and Bradley Wiggins. I’ve thrown in some Sagan, Phinney and Fabs as well, plus, of course, the all important gruppetto. So let’s go! Continue reading

Not unlike last week, it seems that the news was around Jens Voigt and Bradley Wiggins. I’ve thrown in some Sagan, Phinney and Fabs as well, plus, of course, the all important gruppetto. So let’s go! Continue reading
Today, it’s ‘buy one get one free’ as we’re celebrating both Michael’s 37th birthday and his recent retirement. The latter has not been without controversy as he finally admitted to doping while chez Lance. More about that later.
The GP Montreal was officially his final race as a professional cyclist as the arm he had broken in August started acting up and becoming increasingly painful and swollen around the site of the fracture, plate and screws. In some ways it was more fitting that he should end his career on home soil in front of family, friends and supporters in a race that was won by his teammate Lars Petter Nordhaug.
Michael has long been one of my favourites in the peloton largely because of his eloquence when talking and writing about pretty much any subject – but especially cycling – and his elegance on the bike. His years of indentured service as a domestique made him the perfect team captain on the road. We’ve often seem him leading the peloton for hours on end. If you’ve ever wondered how he and others manage to do it for such lengthy periods, watch him in training being paced by a motorbike in this short video:
While he’s ridden for a number of teams in his 14-year professional career, the last three were spent at Sky where he no doubt imparted much wisdom to the younger riders on the team.
In recent years, Michael’s also compiled a number of videos to assist with training and reconnaissance of key stages in Grand Tours and key races. Like his writing, these articulate better than most the life and times of a professional cyclist. Here are just a few of them:
As I mentioned above after retiring from the sport, Michael confirmed that he doped for a period while riding in the service of Lance Armstrong but has ridden clean since leaving the team and riding firstly for HTC and then Sky.
Michael said he changed his mind on doping after crashing at the 2006 Tour of Flanders. Despite the severity of his injuries no one from Discovery Channel came to visit him in hospital. He claimed this was when it struck home he was taking risks with his health on behalf of people who didn’t care about his health or value his well-being. He left the team in 2006 and started speaking out about the need for clean cycling.
His results, such as they were, have been voided for that dark period, but his few career highlights – eighth in the 2008 Olympics road race, runner-up in the Canadian national road race in 2001 and 2012, and a stage of the 2008 Tour of Missouri – were achieved clean.
Given that he’s such a wordsmith, it’s only fitting that I should let Michael have the last word. I hope you enjoy your retirement with your young family and please keep writing!
Many of my fondest memories involve the bike but reach far beyond races: riding through the parks with my mother on the way to school, riding with my father, uncle and aunt through Provence, riding with my wife in the Rocky Mountains, and teaching my sons to ride their bikes. On the bike, our relationships developed. That will continue long after I retire as cycling will always be a part of me. Cycling has given me something that reaches far beyond finish lines and race results. Over the last year, as I’ve thought of retirement and reflected on my career, this has become increasingly clear. The racing journey has been a thrill but the cycling journey will continue.
Unless you’ve been hiding under a rock in a dark cave with earmuffs on, you will have heard by now about the statement issued earlier today by the US Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) regarding the findings of their investigation into Lance Armstrong and the US Postal team. This was followed a few hours later by a meticulous 200-page summary of their full 1,000-page report. Even in ‘summary’ form – we’re still digesting it here, but suffice to say that parts of it read like a Raymond Chandler novel – the evidence and testimony presented by 26 witnesses (including 11 of Armstrong’s former teammates) is as unambiguous as it is comprehensive. At the same time George Hincapie, Armstrong’s most trusted lieutenant, released a statement on his personal website, as did Michael Barry.
Here at VeloVoices we like to express the positive side of cycling fandom, but we are not blind to its harsh realities either. We have previously discussed how we felt about Armstrong’s decision not to contest USADA’s charges against him, but in truth what is important is not what we say on the subject, but what you say about it. In recent months we have brought you Tweets of the Week specials capturing a cross-section of the cycling community’s views in reaction to USADA’s decision to proceed against Armstrong in June and, a little over seven weeks ago, the announcement that he would not call for a hearing. Some of these views we agree with, others we don’t. But what is important is that these are the honest thoughts of fans all over the world who, like us, care deeply and passionately about cycling.
While everyone else is rolling out official statements, we are going to take a step back, absorb USADA’s findings and listen to the depth and breadth of commentary across social media. It’s your voices that matter at a time like this.
For now, the series of tweets below is our only word on the subject. But, like the Terminator, we’ll be back with a round-up of the fall-out from this most significant of days.
Thanks for your patience.
We’re saying nothing about #USADA for the moment. But as always we’ll bring a summary of what everyone else is saying over the next few days
— VeloVoices (@VeloVoices) October 10, 2012
As ever, all we want is a sport we believe in & heroes we love. That’s as much about securing the future as it is about addressing past sins
— VeloVoices (@VeloVoices) October 10, 2012
And, as Forrest Gump, would have said, that’s about all we have to say about that. For now
— VeloVoices (@VeloVoices) October 10, 2012